Firstly, they usually read two Gospel readings. Near the start of mass they read the Gospel about the entrance on Palm Sunday of Jesus into Jerusalem. Later they read the story of his passion from Holy Thursday and Good Friday. The second of these Gospels is considerably longer than any other Sunday Gospel.
The third reading is always the Gospel on a Sunday or Solemnity.
mt 18:15-20
The group shares their uplifting gospel music with our congregation every Sunday.
Sunday Morning by Mary Mary
John's gospel chapter 2.
On all Sundays and Solemnities (Christmas, All Saints, Immaculate Conception, Assumption, etc.) there are three (well, four if you count the psalm), usually an Old Testament reading, a psalm, a New Testament reading, and the Gospel. Weekday Masses only have one reading, the psalm, and the Gospel, there is no second reading on a non-solemnity.
palm Sunday is all about how that when Jesus road into Galilee and his worshipers threw palms at him --another answer-- Palm Sunday (not Psalm Sunday) is about the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem, when people laid palm branches on the ground as he approached. This was a sign of honour in those days.
You might be mistaken. I have never heard of a 'Psalm Sunday' - but there is a 'Palm Sunday' which is the Sunday before Easter Sunday. It is so called because the Gospel read that day in Christian churches concerns itself with how Jesus rode into Jerusalem and was greeted by people laying palm-leaves in his path.
The Biblical Saint Thomas- there is also St.Thomas Acquinas and St.Thomas More, is mentioned in the (Low Sunday) gospel, the first Sunday after Easter. I have no idea why it was called Low, perhaps the apostles were (Lying Low) avoiding contact with the public after the crucifixion. The Low Sunday Gospel is popularioly called the Doubting Thomas gospel, this reflected Biblical and Elizabethan Grammar, wouldn"t Doubtful Thomas- he was doubtful of Jesus" resurrection, be more grammatically correct? well Doubting Thomas it is .
yes and no its a certain way the gospel should sound it cant be to jazzy or lots of ways to make it sound like blues
Roman Catholic AnswerThey would depend on whether it was a Sunday or a weekday. In the Calendar, post Vatican II, July 3 is the Feast of John the Apostle, which has a proper Gospel: John 20:24-29. If July 3 falls on a Sunday, then it would be the Gospel proper to that Sunday which would depend on when Easter was, and what cycle of readings you were on - the Lectionary runs in a three year cycle. July 3 would fall in Ordinary Time, but you would need to know the date, including the year, to find out which Sunday it was. There is only one Gospel a day in the Catholic Church.