Okay, I was wrong.
Live and learn.
So one of the very few sadnesses that I have becoming a priest is no longer having the opportunity to read Paul. Too often he is read like this (which I know some people prefer)

How fun he can be to read however!
YOU, my brothers and sisters, were CALLED. TO. BE. FREE. But do not use your freedom to indulge the flesh[a]; rather, serve one another. Humbly. In love. 14 For the entire law is fulfilled in keeping this one command: “Love your neighbor as yourself.”[b] 15 If you BITE and DEVOUR each other, watch out! or you will be destroyed by each other.
As the celebrant, it is rare that we do not have a reader so I don't get to read him. Almost as rarely do I get to read the Gospel because we have a VERY dedicated and great deacon who assists at almost every Mass. UNFORTUNATELY he broke his ankle (stay off ladders dude! There are plenty of people in the parish who will climb them for you!) so the job of reading the Gospel was opened for a spell.
So I'm all excited that I get to read the Gospel for a spell. THEN - preparing for today's post I read that perhaps I was not the preferred person to read the Gospel. (sigh)
Here is the scoop on who is to read what:

Now, I know to many it may appear that all these rubrics seem rather silly. "Who cares who reads what?" Right? But there is always a reason behind every one of these rubrics. Remember that we had 2,000 years to work up to this and many things are put into place to solve problems and misunderstandings. When even simple things are misunderstood, they can lead to much larger misinterpretations that speed and cause huge problems. So - proclaiming Paul - is this a presidential function? Can nobody else do this? Is the person who proclaims Paul acting in persona Christi? Does one need to be ordained to do this? (These were just a few things off the top of my head - I'm sure there are much better reasons if given a chance to think about it.)
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