Smithsonian Report, 1948.—Metzger PLATE 6 
SY AO ary if 
“PY hey COMA « Re a RE 
ute 4 aoe 
y C3 OE Gl oy PL RMWA PR Y vo Y KCATAYS 
‘ 
a & Hear PT We o* Tyce Cyt 1 Oo 9- YOAL GDA 
EN p24 ertE sous Male Y tc EPS Hep OooON 
6? at 1 Ni APY CBD OTTO FU ar S3 Roy PLT KS 
ENMITH Yo ¥ AAT» 
Depoy ean Ev tt POCRee yoo Ay pert 
ATYWM PENN TAS YR AERIKAER Oa G97 TP 
site Renal 2 
YY MAC ATAREAHRATOCSY, OMS OO THOEPH 
TAH CLE TRTTAN TE y RUG AE BE 
PIs v VAC CTHPRE TSAR KAT OF ee vy ATT : RIAKE 
oe KA TTIRHPY PUA} EY XPY RCRA OR ae 
Ary TM OTHE 2G OC} okbare Aree spere chet 
PK EES Or “RAM SPROEEM TOS ya ha kgarree = . 
rAd wired wen as tet, FDS LT A, ae u 
ATOR ay Oy Coy Teco Ie Or Ben oF aa 
ees 
ee 
‘ 
Ty dtDAeS OM Parw pus CHEK OC Won ee: at ee 7 al 
Wy PY ite) eS OS OP Tye A ce tas 
DIL EOP MEECEH IST SS 7, oe mee Roa al 
Pate perecaton Suni “y. ey ere ad 
LOM TREE KKHUACT ROEM 
TT Pet RES NCOEEN KB - ae 
a ADR OTH Y SN dd HY E45 
PET PATINOT tke PAPO 
ETL Che he 
A leaf from the earliest known copy of Paul’s Epistles, the Chester Beatty Biblical Papyrus IT (P 46), dat- 
ing from the early part of the third century. This leaf contains the text of Romans 15:30-33: 16:1-3, a 
sequence not found in any other witness. The horizontal lines extending over groups of two or three- 
letters mark the customary contractions of the nomina sacra, that is, the names of the deity and similar 
words. (From H. A. Sanders, A Third-Century Papyrus Codex of the Epistles of Paul, facing D. 35; 
University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 1933.) 
