Apostle Paul’s remains authenticated, pope says

Apostle Paul’s remains authenticated, pope says

VATICAN CITY — The Roman Catholic Church’s Year of St. Paul ended with a flourish June 28 as Pope Benedict XVI announced that scientists had authenticated the first-century saint’s earthly remains under a church in Rome.

Carbon testing of bone fragments in a sarcophagus beneath the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls, along with the presence of incense grains and purple linen laminated with pure gold, “seems to confirm the unanimous and undisputed tradition according to which these are the mortal remains of the apostle Paul,” the pope said.

“All this fills our souls with profound emotion,” he added.

The pope spoke at a vespers service to mark the end of a yearlong celebration honoring the “apostle of the Gentiles,” who was martyred in Rome around the year A.D. 65.

Archaeologists excavated the fourth-century sarcophagus, which had been covered up after a fire in 1823, in response to demand from the many pilgrims who flocked there during 2000.

The pope’s statement came a day after the official Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, reported the discovery of the

earliest-known image of Paul, a fourth-century fresco in the tomb of St. Tecla, also in Rome. In the fresco, the saint appears as a bald man with a black beard, prominent nose and furrowed brow, his lean oval face surrounded by a golden halo.