Blog 1 – Finike, Turkey, Aug. 25, 2012
Welcome to the first of about fifteen Paul Blogs (or “Plogs”). I’ve resolved to write one each week during this fall sabbatical. There are many reasons people write blogs, I suppose, but I may be one of the few who are doing this in order to keep from going crazy from sheer isolation.

As on the first sabbatical, I am living aboard SailingActs, but rather than voyaging the routes of Paul with Janet, I will spend almost the entire time in the Finike marina. This is deliberate. The sabbatical research project is called “Ports of Paul” and Dr. Mark Wilson, director of the Asia Minor Research Center in Antalya, Turkey and I are working together with the goal of understanding and describing all of the ports mentioned in Acts. And not only the ports, but the people who lived in them, who traveled through them. We want to focus on the system of Mediterranean connections, and how these connections shaped the people who used them. And by doing so, we want to better understand Paul and the Acts story.

Its been ten days since I arrived in Antalya on Turkish Airlines. I then took the two-hour dolmus ride south along the magnificent, rugged Lycian coast to Finike, walked to the marina from the bus station and boarded SailingActs. I am home! But in those ten days, I’ve become closely acquainted with isolation in a way quite different from my previous 61 years of living closely with others.

The isolation is deliberate. I want to experience just a little of what it is like, for about two months, to live like Paul did during some of his journeys. Paul was either fully engaged with others or was isolated. It seems that during the times of Paul’s enforced isolation, drifting aboard a ship on a windless day, in prison, waiting in port cities for the next cargo ship, it was during these times that Paul thought and wrote.

Working aboard SailingActs

Isolation for Paul then, and for me now means:

– being confined to a very small space day after day
– living in a port city with no other Christians in the area
– having no interruptions. This seems like a luxury, but after two days, it becomes clear that self-generated interruption, eg. being distracted, is worse because there is no one to blame, no excuses for not achieving your goals that day
– no wife present to share and celebrate with, who balances, cautions, critiques and grounds their spouse.
– a sharp and dramatic contrast from being with others 24/7 to being alone. I had been traveling in the Middle East with students and friends for the previous six months on cross-cultural study.

During the next two months, I will also do some field research which includes on-site exploration of several of the most isolated and well preserved first century harbors mentioned in Acts. These include Patara, Andriake, and the recently identified harbor of Perge. I plan to take the dingy into the silted-in, swamp-like areas in order to view the Roman ruins on shore from a first-century sea-traveler’s perspective. I’ll share some of the photos when this happens.

Equipment for exploring the ports of Paul

There is another reason I want to blog during this time. There is so much that we do not know about Paul and what it was like to live as a follower of Jesus in the Roman Empire. There are hints in Acts and in the Epistles, but we use our imagination to fill in the gaps. Each week I would like to throw out questions and ideas for you to consider and respond to. Because, as you might imagine, even crazy ideas can seem entirely rational to someone in isolation. Your responses will help develop and test ideas.

Question for fun: Let’s say Paul lived to be about my age now, 62. How many years of Paul’s life were spent in port cities and on ships, that is, either on or close to the Mediterranean Sea? (I define a port city as a city on are near a good harbor, with “near” meaning less than a day away by river or road.) Leave a comment or send me an email with your estimate at stutzmal@emu.edu. I’m currently researching this and will mention the “winner” in next week’s blog.

7 Comments

  1. Hi, Linford, you are the guru of experiential education, and you walk your talk! I recommend that you read The Way of the Pilgrim on the boat when you are alone. I think you will find your heart strangely warmed. You can also visit me at my blog if you are desperate for company some day. Don’t forget to check out the post I wrote about going with you and Janet to Greece and Turkey this summer. An unforgettable trip. I am still in the process of going through Paul’s letters. They live for me in a new way. Also, here’s another blog post from Christian Century. Paul kept learning and growing!http://www.christiancentury.org/blogs/archive/2011-11/everybody-gets-grow-and-change#comments

    Will try to check in on you from time to time.

    I know you must be missing people, especially Janet!

  2. Thanks Shirley! I do visit your blog all the time, even when I’m not all that desperate. I like your thoughtful commentary and questions for reflection. Thanks for the link and the book suggestion. I’ve checked out both, but I am not sure which of the several The Way of the Pilgrim books you are recommending. If the one you recommend is available on Kindle I’ll get it to read on the boat.

  3. Glenn W.Nofziger II

    Well, it’s estimated that Paul traveled some 10,000 miles, and was that primarily by see? And is it a good guess that he started his missionary journeys when he was in his mid thirties? Of that twenty to twenty-five years of ministry as a follower of Jesus, let’s say he spent fifteen to twenty years in port cities. However, his longest stays in any one port were like 2 years in Ephesis and 18 months in his first visit to Corinth. So, final answer is 16 years!

  4. Good thinking. As I am at this moment painstakingly calculating each recorded travel using the best data available (and a little guestimation) I’ll post my conclusion in the next blog and see how close you are. (Paul wasn’t on Ipek A.)

  5. Glenn W.Nofziger II

    Talked with Paul Lehman yesterday at the cross cultural send off and he said that his ss class is going to be going through Sailing Acts this quarter. I told him about With Paul at Sea and what you are doing now with Paul in Ports. They were hoping to have you come and share in their class but they may have to settle with me sharing about my experience with you.

  6. Well, Linford, I’ve tried to find an educated guess on the number of years that Paul was on a boat or port city and I’m going to say 17 years.

  7. Linford, it doesn’t matter much which translation you choose. I’d go with any that have good reviews and are on Kindle. Here’s another book that made me think about you. Highly recommend the blog, also. http://www.femonite.com/2012/08/13/book-review-revelation-in-the-cave/