Pope Benedict XVI to Receive Copy of Pauline Codex
(January 25, 2010) A 424-page "Codex Pauli" that honours the Apostle to the Gentiles
with illustrations and writings in the spirit of the ancient monastic codices is to
be presented to Pope Benedict XVI. Benedictine Abbot Edmund Power is to present the
volume to the Pope on Monday at the closing vespers for Christian Unity, which is
traditionally held at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls. The "Codex Pauli"
includes original contributions from the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, Bartholomew
I; Patriarch Kirill of Moscow; Gregorios III Laham, patriarch of Antioch for the Greek
Melkite Church; and Anglican Archbishop Rowan Williams. In his contribution, Bartholomew
I wrote: "For St. Paul, unity on the one hand, and ecumenism on the other, are at
the same time either virtues to which we should aspire, or gifts that come from on
high. Moreover, the concepts of unity and ecumenism are not simply metaphorical, but
ontological in content." For Patriarch Kirill, "making himself imitator of the Apostle
to the Gentiles, the Christian is called to be a living image of the Lord and thus
help the modern world to receive with faith and hope the Word of God." Gregorios III
Laham wrote: "May all men of the world be able to walk on the road of Damascus, so
that the world will change and men will be able to pass from darkness to light, from
sin to justice, from persecution to love, from violence to goodness, from terrorism
to solidarity, from fundamentalism to openness and from the spirit of revenge to sentiments
that St. Paul expressed to have the thoughts and attitudes that are in Jesus Christ.”
"The apostle's mission, as Paul understood it, is to point beyond his own individual
concern, to give space to the maturation of his 'children,' so that they also can
learn and point beyond themselves, in love at a dear price, and thus express the fullness
of Christ, whose rejection and crucifixion, as the Gospel says, are not only the foundation
but the corner stone of the new temple, his Body, his Church." Only 998 copies of
the volume have been created. A special font, called "Paulus 2008," was designed for
the work, which mirrors the handwriting of the scribe who copied the 9th century Carolingian
Bible.