Chapters 6–9 analyze some of the ways in which Scripture is evoked in Christian liturgical enactments. One of the most obvious of these is the reading aloud by a lector of a passage from Scripture. This proves considerably more complex than would appear at first glance, especially when the passage includes first-person pronouns. What, for example, is the lector doing or saying when she reads, from the opening of Luke’s Gospel, “I too decided … to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus”? To whom does the “I” refer (and the “you”) when the lector reads this passage? Various alternatives are explored. And how does the liturgical voicing of a Psalm differ from reading aloud a Shakespeare sonnet—as surely it does? These are among the questions addressed in Chapter 6.