St.
Paul and Seneca
Correspondence
Between Paul and Seneca, A.D. 61-65
By Paul Berry
ISBN
0-7734-8166-4
$69.95,
160 pages hardbound, 1999
Edwin Mellen Press, 415 Ridge St., P.O. Box 450, Lewiston, NY 14092-0450
Modern
archaeology and philology have consistently upheld the position
of Latin in the Roman Church from the first century. (Previously,
it was thought that Greek was pre-eminent in the early Church.)
Paul
Berry gave us an excellent monograph, The
Christian Inscription at Pompeii,
from the same press in 1995. In that previous monograph, he demonstrated,
through archaeology at Pompeii, that Latin was already being used
in the Christian liturgy at or before the time of the eruption of
Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79.
Berry
has now followed up that work with one on The
Correspondence Between
Paul and Seneca, A.D. 61-65.
Latinists have, of course, known of this correspondence, but the
liberal scholars of recent centuries have tended
to dismiss it as probably spurious. A new school of modern scholars,
like Berry, are once again arguing for their authenticity, which,
if granted, provides strong proof that St. Paul was as articulate
in the language of the Caesars as he was in that of Pericles.
Berry
is a strong scholarly advocate of the position that the primary
language of Christianity in Italy was not Greek, even from the Apostolic
Age, but Latin. In this, he confirms the contentions of one of the
Traditional Latin Mass’s greatest historians and rubricists, Adrian
Fortescue.
After
a introduction that summarizes forcefully the evidence for the primacy
of Latin in the Apostolic Age, Berry presents each of the letters,
eight from Seneca to St. Paul and six from St. Paul to Seneca. First
he gives an architectural facsimile from the original 9th-century
copies in the State Library of Vienna, written in a quite legible
Carolingian hand.
Then
he gives a facing transcription in modern type, together with a
suggested translation, followed by copious commentary on the content.
When
St. Paul was barely known as an itinerant preacher, the Roman philosopher
Seneca was the leading figure not only in the world of philosophy
and literature, but in government, as he was the principal advisor
to the young Nero.
Seneca,
one of the leading Stoics, was highly regarded by early Christian
thinkers Tertullian,
St. Jerome, and St. Augustine, among others and his Roman Stoicism
undoubtedly helped to form the intellectual basis of Christian philosophy
and theology.
That
the world’s greatest philosopher at the time and the Christian faith’s
greatest Apostle should have had an exchange of thought while the
Apostle was in Rome, eventually to be martyred there, is a truly
watershed event.
Those
with a basic familiarity of the Latin language should be able to
handle the original fairly well (although the commentary is not
grammatical in nature). The Latin style is that of the Silver Age,
the century or so after the Golden Age authors like Julius Caesar
and Cicero, which are those usually studied in the schools.
Unfortunately,
the brilliance and depth of Seneca is usually held off in colleges
and universities until upper division or graduate studies.
However,
there is no need to do this. Seneca’s style, though a bit terser
than the earlier classics, is certainly approachable, and indeed
delightful.
How
better to take pleasure in your knowledge of the Immortal Language
than through this unique set of letters exchanged between the leading
philosopher of the time and the leading Apostle?
From
Traditio, the Traditional
Roman Catholic Internet Site
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