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April
3, 2004
Saturday of the Fifth Week of Lent
Reading I
Ez 37:21-28
Thus says the Lord God:
I will take the children of Israel from
among the nations
to which they have come,
and gather them from all sides to bring
them back to their land.
I will make them one nation upon the land,
in the mountains of Israel,
and there shall be one prince for them
all.
Never again shall they be two nations,
and never again shall they be divided
into two kingdoms.
No longer shall they defile themselves
with their idols,
their abominations, and all their transgressions.
I will deliver them from all their sins
of apostasy,
and cleanse them so that they may be my
people
and I may be their God.
My servant David shall be prince over
them,
and there shall be one shepherd for them
all;
they shall live by my statutes and carefully
observe my decrees.
They shall live on the land that I gave
to my servant Jacob,
the land where their fathers lived;
they shall live on it forever,
they, and their children, and their children's
children,
with my servant David their prince forever.
I will make with them a covenant of peace;
it shall be an everlasting covenant with
them,
and I will multiply them, and put my sanctuary
among them forever.
My dwelling shall be with them;
I will be their God, and they shall be
my people.
Thus the nations shall know that it is
I, the LORD,
who make Israel holy,
when my sanctuary shall be set up among
them forever.
Responsorial Psalm
Jeremiah 31:10, 11-12abcd, 13
R (see 10d) The Lord will guard us, as
a shepherd guards his flock.
Hear the word of the LORD, O nations,
proclaim it on distant isles, and say:
He who scattered Israel, now gathers them
together,
he guards them as a shepherd his flock.
R The Lord will guard us, as a shepherd
guards his flock.
The LORD shall ransom Jacob,
he shall redeem him from the hand of his
conqueror.
Shouting, they shall mount the heights
of Zion,
they shall come streaming to the LORD's
blessings:
The grain, the wine, and the oil,
the sheep and the oxen.
R The Lord will guard us, as a shepherd
guards his flock.
Then the virgins shall make merry and
dance,
and young men and old as well.
I will turn their mourning into joy,
I will console and gladden them after
their sorrows.
R The Lord will guard us, as a shepherd
guards his flock.
Gospel
Jn 11:45-56
Many of the Jews who had come to Mary
and seen what Jesus had done began to
believe in him.
But some of them went to the Pharisees
and told them what Jesus had done.
So the chief priests and the Pharisees
convened the Sanhedrin and said,
"What are we going to do?
This man is performing many signs.
If we leave him alone, all will believe
in him,
and the Romans will come
and take away both our land and our nation."
But one of them, Caiaphas,
who was high priest that year, said to
them,
"You know nothing,
nor do you consider that it is better
for you
that one man should die instead of the
people,
so that the whole nation may not perish."
He did not say this on his own,
but since he was high priest for that
year,
he prophesied that Jesus was going to
die for the nation,
and not only for the nation,
but also to gather into one the dispersed
children of God.
So from that day on they planned to kill
him.
So Jesus no longer walked about in public
among the Jews,
but he left for the region near the desert,
to a town called Ephraim,
and there he remained with his disciples.
Now the Passover of the Jews was near,
and many went up from the country to Jerusalem
before Passover to purify themselves.
They looked for Jesus and said to one
another
as they were in the temple area, "What
do you think?
That he will not come to the feast?"
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