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| First Reading |
| Hosea 6:3-6
Let us set ourselves to know the Lord;
that he will come is as certain as the dawn
his judgement will rise like the light,
he will come to us as showers come,
like spring rains watering the earth.
What am I to do with you, Ephraim?
What am I to do with you, Judah?
This love of yours is like a morning cloud,
like the dew that quickly disappears.
This is why I have torn them to pieces by the prophets,
why I slaughtered them with the words from my mouth,
since what I want is love, not sacrifice;
knowledge of God, not holocausts.
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| Responsorial Psalm |
| Psalm 49:1.8.12-15
| Response: |
I will show God's salvation to the
upright. |
- The God of gods, the Lord,
has spoken and summoned the earth,
from the rising of the sun to its setting.
'I find no fault with your sacrifices,
your offerings are always before me.'
- 'Were I hungry, I would not tell you,
for I own the world and all it holds.
Do you think I eat the flesh of bulls,
or drink the blood of goats?'
- 'Pay your sacrifice of thanksgiving to God
and render him your votive offerings.
Call on me in the day of distress.
I will free you and you shall honour me.'
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| Second Reading |
| Romans 4:18-25
Though it seemed Abraham's hope could not be fulfilled, he hoped
and believed, and through doing so he did become the father of
many nations exactly as he had been promised: Your descendants
will be as many as the stars. Even the thought that his body was
past fatherhood - he was about a hundred years old - and Sarah
too old to become a mother, did not shake his belief. Since God
had promised it, Abraham refused either to deny it or even to doubt
it, but drew strength from faith and gave glory to God, convinced
that God had power to do what he had promised. This is the faith
that was 'considered as justifying him'. Scripture however does
not refer only to him but to us as well when it says that his faith
was thus 'considered'; our faith too will be 'considered' if we
believe in him who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead, Jesus who
was put to death for our sins and raised to life to justify us.
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| Gospel |
| Matthew 9:9-13
As Jesus was walking on he saw a man named Matthew sitting by
the customs house, and he said to him, 'Follow me.' And he got
up and followed him.
While he was at dinner in the house it happened that a number
of tax collectors and sinners came to sit at the table with Jesus
and his disciples. When the Pharisees saw this, they said to his
disciples, 'Why does your master eat with tax collectors and sinners?'
When he heard this he replied, 'It is not the healthy who need
the doctor, but the sick. Go and learn the meaning of the words:
What I want is mercy, not sacrifice. And indeed I did not come
to call the virtuous, but sinners.'
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Readings from The Jerusalem Bible © 1966 by Darton
Longman & Todd Ltd and Doubleday and Company Ltd.
Psalm © The Grail (England) published by HarperCollins.
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