June 30, 2009
Pope: Bone Fragments Found in Tomb
Are Paul's
ROME — The first-ever scientific test on what are believed to be the
remains of the Apostle Paul "seems to confirm" that they do indeed
belong to the Roman Catholic saint, Pope Benedict XVI said Sunday.
It was the second major discovery concerning St. Paul announced by
the Vatican in as many days.
On Saturday, the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano announced
the June 19 discovery of a fresco inside another tomb depicting St.
Paul, which Vatican officials said represented the oldest known icon
of the apostle.
Benedict said archaeologists recently unearthed and opened the white
marble sarcophagus located under the Basilica of St. Paul's Outside
the Walls in Rome, which for some 2,000 years has been believed by
the faithful to be the tomb of St. Paul.
Benedict said scientists had conducted carbon dating tests on bone
fragments found inside the sarcophagus and confirmed that they date
from the first or second century.
"This seems to confirm the unanimous and uncontested tradition that
they are the mortal remains of the Apostle Paul," Benedict said,
announcing the findings at a service in the basilica to mark the end
of the Vatican's Paoline year, in honor of the apostle.
Paul and Peter are the two main figures known for spreading the
Christian faith after the death of Christ.
According to tradition, St. Paul, also known as the apostle of the
Gentiles, was beheaded in Rome in the 1st century during the
persecution of early Christians by Roman emperors. Popular belief
holds that bone fragments from his head are in another Rome
basilica, St. John Lateran, with his other remains inside the
sarcophagus.
The pope said that when archaeologists opened the sarcophagus, they
discovered alongside the bone fragments some grains of incense, a
"precious" piece of purple linen with gold sequins and a blue fabric
with linen filaments.
On Saturday, the Vatican newspaper announced that a round fresco
edged in gold featuring the emaciated face of St. Paul had been
discovered in excavations of the tombs of St. Tecla in Rome. It was
believed to have been dated from the end of the fourth century,
making it the oldest known icon of St. Paul, meaning it was an image
designed for prayer, not just art, L'Osservatore Romano said.
Monsignor Gianfranco Ravasi, presidente of the Vatican's culture
department, said the discovery was an "extraordinary event" that was
an "eloquent testimony" to the Christianity of the first centuries,
L'Osservatore said.
Vatican archaeologists in 2002 began excavating the
8-foot(2.4-meter)-long tomb of St. Paul, which dates from at least
A.D. 390 and was buried under the basilica's main altar. The
decision to unearth it was made after pilgrims who came to Rome
during the Roman Catholic Church's 2000 Jubilee year expressed
disappointment at finding that the saint's tomb — buried under
layers of plaster and further hidden by an iron grate — could not be
visited or touched.
The top of the coffin has small openings — subsequently covered with
mortar — because in ancient times Christians would insert offerings
or try to touch the remains.
The basilica stands at the site of two 4th-century churches —
including one destroyed by a fire in 1823 that had left the tomb
visible, first above ground and later in a crypt. After the fire,
the crypt was filled with earth and covered by a new altar. A slab
of cracked marble with the words "Paul apostle martyr" in Latin was
also found embedded in the floor above the tomb.
Monday is the feast of Saints Peter and Paul, a major feast day for
the Roman Catholic Church, during which the pope will bestow a
woolen pallium, or scarf, on all the new archbishops he has recently
named. The pallium is a band of white wool decorated with black
crosses that is a sign of pastoral authority and a symbol of the
archbishops' bond with the pope.
At the end of Sunday's service in the warm basilica, the 82-year-old
Benedict lost his balance slightly as he slipped on a step on the
altar, and was steadied by one of his assistants who was by his
side.
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