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Pope
Benedict XVI has proclaimed a Pauline Year to honor
St. Paul
in preparation for the 2000th anniversary of the great
apostle's birth. Church historians reckon that
St. Paul
was born about 10 AD. in
Tarsus, now located in present-day Turkey. Following his conversion to
Christianity he became the
Church's foremost evangelizer in spreading the gospel among
the Jews and the Gentiles.
The
Pauline Year will run June 29,2008, to June 29, 2009, to
highlight Paul's contribution to the spread of
Christianity in the first century.
On
his first official venture outside the
Vatican
in April 2005, Pope Benedict XVI visited the Basilica of St.
Paul's Outside the Walls to pray at the tomb of the great
apostle and to honor his missionary legacy. On that occasion
he reflected that "The Church is by nature missionary;
its primary task is evangelization. At the beginning of the
third millennium the Church feels with renewed strength that
Christ's missionary mandate is more pressing than
ever."
St.
Paul
's
Letters
The
inspired letters of
St. Paul
are a primary source of the history and teaching of the
nascent Church and clearly influenced its early
development.
With
today's rapid and varied styles of communication St. Paul
would have a field day with his extensive contacts for the
growth and development of the Church. The awesome ease of
electronic communication would hold spellbound this
inveterate letter writer of the New Testament and master
evangelizer.
However,
the demanding and rigorous conditions of letter writing in St. Paul
's day in no way diminished his passion for this labor of
love.
In
the beginnings of Christianity the "city churches"
communicated with Paul and other leaders of their time and
with each other by letters. Unfortunately many of these
letters have been lost. Some of Paul's letters are responses
to letters he received, and in his letters he instructs,
solves problems, and offers encouragement to the local Christian
communities.
Elements
of Letter Writing in Ancient Times
Just
what did it take to write a letter in the era of the New
Testament's formation? The biographical study, Paul the
Apostle, published in the mid-19th century by the noted
Italian scholar Giuseppe Ricciotti, details some aspects of
ancient letter writing.
Usually
letters were written on parchment, which was worked leather,
or on papyrus. Papyrus was a composition of thin, crossed
strips of an Egyptian river reed. It varied in thickness
and smoothness, and was formed into sheets measuring about
10 or 12 inches wide. Neither parchment nor papyrus offered
the smooth writing surface we expect in paper today.
A
pen was made from a split reed or a goose quill. The sticky
ink was a mixture of carbon and glue or gum. With rough
quality papyrus writing was very difficult and the scribe
struggled intently to form each letter.
With
a short letter, such as Paul's message to Philemon (25
verses), the finished letter was folded, then sealed with
wax or pitch. The name of the intended receiver was written
on the outside
along with the name of the bearer and the intermediate
stops. A long letter would be rolled and enclosed in a
sealed envelope, or wrapped in another sheet of papyrus,
then tied with a small cord and sealed.
Composing
and Handwriting
The
actual composition and writing of the letter posed some
difficulty. Determining the content of the message, plus the
length of the text, required considerable effort, writing
space, and time. On average each papyrus sheet held about
140 words. To write three syllables required about one
minute, and an hour's work produced about 72 words.
St. Paul
's earliest letter, the oldest
text in the New Testament, is the First Letter to the
Thessalonians. Scholars estimate that this required about 11
sheets of papyrus and 20 hours of writing. His letter to the
Romans, his longest, needed 50 sheets and 100 hours to
complete. His shortest letter contains 335 words to
Philemon, but required three sheets and more than four
hours. Letter writing was not an easy task. But it was a
labor of love.
Because
writing was a tedious task, only two or three hours in a
working day could be devoted to a letter. It is estimated
that the Letter to the Romans must have occupied Paul and
his secretary at least 32 days at three hours a day, or a
maximum of 49 days at two hours a day.
The
Mechanics of Writing Influenced the Understanding
These
approximate calculations hold special importance for a
correct interpretation and understanding of St. Paul
's letters. Apparent interruptions in the development of
thought, abrupt transitions, and repetition complicate
Paul's theological reflections and exhortations. Considering
the time involved in actually composing and writing, and
factoring in postponements and interruptions, no wonder
Paul's content and style are not always easy to follow or to
read aloud.
Another
New Testament letter writer, St. Peter, admitted frankly
that in the letters of "our beloved brother Paul . . .
there are some things hard to understand" (2 Peter
3:15-16).
Recalling
the Purpose and Value of Letter Writing
Reviewing
these conditions might serve as a reminder for us about the
importance of letter writing. This seems to be a lost art
among most of the young. The known effects of a handwritten
or typed personal letter are remarkable. We are not all like
St. Paul
, but we do have the ability and opportunity to cheer, console,
cajole, congratulate, and encourage each other. Letter
writing is a valuable apostolic venture, and an effective
tool for promoting justice and peace. Remember that
St. Paul
inspired and supported Church vocations by his letters to
Timothy and Titus, and in all his letters exhorted all the
baptized to be faithful to their baptismal consecration.
Writing
a personal letter is a wonderful and warm expression of
thoughtfulness and courtesy and appreciation. Writing to
civil leaders, social organizations, and businesses can
produce improvements for society. Letter writing is an
inspired apostolate of expressing God's love for us, and our
love for one another. Let's take a page from St. Paul
and renew this practice in our own lives.
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