Benedict XVI General
Audience Message



















    BENEDICT XVI
         GENERAL AUDIENCE

       Wednesday, 2 July 2008

     













     The Great Apostle Saint Paul
      Environment in which St Paul lived and worked

      Dear Brothers and Sisters,

    Today I would like to begin a new cycle of Catecheses focusing on
    the great Apostle St Paul. As you know, this year is dedicated to
    him, from the liturgical Feast of Sts Peter and Paul on 29 June
    2008 to the same Feast day in 2009. The Apostle Paul, an
    outstanding and almost inimitable yet stimulating figure, stands
    before us as an example of total dedication to the Lord and to his
    Church, as well as of great openness to humanity and its cultures. It
    is right, therefore, that we reserve a special place for him in not
    only our veneration but also in our effort to understand what he has
    to say to us as well, Christians of today. In this first meeting let us
    pause to consider the environment in which St Paul lived and
    worked. A theme such as this would seem to bring us far from our
    time, given that we must identify with the world of 2,000 years ago.
    Yet this is only apparently and, in any case, only partly true for we
    can see that various aspects of today's social and cultural context
    are not very different from what they were then.

    A primary and fundamental fact to bear in mind is the relationship
    between the milieu in which Paul was born and raised and the
    global context to which he later belonged. He came from a very
    precise and circumscribed culture, indisputably a minority, which is
    that of the People of Israel and its tradition. In the ancient world and
    especially in the Roman Empire, as scholars in the subject teach
    us, Jews must have accounted for about 10 percent of the total
    population; later, here in Rome, towards the middle of the first
    century, this percentage was even lower, amounting to three
    percent of the city's inhabitants at most. Their beliefs and way of
    life, is still the case today, distinguished them clearly from the
    surrounding environment; and this could have two results: either
    derision, that could lead to intolerance, or admiration which was
    expressed in various forms of sympathy, as in the case of the "God-
    fearing" or "proselytes", pagans who became members of the
    Synagogue and who shared the faith in the God of Israel. As
    concrete examples of this dual attitude we can mention on the one
    hand the cutting opinion of an orator such as Cicero who despised
    their religion and even the city of Jerusalem (cf. Pro Flacco, 66-69)
    and, on the other, the attitude of Nero's wife, Poppea, who is
    remembered by Flavius Josephus as a "sympathizer" of the Jews
    (cf. Antichità giudaiche 20, 195, 252); Vita 16), not to mention that
    Julius Caesar had already officially recognized specific rights of
    the Jews which have been recorded by the above-mentioned
    Jewish historian Flavius Josephus (cf. ibid., 14,200-216). It is
    certain that the number of Jews, as, moreover, is still the case
    today, was far greater outside the land of Israel, that is, in the
    Diaspora, than in the territory that others called Palestine.

    It is not surprising, therefore, that Paul himself was the object of the
    dual contradictory assessment that I mentioned. One thing is
    certain: the particularism of the Judaic culture and religion easily
    found room in an institution as far-reaching as the Roman Empire.
    Those who would adhere with faith to the Person of Jesus of
    Nazareth, Jew or Gentile, were in the more difficult and troubled
    position, to the extent to which they were to distinguish themselves
    from both Judaism and the prevalent paganism. In any case, two
    factors were in Paul's favour. The first was the Greek, or rather
    Hellenistic, culture which after Alexander the Great had become a
    common heritage, at least of the Eastern Mediterranean and of the
    Middle East, and had even absorbed many elements of peoples
    traditionally considered barbarian. One writer of the time says in
    this regard that Alexander "ordered that all should consider the
    entire oecumene as their homeland... and that a distinction should
    no longer be made between Greek and barbarian" (Plutarch, De
    Alexandri Magni fortuna aut virtute, 6, 8). The second factor was
    the political and administrative structure of the Roman Empire
    which guaranteed peace and stability from Britain as far as
    southern Egypt, unifying a territory of previously unheard of
    dimensions. It was possible to move with sufficient freedom and
    safety in this space, making use, among other things, of an
    extraordinary network of roads and finding at every point of arrival
    basic cultural characteristics which, without affecting local values,
    nonetheless represented a common fabric of unification super
    partes, so that the Jewish philosopher, Philo of Alexandria, a
    contemporary of Paul himself, praised the Emperor Augustus for
    "composing in harmony all the savage peoples, making himself the
    guardian of peace" (Legatio ad Caium, 146-147).

    There is no doubt that the universalist vision characteristic of St
    Paul's personality, at least of the Christian Paul after the event on
    the road to Damascus, owes its basic impact to faith in Jesus
    Christ, since the figure of the Risen One was by this time situated
    beyond any particularistic narrowness. Indeed, for the Apostle
    "there is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free,
    there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus"
    (Gal 3: 28). Yet, even the historical and cultural situation of his time
    and milieu could not but have had an influence on his decisions
    and his work. Some have defined Paul as "a man of three
    cultures", taking into account his Jewish background, his Greek
    tongue and his prerogative as a "civis romanus [Roman citizen], as
    the name of Latin origin suggests. Particularly the Stoic philosophy
    dominant in Paul's time which influenced Christianity, even if only
    marginally, should be recalled. Concerning this, we cannot gloss
    over certain names of Stoic philosophers such as those of its
    founders, Zeno and Cleanthes, and then those closer to Paul in
    time such as Seneca, Musonius and Epictetus: in them the loftiest
    values of humanity and wisdom are found which were naturally to
    be absorbed by Christianity. As one student of the subject
    splendidly wrote, "Stoicism... announced a new ideal, which
    imposed upon man obligations to his peers, but at the same time
    set him free from all physical and national ties, and made of him a
    purely spiritual being" (M. Pohlenz, La Stoa, I, Florence, 2, 1978,
    pp. 565 f.). One thinks, for example, of the doctrine of the universe
    understood as a single great harmonious body and consequently
    of the doctrine of equality among all people without social
    distinctions, of the equivalence, at least in principle, of men and
    women, and then of the ideal of frugality, of the just measure and
    self-control to avoid all excesses. When Paul wrote to the
    Philippians, "Whatever is true, whatever is honourable, whatever is
    just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if
    there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think
    about these things" (Phil 4: 8), he was only taking up a purely
    humanistic concept proper to that philosophical wisdom.

    In St Paul's time a crisis of traditional religion was taking place, at
    least in its mythological and even civil aspects. After Lucretius had
    already ruled polemically a century earlier that "religion has led to
    many misdeeds" (De rerum natura, 1, 101, On the Nature of
    Things), a philosopher such as Seneca, going far beyond any
    external ritualism, taught that "God is close to you, he is with you,
    he is within you" (Epistulae morales to Lucilius, 41, 1). Similarly,
    when Paul addresses an audience of Epicurean philosophers and
    Stoics in the Areopagus of Athens, he literally says: "God does not
    live in shrines made by man,... for in him we live and move and
    have our being" (Acts 17: 24, 28). In saying this he certainly re-
    echoes the Judaic faith in a God who cannot be represented in
    anthropomorphic terms and even places himself on a religious
    wavelength that his listeners knew well. We must also take into
    account the fact that many pagan cults dispensed with the official
    temples of the town and made use of private places that favoured
    the initiation of their followers. It is therefore not surprising that
    Christian gatherings (ekklesiai) as Paul's Letters attest, also took
    place in private homes. At that time, moreover, there were not yet
    any public buildings. Therefore Christian assemblies must have
    appeared to Paul's contemporaries as a simple variation of their
    most intimate religious practice. Yet the differences between
    pagan cults and Christian worship are not negligible and regard
    the participants' awareness of their identity as well as the
    participation in common of men and women, the celebration of the
    "Lord's Supper", and the reading of the Scriptures.

    In conclusion, from this brief over-view of the cultural context of the
    first century of the Christian era, it is clear that it is impossible to
    understand St Paul properly without placing him against both the
    Judaic and pagan background of his time. Thus he grows in
    historical and spiritual stature, revealing both sharing and
    originality in comparison with the surrounding environment.
    However, this applies likewise to Christianity in general, of which
    the Apostle Paul, precisely, is a paradigm of the highest order from
    whom we all, always, still have much to learn. And this is the goal of
    the Pauline Year: to learn from St Paul, to learn faith, to learn
    Christ, and finally to learn the way of upright living.
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    © Copyright 2008 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
Web Site Designed & Copyrighted  2008 By Robert Frederico Internet
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