In the Roman Catholic Mass, the priest reads the Gospel which is taken from Matthew, Mark, Luke or John in the New Testament part of The Bible. Before that, lectors read twice (once on weekdays) and it's from any book in the Old Testament, often Isaiah or the Psalms. To Christians, Jesus is the fulfillment of the promises God made to his people in the Old Testament through prophecies.
In the drive mechanism the part that does this is the head assembly.
The Jews call it the Torah.
The Elevations.
During the liturgy of the word you need to be listening to the priest/bishop or deacon because during this part of the mass we learn of redemption and salvation through the proclamation of the scriptures.
verb
Yes. They call themselves Satanists and are part of the "Church of Satan".
Christianity and Judaism share part of the Bible. What the Jews call the Tanakh, the Christians call the Old Testament.
It isn't in the Bible. It is one of the books that call themselves the gospel-of-something-or-the-other but was written much later and contradicts the rest of the Bible, proving that is isn't part of it.
During the Catholic Mass, the priest does read the Gospel. He can, however, confer the ability to read the Gospel onto a deacon for that Mass. In common practice, though, only a priest should read the Gospel during the Mass; in private Bible groups or readings, it may be read aloud by anyone.
the best part
No. I don't think the concept was known in that part of the world at the time. "Politics" was either Kings or Emperors.
When a priest speaks in Church as part of a Liturgy or Service, it is called a Sermon.