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The two Catholic rites, far from being opposites, were nearly identical in their covenant structure—just “unfolded” differently. The old Mass emphasized the sacrificial renewal of the covenant; the new Mass highlighted the covenant meal. But both contained the same four-fold covenant pattern (Preamble, Proclamation, Sacrifice, Meal). Hahn famously concluded: “The Latin Mass is the Novus Ordo in slow motion; the Novus Ordo is the Latin Mass in fast-forward.”
Hahn didn’t buy it. So he did something few had bothered to do: he went back to the original Hebrew berit (covenant) and ancient Near Eastern treaty forms. Then he compared the structure of the Latin Mass, the Novus Ordo, and even the Last Supper narratives. What he found shocked him. Author Scott Hahn
In the early 1990s, Hahn was already a rising star in Catholic circles for his “covenant theology” framework. But he noticed something odd: traditionalist Catholics and radical Protestant critics both claimed the ancient “Mass of the Ages” (the Tridentine Latin Mass) was essentially different from the Novus Ordo Mass introduced after Vatican II. Traditionalists said the old Mass was pure sacrifice; critics said it was a pagan holdover. Both agreed: the two rites were theologically worlds apart. The two Catholic rites, far from being opposites,
Most people know Scott Hahn as the fiery Presbyterian minister turned Catholic apologist, author of Rome Sweet Home and The Lamb’s Supper . But few realize he once played theological detective in a way that unsettled both Protestant and Catholic camps. Hahn famously concluded: “The Latin Mass is the
