About the Author
Scott Hahn
Scott Hahn is the Fr. Michael Scanlan Professor of Biblical Theology at Franciscan University of Steubenville, where he has taught since 1990. Founder and President of the St. Paul Center, Dr. Hahn has been married to Kimberly since 1979; they have six children and twenty-four grandchildren. He is the author or editor of over fifty popular and academic books, including best-selling titles Rome Sweet Home, The Lamb’s Supper, and the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible.
What People Are Saying
Scott Hahn has a well-earned reputation as a vivid guide to the Word of God. That skill is elegantly on display here. Consuming the Word is erudite and accessible, rich in content and lucid in style—an engaging read for anyone who seeks to better understand the profound interplay of Scripture, Liturgy and the role of the Church in Christian life.
Most Reverend Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap.
Archbishop of Philadelphia
With words that are both accessible and erudite, Dr. Scott Hahn introduces us anew to the Eternal Word of the New Testament, a word that is given to us, not simply as a text in a book, but as the living and real presence of the Lord Jesus himself.
Very Reverend Robert Barron
author of Catholicism: A Journey to the Heart of the Faith
In Consuming the Word, Scott Hahn brings his trilogy on the Bible and the Mass to a brilliant climax. In it, he serves up a veritable feast of insights into the real meaning of the ‘New Testament,’ the ancient Christian Eucharist, the Sacraments, the Canon of Scripture, the Lectionary, the Truth of the Bible, the importance of Tradition, and much, much more. If you want to deepen your hunger for the Word of God in Scripture and Word made flesh in the Eucharist, then this is the book for you.
Brant Pitre
author of Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Eucharist
I have known about Scott Hahn since he, as an Evangelical minister, brought my brother into his community to express his concern about my becoming a Roman Catholic in 1978. His Romanization years later blessed my heart, as I saw a new generation of Catholic converts from the Evangelical world. Since then I have been most impressed by the scholarship and love of scripture he brought into his Catholic life and ministry. I am blessed to count him as a friend. This newest offering reflects the strong connection between the authority of the scriptures and the Church that confronts and challenges anyone on a similar journey into the Catholic Church.
John Michael Talbot
author of The World is My Cloister
Catholic scholars may debate certain details about how to understand Scripture, dogma, and liturgy, but all can agree that these three realities inseparably illuminate each other. Scott Hahn powerfully articulates these connections and their consequences for the love relationship into which the God of Love calls us.
Matthew Levering
Professor of Theology, University of Dayton
This thoroughly enjoyable examination of the source and meaning of the New Testament is particularly needed today with the confusion brought about by the hyper-acceptance and over-application of higher-critical theories. The beauty of all of Scott's writings come from him unique ability to see the big picture, to bring together theology, history, philosophy, and biblical studies, and present it in a way that is amazingly readable and practical. In the work that we do, helping non-Catholic clergy discover the beauty and truth of the Church, this book will become an essential resource.
Marcus Grodi
host of EWTN’s The Journey Home
After reading Consuming the Word, I will never hear the phrase ‘New Testament’ in the same way again. This book offers a soul-satisfying account of the organic connection between the liturgical life of the Church and Scripture, between the Incarnation in flesh and the Incarnation in words, between the sinlessness of Christ and the truthfulness of Scripture, which emphasizes the necessary priority of the former in each pair without in the least diminishing the indispensability of the latter. I say ‘soul-satisfying’ because one leaves the book feeling that a spiritual need for coherence and clarity has been met.
John C. Cavadini
Professor of Theology, Director of the Institute for Church Life, University of Notre Dame
In his latest book, Scott Hahn takes lessons from the Early Church to reveal the New Testament in a whole new light. Consuming the Word is essential reading for Catholics who want to better understand how the sacred authors and apostles affect us today.
Matthew Kelly
author of Rediscover Catholicism
Consuming the Word will increase your appetite for God and draw you into divine intimacy. Dr. Hahn brings clarity to the term "New Testament" as he moves us from text to action, from page to passion. Disciples of Christ have been called not to a text but to a covenant. The invitation to anyone studying the bible is to go deeper, to go beyond study to worship, to go beyond the words to the Word made flesh. For those who grasp the message of this book, their understanding of the Eucharistic sacrifice will never be the same.
Jeff Cavins
author of My Life on the Rock
Reviews
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Jude Sekar
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<p>This is just a review or rather a thirst for Dr. Hahn's "Consuming the Word..." after reading all the reviews by eminent authors and Bishops. I have often pondered on this: "taste and see that the Lord is good." So I'm eager to read a scholarly explanation on this.</p>
Dan Shelley
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<p>Excellent</p>
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