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ST. JEROME
THE LETTERS
LETTER I
TO INNOCENT
Not only the first of the letters but probably the earliest extant composition
of Jerome (c. 370 A. D.). Innocent, to whom it is addressed, was one of the
little band of enthusiasts whom Jerome gathered round him in Aquileia. He followed
his friend to Syria, where he died in 374 A.D. (See Letter III., 3.)
1. You have frequently asked me, dearest Innocent, not to pass over in silence
the marvellous event which has happened in our own day. I have declined the
task from modesty and, as I now feel, with justice, believing myself to be
incapable of it, at once because bureau language is inadequate to the divine
praise, and because inactivity, acting like rust upon the intellect, has dried
up any little power of expression that I have ever had. You in reply urge that
in the things of God we must look not at the work which we are able to accomplish,
but at the spirit in which it is undertaken, and that he can never be at a
loss for words who has believed on the Word.
2. What,
then, must I do? The task is beyond me, and yet I dare not decline it. I
am a mere unskilled
passenger,
and I find myself placed in charge of
a freighted ship. I have not so much as handled a rowboat on a lake, and now
I have to trust myself to the noise and turmoil of the Euxine. I see the shores
sinking beneath the horizon, "sky and sea on every side";(1) darkness
lowers over the water, the clouds are black as night, the waves only are white
with foam. You urge me to hoist the swelling sails, to loosen the sheets, and
to take the helm. At last I obey your commands, and as charity can do all things,
I will trust in the Holy Ghost to guide my course, and I shall console myself,
whatever the event. For, if our ship is wafted by the surf into the wished-for
haven, I shall be content to be told that the pilotage was poor. But, if through
my unpolished diction we run aground amid the rough cross-currents of language,
you may blame my lack of power, but you will at least recognize my good intentions.
3. To
begin, then: Vercellae is a Ligurian town, situated not far from the base
of the Alps, once important,
but now sparsely peopled and fallen into
decay. When the consular(1) was holding his visitation there, a poor woman
and her paramour were brought before him--the charge of adultery had been fastened
upon them by the husband--and were both consigned to the penal horrors of a
prison. Shortly after an attempt was made to elicit the truth by torture, and
when the blood-stained hook smote the young man's livid flesh and tore furrows
in his side, the unhappy wretch sought to avoid prolonged pain by a speedy
death. Falsely accusing his own passions, he involved another in the charge;
and it appeared that he was of all men the most miserable, and that his execution
was just inasmuch as he had left to an innocent woman no means of self-defence.
But the woman, stronger in virtue if weaker in sex, though her frame was stretched
upon the rack, and though her hands, stained with the filth of the prison,
were tied behind her, looked up to heaven with her eyes, which alone the torturer
had been unable to bind, and while the tears rolled down her face, said: "Thou
art witness, Lord Jesus, to whom nothing is hid, who triest the reins and the
heart.(2) Thou art witness that it is not to save my life that I deny this
charge. I refuse to lie because to lie is sin. And as for you, unhappy man,
if you are bent on hastening your death, why must you destroy not one innocent
person, but two? I also, myself, desire to die. I desire to put off this hated
body, but not as an adulteress. I offer my neck; I welcome the shining sword
without fear; yet I will take my innocence with me. He does not die who is
slain while purposing so to live."
4. The consular, who had been feasting his eyes upon the bloody spectacle,
now, like a wild beast, which after once tasting blood always thirsts for it,
ordered the torture to be doubled, and cruelly gnashing his teeth, threatened
the executioner with like punishment if he failed to extort from the weaker
sex a confession which a man's strength had not been able to keep back.
5. Send help, Lord Jesus. For this one creature of Thine every species of
torture is devised. She is bound by the hair to a stake, her whole body is
fixed more firmly than ever on the rack; fire is brought and applied to her
feet; her sides quiver beneath the executioner's probe; even her breasts do
not escape. Still the woman remains unshaken; and, triumphing in spirit over
the pain of the body, enjoys the happiness of a good conscience, round which
the tortures rage in vain.(1) The cruel judge rises, overcome with passion.
She still prays to God. Her limbs are wrenched from their sockets she only
turns her eyes to heaven. Another confesses what is thought their common guilt.
She, for the confessor's sake, denies the confession, and, in peril of her
own life, clears one who is in peril of his.
6. Meantime
she has but one thing to say "Beat me, burn me, tear me,
if you will; I have not done it. If you will not believe my words, a day will
come when this charge shall be carefully sifted. I have One who will judge
me." Wearied out at last, the torturer sighed in response to her groans;
nor could he find a spot on which to inflict a fresh wound. His cruelty overcome,
he shuddered to see the body he had torn. Immediately the consular cried, in
a fit of passion, "Why does it surprise you, bystanders, that a woman
prefers torture to death? It takes two people, most assuredly, to commit adultery;
and I think it more credible that a guilty woman should deny a sin than that
an innocent young man should confess one."
7. Like
sentence, accordingly, was passed on both, and the condemned pair were dragged
to execution. The
entire people poured out to see the sight; indeed,
so closely were the gates thronged by the out-rushing crowd, that you might
have fancied the city itself to be migrating. At the very first stroke of the
sword the head of the hapless youth was cut off, and the headless trunk rolled
over in its blood. Then came the woman's turn. She knelt down upon the ground,
and the shining sword was lifted over her quivering neck. But though the headsman
summoned all his strength into his bared arm, the moment it touched her flesh
the fatal blade stopped short, and, lightly glancing over the skin, merely
grazed it sufficiently to draw blood. The striker saw, with terror, his hand
unnerved, and, amazed at his defeated skill and at his drooping sword, he whirled
it aloft for another stroke. Again the blade fell forceless on the woman, sinking
harmlessly on her neck, as though the steel feared to touch her. The enraged
and panting officer, who had thrown open his cloak at the neck to give his
full strength to the blow, shook to the ground the brooch which clasped the
edges of his mantle, and not noticing this, began to poise his sword for a
fresh stroke. "See," cried the woman, "a jewel has fallen from
your shoulder. Pick up what you have earned by hard toil, that you may not
lose it."
8. What, I ask, is the secret of such confidence as this? Death draws near,
but it has no terrors for her. When smitten she exults, and the executioner
turns pale. Her eyes see the brooch, they fail to see the sword. And, as if
intrepidity in the presence of death were not enough, she confers a favor upon
her cruel foe. And now the mysterious Power of the Trinity rendered even a
third blow vain. The terrified soldier, no longer trusting the blade, proceeded
to apply the point to her throat, in the idea that though it might not cut,
the pressure of his hand might plunge it into her flesh. Marvel unheard of
through all the ages! The sword bent back to the hilt, and in its defeat looked
to its master, as if confessing its inability to slay.
9. Let me call to my aid the example of the three children,(1) who, amid the
cool, encircling fire, sang hymns,(2) instead of weeping, and around whose
turbans and holy hair the flames played harmlessly. Let me recall, too, the
story of the blessed Daniel,(3) in whose presence, though he was their natural
prey, the lions crouched, with fawning tails and frightened mouths. Let Susannah
also rise in the nobility of her faith before the thoughts of all; who, after
she had been condemned by an unjust sentence, was saved through a youth inspired
by the Holy Ghost.(4) In both cases the Lord's mercy was alike shewn; for while
Susannah was set free by the judge, so as not to die by the sword, this woman,
though condemned by the judge, was acquitted by the sword.
10. Now at length the populace rise in arms to defend the woman. Men and women
of every age join in driving away the executioner, shouting round him in a
surging crowd. Hardly a man dares trust his own eyes. The disquieting news
reaches the city close at hand, and the entire force of constables is mustered.
The officer who is responsible for the execution of criminals bursts from among
his men, and,
Staining
his hoary hair with soiling dust, exclaims: "What! citizens,
do you mean to seek my life? Do you intend to make me a substitute for her?
However much your minds are set on mercy, and however much you wish to save
a condemned woman, yet assuredly I--I who am innocent--ought not to perish." His
tearful appeal tells upon the crowd, they are all benumbed by the influence
of sorrow, and an extraordinary change of feeling is manifested. Before it
had seemed a duty to plead for the woman's life, now it seemed a duty to allow
her to be executed.
11. Accordingly a new sword is fetched, a new headsman appointed. The victim
takes her place, once more strengthened only with the favor of Christ. The
first blow makes her quiver, beneath the second she sways to and fro, by the
third she falls wounded to the ground. Oh, majesty of the divine power highly
to be extolled! She who previously had received four strokes without injury,
now, a few moments later, seems to die that an innocent man may not perish
in her stead.
12. Those
of the clergy whose duty it is to wrap the blood-stained corpse in a winding-sheet,
dig
out the earth
and, heaping together stones, form the
customary tomb. The sunset comes on quickly, and by God's mercy the night of
nature arrives more swiftly than is its wont. Suddenly the woman's bosom heaves,
her eyes seek the light, her body is quickened into new life. A moment after
she sighs, she looks round, she gets up and speaks. At last she is able to
cry: "The Lord is on my side; I will not fear. What can man do unto me?"(2)
13. Meantime
an aged woman, supported out of the funds of the church, gave back her spirit
to heaven
from which
it came.(3) It seemed as if the course
of events had been thus purposely ordered, for her body took the place of the
other beneath the mound. In the gray dawn the devil comes on the scene in the
form of a constable,(1) asks for the corpse of her who had been slain, and
desires to have her grave pointed out to him. Surprised that she could have
died, he fancies her to be still alive. The clergy show him the fresh turf,
and meet his demands by pointing to the earth lately heaped up, taunting him
with such words as these: "Yes, of course, tear up the bones which have
been buried! Declare war anew against the tomb, and if even that does not satisfy
you, pluck her limb from limb for birds and beasts to mangle! Mere dying is
too good for one whom it took seven strokes to kill."
14. Before such opprobrious words the executioner retires in confusion, while
the woman is secretly revived at home. Then, lest the frequency of the doctor's
visits to the church might give occasion for suspicion, they cut her hair short
and send her in the company of some virgins to a sequestered country house.
There she changes her dress for that of a man, and scars form over her wounds.
Yet even after the great miracles worked on her behalf, the laws still rage
against her. So true is it that, where there is most law, there, there is also
most injustice.(2)
15. But now see whither the progress of my story has brought me; we come upon
the name of our friend Evagrius.(3) So great have his exertions been in the
cause of Christ that, were I to suppose it possible adequately to describe
them, I should only show my own folly; and were I minded deliberately to pass
them by, I still could not prevent my voice from breaking out into cries of
joy. Who can fittingly praise the vigilance which enabled him to bury, if I
may so say, before his death Auxentius(4) of Milan, that curse brooding over
the church? Or who can sufficiently extol the discretion with which he rescued
the Roman bishop(5) from the toils of the net in which he was fairly entangled,
and showed him the means at once of overcoming his opponents and of sparing
them in their discomfiture? But
Such topics I must leave to other bards,
Shut out by envious straits of time and space.(6)
I am satisfied now to record the conclusion of my tale. Evagrius seeks a special
audience of the Emperor;(1) importunes him with his entreaties, wins his favor
by his services, and finally gains his cause through his earnestness. The Emperor
restored to liberty the woman whom God had restored to life.
LETTER II.
TO THEODOSIUS AND THE REST OF THE ANCHORITES.
Written from Antioch, 374 A.D., while Jerome was still in doubt as to his
future course. Theodosius appears to have been the head of the solitaries in
the Syrian Desert.
How I long to be a member of your company, and with uplifting of all my powers
to embrace your admirable community! Though, indeed, these poor eyes are not
worthy to look upon it. Oh! that I could behold the desert, lovelier to me
than any city! Oh! that I could see those lonely spots made into a paradise
by the saints that throng them! But since my sins prevent me from thrusting
into your blessed company a head laden with every transgression, I adjure you
(and I know that you can do it) by your prayers to deliver me from the darkness
of this world. I spoke of this when I was with you, and now in writing to you
I repeat anew the same request; for all the energy of my mind is devoted to
this one object. It rests with you to give effect to my resolve. I have the
will but not the power; this last can only come in answer to your prayers.
For my part, I am like a sick sheep astray from the flock. Unless the good
Shepherd shall place me on his shoulders and carry me back to the fold,(2)
my steps will totter, and in the very effort of rising I shall find my feet
give way. I am the prodigal son(3) who although I have squandered all the portion
entrusted to me by my father, have not yet bowed the knee in submission to
him; not yet have I commenced to put away from me the allurements of my former
excesses. And because it is only a little while since I have begun not so much
to abandon my vices as to desire to abandon them, the devil now ensnares me
in new toils, he puts new stumbling-blocks in my path, be encompasses me on
every side.
The seas around, and all around the main.(4)
I find myself in mid-ocean, unwilling to retreat and unable to advance. It
only remains that your prayers should win for me the gale of the Holy Spirit
to waft me to the haven upon the desired shore.
LETTER III.
TO RUFINUS THE MONK.(1)
Written from Antioch, 374 A.D., to Rufinus in Egypt. Jerome narrates his travels
and the events which have taken place since his arrival in Syria, particularly
the deaths of Innocent and Hylas ( 3). He also describes the life of Bonosus,
who was now a hermit on an island in the Adriatic ( 4). The main object of
the letter is to induce Rufinus to come to Syria.
1. That
God gives more than we ask Him for,(2) and that He often grants us things
which "eye hath not seen nor ear heard, neither have they entered
into the heart of man,"(3) I knew indeed before from the mystic declaration
of the sacred volumes; but now, dearest Rufinus, I have had proof of it in
my own case. For I who fancied it too bold a wish to be allowed by an exchange
of letters to counterfeit to myself your presence in the flesh, hear that you
are penetrating the remotest parts of Egypt, visiting the monks and going round
God's family upon earth. Oh, if only the Lord Jesus Christ would suddenly transport
me to you as Philip was transported to the eunuch,(4) and Habakkuk to Daniel,(5)
with what a close embrace would I clasp your neck, how fondly would I press
kisses upon that mouth which has so often joined with me of old in error or
in wisdom. But as I am unworthy (not that you should so come to me but) that
I should so come to you, and because my poor body, weak even when well, has
been shattered by frequent illnesses; I send this letter to meet you instead
of coming myself, in the hope that it may bring you hither to me caught in
the meshes of love's net.
2. My
first joy at such unexpected good tidings was due to our brother, Heliodorus.
I desired to
be sure of
it, but did not dare to feel sure, especially as he
told me that he had only heard it from some one else, and as the strangeness
of the news impaired the credit of the story. Once more my wishes hovered in
uncertainty and my mind wavered, till an Alexandrian monk who had some time
previously been sent over by the dutiful zeal of the people to the Egyptian
confessors (in will already martyrs(6)), impelled me by his presence to believe
the tidings. Even then, I must admit I still hesitated. For on the one hand
he knew nothing either of your name or country: yet on the other what he said
seemed likely to be true, agreeing as it did with the hint which had already
reached me. At last the truth broke upon me in all its fulness, for a constant
stream of persons passing through brought the report: "Rufinus is at Nitria,
and has reached the abode of the blessed Macarius."(1) At this point I
cast away all that restrained my belief, and then first really grieved to find
myself ill. Had it not been that my wasted and enfeebled frame lettered my
movements, neither the summer heat nor the dangerous voyage should have had
power to retard the rapid steps of affection. Believe me, brother, I look forward
to seeing you more than the storm-tossed mariner looks for his haven, more
than the thirsty fields long for the showers, more than the anxious mother
sitting on the curving shore expects her son.
3. After that sudden whirlwind(2) dragged me from your side, severing with
its impious wrench the bonds of affection in which we were knit together,
The dark blue raincloud lowered o'er my head:
On all sides were the seas, on all the sky.(3)
I wandered about, uncertain where to go. Thrace, Pontus, Bithynia, the whole
of Galatia and Cappadocia, Cilicia also with its burning heat, one after another
shattered my energies. At last Syria presented itself to me as a most secure
harbor to a shipwrecked man. Here, after undergoing every possible kind of
sickness, I lost one of my two eyes; for Innocent,(4) the half of my soul,
(5) was taken away from me by a sudden attack of fever. The one eye which I
now enjoy, and which is all in all to me, is our Evagrius,(6) upon whom I with
my constant infirmities have come as an additional burden. We had with us also
Hylas,(7) the servant of the holy Melanium,(8) who by his stainless conduct
had wiped out the taint of his previous servitude. His death opened afresh
the wound which had not yet healed. But as the apostle's words forbid us to
mourn for those who sleep,(9) and as my excess of grief has been tempered by
the joyful news that has since come to me, I recount this last, that, if you
have not heard it, you may learn it; and that, if you know it already, you
may rejoice over it with me.
4. Bonosus,(1) your friend, or, to speak more truly, mine as well as yours,
is now climbing the ladder foreshown in Jacob's dream.(2) He is bearing his
cross, neither taking thought for the morrow(3) nor looking back at what he
has left.(4) He is sowing in tears that he may reap in joy.(5) As Moses in
a type so he in reality is lifting up the serpent in the wilderness.(6) This
is a true story, and it may well put to shame the lying marvels described by
Greek and Roman pens. For here you have a youth educated with us in the refining
accomplishments of the world, with abundance of wealth, and in rank inferior
to none of his associates; yet he forsakes his mother, his sisters, and his
dearly loved brother, and settles like a new tiller of Eden on a dangerous
island, with the sea roaring round its reefs; while its rough crags, bare rocks,
and desolate aspect make it more terrible still. No peasant or monk is to be
found there. Even the little Onesimus(7) you know of, in whose kisses he used
to rejoice as in those of a brother, in this tremendous solitude no longer
remains at his side. Alone upon the island--or rather not alone, for Christ
is with him--he sees the glory of God, which even the apostles saw not save
in the desert. He beholds, it is true, no embattled towns, but he has enrolled
his name in the new city.(8) Garments of sackcloth disfigure his limbs, yet
so clad he will be the sooner caught up to meet Christ in the clouds.(9) No
watercourse pleasant to the view supplies his wants, but from the Lord's side
he drinks the water of life.(10) Place all this before your eyes, dear friend,
and with all the faculties of your mind picture to yourself the scene. When
you realize the effort of the fighter then you will be able to praise his victory.
Round the entire island roars the frenzied sea, while the beetling crags along
its winding shores resound as the billows beat against them. No grass makes
the ground green; there are no shady copses and no fertile fields. Precipitous
cliffs surround his dreadful abode as if it were a prison. But he, careless,
fearless, and armed from head to foot with the apostle's armor,(11) now listens
to God by reading the Scriptures, now speaks to God as he prays to the Lord;
and it may be that, while he lingers in the island, he sees some vision such
as that once seen by John.(1)
5. What
snares, think you, is the devil now weaving? What stratagems is he preparing?
Perchance,
mindful of
his old trick,(2) he will try to tempt Bonosus
with hunger. But he has been answered already: "Man shall not live by
bread alone."(3) Perchance he will lay before him wealth and fame. But
it shall be said to him: "They that desire to be rich fall into a trap(4)
and temptations,"(5) and "For me all glorying is in Christ."(6)
He will come, it may be, when the limbs are weary with fasting, and rack them
with the pangs of disease; but the cry of the apostle will repel him: "When
I am weak, then am I strong," and "My strength is made perfect in
weakness."(7) He will hold out threats of death; but the reply will be: "I
desire to depart and to be with Christ."(8) He will brandish his fiery
darts, but they will be received on the shield of faith.(9) In a word, Satan
will assail him, but Christ will defend. Thanks be to Thee, Lord Jesus, that
in Thy day I have one able to pray to Thee for me. To Thee all hearts are open,
Thou searchest the secrets of the heart,(10) Thou seest the prophet shut up
in the fish's belly in the midst of the sea.(11) Thou knowest then how he and
I grew up together from tender infancy to vigorous manhood, how we were fostered
in the bosoms of the same nurses, and carried in the arms of the same bearers;
and how after studying together at Rome we lodged in the same house and shared
the same food by the half savage banks of the Rhine. Thou knowest, too, that
it was I who first began to seek to serve Thee. Remember, I beseech Thee, that
this warrior of Thine was once a raw recruit with me. I have before me the
declaration of Thy majesty: "Whosoever shall teach and not do shall be
called least in the kingdom of heaven."(12) May he enjoy the crown of
virtue, and in return for his daily martyrdoms may he follow the Lamb robed
in white raiment!(13) For" in my Father's house are many mansions,"(14)
and "one star differeth from another star in glory."(15) Give me
strength to raise my head to a level with the saints' heels!(16) I willed,
but he performed. Do Thou therefore pardon me that I failed to keep my resolve,
and reward him with the guerdon of his deserts.
I may perhaps have been tedious, and have said more than the short compass
of a letter usually allows; but this, I find, is always the case with me when
I have to say anything in praise of our dear Bonosus.
6. However, to return to the point from which I set out, I beseech you do
not let me pass wholly out of sight and out of mind. A friend is long sought,
hardly found, and with difficulty kept. Let those who will, allow gold to dazzle
them and be borne along in splendor, their very baggage glittering with gold
and silver. Love is not to be purchased, and affection has no price. The friendship
which can cease has never been real. Farewell in Christ.
LETTER IV.
TO FLORENTIUS.
Sent to
Florentius along with the preceding letter, which jerome requests him to
deliver to Rufinus.
This Florentius
was a rich Italian who had retired
to Jerusalem to pursue the monastic life. Jerome subsequently speaks of him
as "a distinguished monk so pitiful to the needy that he was generally
known as the father of the poor." (Chron. ad A.D. 381.)
1. How
much your name and sanctity are on the lips of the most different peoples
you may gather
from the fact
that I commence to love you before I know you.
For as, according to the apostle, "Some men's sins are evident going before
unto judgment,"(1) so contrariwise the report of your charity is so widespread
that it is considered not so much praiseworthy to love you as criminal to refuse
to do so. I pass over the countless instances in which you have supported Christ,(2)
fed, clothed, and visited Him. The aid you rendered to our brother Heliodorus(3)
in his need may well loose the utterance of the dumb. With what gratitude,
with what commendation, does he speak of the kindness with which you smoothed
a pilgrim's path. I am, it is true, the most sluggish of men, consumed by an
unendurable sickness; yet keen affection and desire have winged my feet, and
I have come forward to salute and embrace you. I wish you every good thing,
and pray that the Lord may establish our nascent friendship.
2. Our
brother, Rufinus, is said to have come from Egypt to Jerusalem with the devout
lady, Melanium.
He is
inseparably bound to me in brotherly love;
and I beg you to oblige me by delivering to him the annexed letter. You must
not, however, judge of me by the virtues that you find in him. For in him you
will see the clearest tokens of holiness, whilst I am but dust and vile dirt,
and even now, while still living, nothing but ashes. It is enough for me if
my weak eyes can bear the brightness of his excellence. He has but now washed
himself(1) and is clean, yea, is made white as snow;(2) whilst I, stained with
every sin, wait day and night with trembling to pay the uttermost farthing.(3)
But since "the Lord looseth the prisoners,"(4) and resteth upon him
who is of a contrite spirit, and that trembleth at His words,(5) perchance
he may say even to me who lie in the grave of sin: "Jerome, come forth."(6)
The reverend presbyter, Evagrius, warmly salutes you. We both with united
respect salute the brother, Martinianus.(7) I desire much to see him, but I
am impeded by the chain of sickness. Farewell in Christ.
LETTER V.
TO FLORENTIUS.
Written a few months after the preceding (about the end of 374 A.D.) from
the Syrian Desert. After dilating on his friendship for Florentius, and making
a passing allusion to Rufinus, Jerome mentions certain books copies of which
he desires to be sent to him. He also speaks of a runaway slave about whom
Florentius had written to him.
1. Your letter, dear friend, finds me dwelling in that quarter of the desert
which is nearest to Syria and the Saracens. And the reading of it rekindles
in my mind so keen a desire to set out for Jerusalem that I am almost ready
to violate my monastic vow in order to gratify my affection. Wishing to do
the best I can, as I cannot come in person I send you a letter instead; and
thus, though absent in the body, I come to you in love and in spirit.(8) For
my earnest prayer is that our infant friendship, firmly cemented as it is in
Christ, may never be rent asunder by time or distance. We ought rather to strengthen
the bond by an interchange of letters. Let these pass between us, meet each
other on the way, and converse with us. Affection will not lose much if it
keeps up an intercourse of this kind.
2. You write that our brother, Rufinus, has not yet come to you. Even if he
does come it will do little to satisfy my longing, for I shall not now be able
to see him. He is too far away to come hither, and the conditions of the lonely
life that I have adopted forbid me to go to him. For I am no longer free to
follow my own wishes. I entreat you, therefore, to ask him to allow you to
have the commentaries of the reverend Rhetitius,(1) bishop of Augustodunum,(2)
copied, in which he has so eloquently explained the Song of Songs. A countryman
of the aforesaid brother Rufinus, the old man Paul,(3) writes that Rufinus
has his copy of Tertullian, and urgently requests that this may be returned.
Next I have to ask you to get written on paper by a copyist certain books which
the subjoined list(4) will show you that I do not possess. I beg also that
you will send me the explanation of the Psalms of David, and the copious work
on Synods of the reverend Hilary,(5) which I copied for him(6) at Treves with
my own hand. Such books, you know, must be the food of the Christian soul if
it is to meditate in the law of the Lord day and night.(7)
Others you welcome beneath your roof, you cherish and comfort, you help out
of your own purse; but so far as I am concerned, you have given me everything
when once you have granted my request. And since, through the Lord's bounty,
I am rich in volumes of the sacred library,(8) you may command me in turn.
I will send you what you please; and do not suppose that an order from you
will give me trouble. I have pupils devoted to the art of copying. Nor do I
merely promise a favor because I am asking one. Our brother, Heliodorus,(9)
tells me that there are many parts of the Scriptures which you seek and cannot
find. But even if you have them all, affection is sure to assert its rights
and to seek for itself more than it already has.
3. As
regards the present master of your slave--of whom you have done me the honor
to write--I have
no doubt
but that he is his kidnapper. While I was still
at Antioch the presbyter, Evagrius, often reproved him in my presence. To whom
he made this answer: "I have nothing to fear." He declares that his
master has dismissed him. If you both want him, he is here; send him whither
you will. I think I am not wrong in refusing to allow a runaway to stray farther.
Here in the wilderness I cannot myself execute your orders; and therefore I
have asked my dear friend Evagrius to push the affair vigorously, both for
your sake and for mine. I desire your welfare in Christ.
LETTER VI.
TO JULIAN, A DEACON OF ANTIOCH.
This letter, written in 374 A.D., is chiefly interesting for its mention of
Jerome's sister. It would seem that she had fallen into sin and had been restored
to a life of virtue by the deacon, Julian. Jerome speaks of her again in the
next letter ( 4).
It is
an old saying, "Liars are disbelieved even when they speak the
truth."(1) And from the way in which you reproach me for not having written,
I perceive that this has been my lot with you. Shall I say, "I wrote often,
but the bearers of my letters were negligent"? You will reply, "Your
excuse is the old one of all who fail to write." Shall I say, "I
could not find any one to take my letters"? You will say that numbers
of persons have gone from my part of the world to yours. Shall I contend that
I have actually given them letters? They not having delivered them, will deny
that they have received them. Moreover, so great a distance separates us that
it will be hard to come at the truth. What shall I do then? Though really not
to blame, I ask your forgiveness, for I think it better to fall back and make
overtures for peace than to keep my ground and offer battle. The truth is that
constant sickness of body and vexation of mind have so weakened me that with
death so close at hand I have not been as collected as usual. And lest you
should account this plea a false one, now that I have stated my case, I shall,
like a pleader, call witnesses to prove it. Our reverend brother, Heliodorus,
has been here; but in spite of his wish to dwell in the desert with me, he
has been frightened away by my crimes. But my present wordiness will atone
for my past remissness; for, as Horace says in his satire:(2)
All singers have one fault among their friends:
They never sing when asked, unasked they never cease.
Henceforth
I shall overwhelm you with such bundles of letters that you will take the
opposite line and
beg
me not to write•
I rejoice that my sister(1)--to you a daughter in Christ--remains steadfast
in her purpose, a piece of news which I owe in the first instance to you. For
here where I now am I am ignorant not only as to what goes on in my native
land, but even as to its continued existence. Even though the Iberian viper(2)
shall rend me with his baneful fangs, I will not fear men's judgment, seeing
that I shall have God to judge me. As one puts it:
Shatter the world to fragments if you will:
It will fall upon a head which knows not fear.(3)
Bear in mind, then, I pray you, the apostle's precept(4) that we should make
our work abiding; prepare for yourself a reward from the Lord in my sister's
salvation; and by frequent letters increase my joy in that glory in Christ
which we share together.
LETTER VII.
TO CHROMATIUS, JOVINUS, AND EUSEBIUS.(6)
This letter (written like the preceding in 374 A.D.) is addressed by Jerome
to three of his former companions in the religious life. It commends Bonosus
( 3), asks guidance for the writer's sister (on 4), and attacks the conduct
of Lupicinus, Bishop of Stridon ( 5).
1. Those whom mutual affection has joined together, a written page ought not
to sunder. I must not, therefore, distribute my words some to one and some
to another. For so strong is the love that binds you together that affection
unites all three of you in a bond no less close than that which naturally connects
two of your number.(6) Indeed, if the conditions of writing would only admit
of it, I should amalgamate your names and express them under a single symbol.
The very letter which I have received from you challenges me in each of you
to see all three, and in all three to recognize each. When the reverend Evagrius
transmitted it to me in the corner of the desert which stretches between the
Syrians and the Saracens, my joy was intense. It wholly surpassed the rejoicings
felt at Rome when the defeat of Cannae was retrieved, and Marcellus at Nola
cut to pieces the forces of Hannibal. Evagrius frequently comes to see me,
and cherishes me in Christ as his own bowels.(7) Yet as he is separated from
me by a long distance, his departure has generally left me as much regret as
his arrival has brought me joy.
2. I converse with your letter, I embrace it, it talks to me; it alone of
those here speaks Latin. For hereabout you must either learn a barbarous jargon
or else hold your tongue. As often as the lines--traced in a well-known hand--bring
back to me the faces which I hold so dear, either I am no longer here, or else
you are here with me. If you will credit the sincerity of affection, I seem
to see you all as I write this.
Now at the outset I should like to ask you one petulant question. Why is it
that, when we are separated by so great an interval of land and sea, you have
sent me so short a letter? Is it that I have deserved no better treatment,
not having first written to you? I cannot believe that paper can have failed
you while Egypt continues to supply its wares. Even if a Ptolemy had closed
the seas, King Attalus would still have sent you parchments from Pergamum,
and so by his skins you could have made up for the want of paper. The very
name parchment is derived from a historical incident of the kind which occurred
generations ago.(1) What then? Am I to suppose the messenger to have been in
haste? No matter how long a letter may be, it can be written in the course
of a night. Or had you some business to attend to which prevented you from
writing? No claim is prior to that of affection. Two suppositions remain, either
that you felt disinclined to write or else that I did not deserve a letter.
Of the two I prefer to charge you with sloth than to condemn myself as undeserving.
For it is easier to mend neglect than to quicken love.
3. You
tell me that Bonosus, like a true son of the Fish, has taken to the water.(2)
As for me who am
still
foul with my old stains, like the basilisk
and the scorpion I haunt the dry places.(3) Bonosus has his heel already on
the serpent's head, whilst I am still as food to the same serpent which by
divine appointment devours the earth.(4) He can scale already that ladder of
which the psalms of degrees(5) are a type; whilst I, still weeping on its first
step, hardly know whether I shall ever be able to say: "I will lift up
mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help."(1) Amid the threatening
billows of the world he is sitting in the safe shelter of his island,(2) that
is, of the church's pale, and it may be that even now, like John, he is being
called to eat God's book;(3) whilst I, still lying in the sepulchre of my sins
and bound with the chains of my iniquities, wait for the Lord's command in
the Gospel: "Jerome, come forth."(4) But Bonosus has done more than
this. Like the prophet(5) he has carried his girdle across the Euphrates (for
all the devil's strength is in the loins(6)), and has hidden it there in a
hole of the rock. Then, afterwards finding it rent, he has sung: "O Lord,
thou hast possessed my reins.(7) Thou hast broken my bonds in sunder. I will
offer to thee the sacrifice of thanksgiving."(8) But as for me, Nebuchadnezzar
has brought me in chains to Babylon, to the babel that is of a distracted mind.
There he has laid upon me the yoke of captivity; there inserting in my nostrils
a ring of iron,(9) he has commanded me to sing one of the songs of Zion. To
whom I have said, "The Lord looseth the prisoners; the Lord openeth the
eyes of the blind."(10) To complete my contrast in a single sentence,
whilst I pray for mercy Bonosus looks for a crown.
4. My sister's conversion is the fruit of the efforts of the saintly Julian.
He has planted, it is for you to water, and the Lord will give the increase.(11)
Jesus Christ has given her to me to console me for the wound which the devil
has inflicted on her. He has restored her from death to life. But in the words
of the pagan poet, for her
There is no safety that I do not fear.(12)
You know
yourselves how slippery is the path of youth--a path on which I have myself
fallen,(13)
and which
you are now traversing not without fear. She,
as she enters upon it, must have the advice and the encouragement of all, she
must be aided by frequent letters from you, my reverend brothers. And--for "charity
endureth all things,"(14)--I beg you to get from Pope(15) Valerian(16)
a letter to confirm her resolution. A girl's courage, as you know, is strengthened
when she realizes that persons in high place are interested in her.
5. The fact is that my native land is a prey to barbarism, that in it men's
only God is their belly,(1) that they live only for the present, and that the
richer a man is the holier he is held to be. Moreover, to use a well-worn proverb,
the dish has a cover worthy of it; for Lupicinus is their priest.(2) Like lips
like lettuce, as the saying goes--the only one, as Lucilius tells us,(3) at
which Crassus ever laughed--the reference being to a donkey eating thistles.
What I mean is that an unstable pilot steers a leaking ship, and that the blind
is leading the blind straight to the pit. The ruler is like the ruled.
6. I salute your mother and mine with the respect which, as you know, I feel
towards her. Associated with you as she is in a holy life, she has the start
of you, her holy children, in that she is your mother. Her womb may thus be
truly called golden. With her I salute your sisters, who ought all to be welcomed
wherever they go, for they have triumphed over their sex and the world, and
await the Bridegroom's coming,(4) their lamps replenished with oil. O happy
the house which is a home of a widowed Anna, of virgins that are prophetesses,
and of twin Samuels bred in the Temple!(6) Fortunate the roof which shelters
the martyr-mother of the Maccabees, with her sons around her, each and all
wearing the martyr's crown!(5) For although you confess Christ every day by
keeping His commandments, yet to this private glory you have added the public
one of an open confession; for it was through you that the poison of the Arian
heresy was formerly banished from your city.
You are surprised perhaps at my thus making a fresh beginning quite at the
close of my letter. But what am I to do? I cannot refuse expression to my feelings.
The brief limits of a letter compel me to be silent; my affection for you urges
me to speak. I write in haste, my language is confused and ill-arranged; but
love knows nothing of order.
LETTER VIII.
TO NICEAS, SUB-DEACON OF AQUILEIA.
Niceas, the sub-deacon, had accompanied Jerome to the East but had now returned
home. In after-years he became bishop of Aquileia in succession to Chromatius.
The date of the letter is 374 A.D.
The comic poet Turpilius(1) says of the exchange of letters that it alone
makes the absent present. The remark, though occurring in a work of fiction,
is not untrue. For what more real presence--if I may so speak--can there be
between absent friends than speaking to those whom they love in letters, and
in letters hearing their reply? Even those Italian savages, the Cascans of
Ennius, who--as Cicero tells us in his books on rhetoric--hunted their food
like beasts of prey, were wont, before paper and parchment came into use, to
exchange letters written on tablets of wood roughly planed, or on strips of
bark torn from the trees. For this reason men called letter-carriers tablet-bearers,(2)
and letter-writers bark-users,(3) because they used the bark of trees. How
much more then are we, who live in a civilized age, bound not to omit a social
duty performed by men who lived in a state of gross savagery, and were in some
respects entirely ignorant of the refinements of life. The saintly Chromatius,
look you, and the reverend Eusebius, brothers as much by compatibility of disposition
as by the ties of nature, have challenged me to diligence by the letters which
they have showered upon me. You, however, who have but just left me, have not
merely unknit our new-made friendship; you have torn it asunder--a process
which Laelius, in Cicero's treatise,(4) wisely forbids. Can it be that the
East is so hateful to you that you dread the thought of even your letters coming
hither? Wake up, wake up, arouse yourself from sleep, give to affection at
least one sheet of paper. Amid the pleasures of life at home sometimes heave
a sigh over the journeys which we have made together. If you love me, write
in answer to my prayer. If you are angry with me, though angry still write.
I find my longing soul much comforted when I receive a letter from a friend,
even though that friend be out of temper with me.
LETTER IX.
TO CHRYSOGONUS, A MONK OF AQUILEIA.
A bantering letter to an indifferent correspondent. Of the same date as the
preceding.
Heliodorus,(5) who is so dear to us both, and who loves you with an affection
no less deep than my own, may have given you a faithful account of my feelings
towards you; how your name is always on my lips, and how in every conversation
which I have with him I begin by recalling my pleasant intercourse with you,
and go on to marvel at your lowliness, to extol your virtue, and to proclaim
your holy love.
Lynxes, they say, when they look behind them, forget what they have just seen,
and lose all thought of what their eyes have ceased to behold. And so it seems
to be with you. For so entirely have you forgotten our joint attachment that
you have not merely blurred but erased the writing of that epistle which, as
the apostle tells us,(1) is written in the hearts of Christians. The creatures
that I have mentioned lurk on branches of leafy trees and pounce on fleet roes
or frightened stags. In vain their victims fly, for they carry their tormentors
with them, and these rend their flesh as they run. Lynxes, however, only hunt
when an empty belly makes their mouths dry. When they have satisfied their
thirst for blood, and have filled their stomachs with food, satiety induces
forgetfulness, and they bestow no thought on future prey till hunger recalls
them to a sense of their need.
Now in your case it cannot be that you have already had enough of me. Why
then do you bring to a premature close a friendship which is but just begun?
Why do you let slip what you have hardly as yet fully grasped? But as such
remissness as yours is never at a loss for an excuse, you will perhaps declare
that you had nothing to write. Had this been so, you should still have written
to inform me of the fact.
LETTER X.
TO PAUL, AN OLD MAN OF CONCORDIA.
Jerome writes to Paul of Concordia, a centenarian ( 2), and the owner of a
good theological library (3), to lend him some commentaries. In return he sends
him his life (newly written) of Paul the hermit.(2) The date of the letter
is 374 A. D.
1. The
shortness of man's life is the punishment for man's sin; and the fact that
even on the very
threshold
of the light death constantly overtakes the
new-born child proves that the times are continually sinking into deeper depravity.
For when the first tiller of paradise had been entangled by the serpent in
his snaky coils, and had been forced in consequence to migrate earthwards,
although his deathless state was changed for a mortal one, yet the sentence(1)
of man's curse was put off for nine hundred years, or even more, a period so
long that it may be called a second immortality. Afterwards sin gradually grew
more and more virulent, till the ungodliness of the giants(2) brought in its
train the shipwreck of the whole world. Then when the world had been cleansed
by the baptism--if I may so call it--of the deluge, human life was contracted
to a short span. Yet even this we have almost altogether wasted, so continually
do our iniquities fight against the divine purposes. For how few there are,
either who go beyond their hundredth year, or who, going beyond it, do not
regret that they have done so; according to that which the Scripture witnesses
in the book of Psalms: "the days of our years are threescore years and
ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yetis their strength
labor and sorrow."(3)
2. Why, say you, these opening reflections so remote and so far fetched that
one might use against them the Horatian witticism: Back to the eggs which Leda
laid for Zeus, The bard is fain to trace the war of Troy?(4)
Simply that I may describe in fitting terms your great age and hoary head
as white as Christ's.(5) For see, the hundredth circling year is already passing
over you, and yet, always keeping the commandments of the Lord, amid the circumstances
of your present life you think over the blessedness of that which is to come.
Your eyes are bright and keen, your steps steady, your hearing good, your teeth
are white, your voice musical, your flesh firm and full of sap; your ruddy
cheeks belie your white hairs, your strength is not that of your age. Advancing
years have not, as we too often see them do, impaired the tenacity of your
memory; the coldness of your blood has not blunted an intellect at once warm
and wary.(6) Your face is not wrinkled nor your brow furrowed. Lastly, no tremors
palsy your hand or cause it to travel in crooked pathways over the wax on which
you write. The Lord shows us in you the bloom of the resurrection that is to
he ours; so that whereas in others who die by inches whilst yet living, we
recognize the results of sin, in your case we ascribe it to righteousness that
you still simulate youth at an age to which it is foreign. And although we
see the like haleness of body in many even of those who are sinners, in their
case it is a grant of the devil to lead them into sin, whilst in yours it is
a gift of God to make you rejoice.
3. Tully
in his brilliant speech on behalf of Flaccus(1) describes the learning of
the Greeks as "innate
frivolity and accomplished vanity."
Certainly
their ablest literary men used to receive money for pronouncing eulogies
upon their kings
or princes.
Following their example, I set a price
upon my praise. Nor must you suppose my demand a small one. You are asked to
give me the pearl of the Gospel,(2) "the words of the Lord," "pure
words, even as the silver which from the earth is tried, and purified seven
times in the fire,"(3) I mean the commentaries of Fortunatian(4) and--for
its account of the persecutors--the History of Aurelius Victor,(5) and with
these the Letters of Novatian;(6) so that, learning the poison set forth by
this schismatic, we may the more gladly drink of the antidote supplied by the
holy martyr Cyprian. In the mean time I have sent to you, that is to say, to
Paul the aged, a Paul that is older still.(7) I have taken great pains to bring
my language down to the level of the simpler sort. But, somehow or other, though
you fill it with water, the jar retains the odor which it acquired when first
used.(8) If my little gift should please you, I have others also in store which
(if the Holy Spirit shall breathe favorably), shall sail across the sea to
you with all kinds of eastern merchandise.
LETTER XI.
TO THE VIRGINS OF AEMONA.
AEmona was a Roman colony not far from Stridon, Jerome's birthplace. The virgins
to whom the note is addressed had omitted to answer his letters, and he now
writes to upbraid them for their remissness. The date of the letter is 374
A. D.
This scanty sheet of paper shows in what a wilderness I live, and because
of it I have to say much in few words. For, desirous though I am to speak to
you more fully, this miserable scrap compels me to leave much unsaid. Still
ingenuity make up for lack of means, and by writing small I can say a great
deal. Observe, I beseech you, how I love you, even in the midst of my difficulties,
since even the want of materials does not stop me from writing to you.
Pardon,
I beseech you, an aggrieved man: if I speak in tears and in anger it is because
I have been
injured.
For in return for my regular letters you
have not sent me a single syllable. Light, I know, has no communion with darkness,(1)
and God's handmaidens no fellowship with a sinner, yet a harlot was allowed
to wash the Lord's feet with her tears,(2) and dogs are permitted to eat of
their masters' crumbs.(3) It was the Saviour's mission to call sinners and
not the righteous; for, as He said Himself, "they that be whole need not
a physician.(4) He wills the repentance of a sinner rather than his death,(6)
and carries home the poor stray sheep on His own shoulders.(6) So, too, when
the prodigal son returns, his father receives him with joy.(7) Nay more, the
apostle says: "Judge nothing before the time."(8) For "who art
thou that judgest another man's servant? To his own master he standeth or falleth."(9)
And "let him that standeth take heed lest he fall."(10) "Bear
ye one another's burdens."(11)
Dear sisters,
man's envy judges in one way, Christ in another; and the whisper of a corner
is not
the same
as the sentence of His tribunal. Many ways seem
right to men which are afterwards found to be wrong.(12) And a treasure is
often stowed in earthen vessels.(13) Peter thrice denied his Lord, yet his
bitter tears restored him to his place. "To whom much is forgiven, the
same loveth much."(14) No word is said of the flock as a whole, yet the
angels joy in heaven over the safety of one sick ewe.(15) And if any one demurs
to this reasoning, the Lord Himself has said: "Friend, is thine eye evil
because I am good?"(16)
LETTER XII.
TO ANTONY, MONK.
The subject
of this letter is similar to that of the preceding. Of Antony nothing is
known except that
some MSS.
describe him as "of AEmona." The
date of the letter is 374 A.D.
While
the disciples were disputing concerning precedence our Lord, the teacher
of humility, took a
little child
and said: "Except ye be converted and
become as little children ye cannot enter the kingdom of heaven."(1) And
lest He should seem to preach more than he practised, He fulfilled His own
precept in His life. For He washed His disciples' feet,(2) he received the
traitor with a kiss,(3) He conversed with the woman of Samaria,(4) He spoke
of the kingdom of heaven with Mary at His feet,(5) and when He rose again from
the dead He showed Himself first to some poor women.(6) Pride is opposed to
humility, and through it Satan lost his eminence as an archangel. The Jewish
people perished in their pride, for while they claimed the chief seats and
salutations in the market place,(7) they were superseded by the Gentiles, who
had before been counted as "a drop of a bucket."(8) Two poor fishermen,
Peter and James, were sent to confute the sophists and the wise men of the
world. As the Scripture says: "God resisteth the proud and giveth grace
to the humble."(9) Think, brother, what a sin it must be which has God
for its opponent. In the Gospel the Pharisee is rejected because of his pride,
and the publican is accepted because of his humility.(10)
Now, unless I am mistaken, I have already sent you ten letters, affectionate
and earnest, whilst you have not deigned to give me even a single line. The
Lord speaks to His servants, but you, my brother servant, refuse to speak to
me. Believe me, if reserve did not check my pen, I could show my annoyance
in such invective that you would have to reply--even though it might be in
anger. But since anger is human, and a Christian must not act injuriously,
I fall back once more on entreaty, and beg you to love one who loves you, and
to write to him as a servant should to his fellow-servant. Farewell in the
Lord.
LETTER XIII.
TO CASTORINA, HIS MATERNAL AUNT.
An interesting letter, as throwing some light on Jerome's family relations.
Castorina, his maternal aunt, had, for some reason, become estranged from him,
and he now writes to her to effect a reconciliation. Whether he succeeded in
doing so, we do not know. The date of the letter is 374 A. D.
The apostle
and evangelist John rightly says, in his first epistle, that "whosoever
hateth his brother is a murderer."(1) For, since murder often springs
from hate, the hater, even though he has not yet slain his victim, is at heart
a murderer. Why, you ask, do I begin in this style? Simply that you and I may
both lay aside past ill feeling and cleanse our hearts to be a habitation for
God. "Be ye angry," David says, "and sin not," or, as the
apostle more fully expresses it, "let not the sun go down upon your wrath."(2)
What then shall we do in the day of judgment, upon whose wrath the sun has
gone down not one day but many years? The Lord says in the Gospel: "If
thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath
aught against thee; leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way;
first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift."(3)
Woe to me, wretch that I am; woe, I had almost said, to you also. This long
time past we have either offered no gift at the altar or have offered it whilst
cherishing anger "without a cause." How have we been able in our
daily prayers to say "Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors,"(4)
whilst our feelings have been at variance with our words, and our petition
inconsistent with our conduct? Therefore I renew the prayer which I made a
year ago in a previous letter,(5) that the Lord's legacy of peace(6) may be
indeed ours, and that my desires and your feelings may find favor in His sight.
Soon we shall stand before His judgment seat to receive the reward of harmony
restored or to pay the penalty for harmony broken. In case you shall prove
unwilling--I hope that it may not be so--to accept my advances, I for my part
shall be free. For this letter, when it is read, will insure my acquittal.
LETTER XIV.
TO HELlODORUS, MONK.
Heliodorus, originally a soldier, but now a presbyter of the Church, had accompanied
Jerome to the East, but, not feeling called to the solitary life of the desert,
had returned to Aquileia. Here be resumed his clerical duties, and in course
of time was raised to the episcopate as bishop of Altinum.
The letter was written in the first bitterness of separation and reproaches
Heliodorus for having gone back from the perfect way of the ascetic life. The
description given of this is highly colored and seems to have produced a great
impression in the West. Fabiola was so much enchanted by it that she learned
the letter by heart.(7) The date is 373 or 374 A.D.
1. SO
conscious are you of the affection which exists between us that you cannot
but recognize the
love
and passion with which I strove to prolong our
common sojourn in the desert. This very letter--blotted, as you see, with tears--gives
evidence of the lamentation and weeping with which I accompanied your departure.
With the pretty ways of a child you then softened your refusal by soothing
words, and I, being off my guard, knew not what to do. Was I to hold my peace?
I could not conceal my eagerness by a show of indifference. Or was I to entreat
you yet more earnestly? You would have refused to listen, for your love was
not like mine. Despised affection has taken the one course open to it. Unable
to keep you when present, it goes in search of you when absent. You asked me
yourself, when you were going away, to invite you to the desert when I took
up my quarters there, and I for my part promised to do so. Accordingly I invite
you now; come, and come quickly. Do not call to mind old ties; the desert is
for those who have left all. Nor let the hardships of our former travels deter
you. You believe in Christ, believe also in His words: "Seek ye first
the kingdom of God and all these things shall be added unto you."(1) Take
neither scrip nor staff. He is rich enough who is poor--with Christ.
2. But
what is this, and why do I foolishly importune you again? Away with entreaties,
an end to coaxing
words. Offended love does well to be angry. You
have spurned my petition; perhaps you will listen to my remonstrance. What
keeps you, effeminate soldier, in your father's house? Where are your ramparts
and trenches? When have you spent a winter in the field? Lo, the trumpet sounds
from heaven! Lo, the Leader comes with clouds!(2) He is armed to subdue the
world, and out of His mouth proceeds a two-edged sword(3) to mow down all that
encounters it. But as for you, what will you do? Pass straight from your chamber
to the battle-field, and from the cool shade into the burning sun? Nay, a body
used to a tunic cannot endure a buckler; a head that has worn a cap refuses
a helmet; a hand made tender by disuse is galled by a sword-hilt.(4) Hear the
proclamation of your King: "He that is not with me is against me, and
he that gathereth not with me scattereth."(5) Remember the day on which
you enlisted, when, buried with Christ in baptism, you swore fealty to Him,
declaring that for His sake you would spare neither father nor mother. Lo,
the enemy is striving to slay Christ in your breast. Lo, the ranks of the foe
sigh over that bounty which you received when you entered His service. Should
your little nephew(1) hang on your neck, pay no regard to him; should your
mother with ashes on her hair and garments rent show you the breasts at which
she nursed you, heed her not; should your father prostrate himself on the threshold,
trample him under foot and go your way. With dry eyes fly to the standard of
the cross. In such cases cruelty is the only true affection.
3. Hereafter there shall come--yes, there shall come--a day when you will
return a victor to your true country, and will walk through the heavenly Jerusalem
crowned with the crown of valor. Then will you receive the citizenship thereof
with Paul.(2) Then will you seek the like privilege for your parents. Then
will you intercede for me who have urged you forward on the path of victory.
I am not
ignorant of the fetters which you may plead as hindrances. My breast is not
of iron nor my
heart
of stone. I was not born of flint or suckled by
a tigress.(3) I have passed through troubles like yours myself. Now it is a
widowed sister who throws her caressing arms around you. Now it is the slaves,
your foster-brothers, who cry, "To what master are you leaving us?" Now
it is a nurse bowed with age, and a body-servant loved only less than a father,
who exclaim: "Only wait till we die and follow us to our graves." Perhaps,
too, an aged mother, with sunken bosom and furrowed brow, recalling the lullaby(4)
with which she once soothed you, adds her entreaties to theirs. The learned
may call you, if they please.
The sole support and pillar of your house.(5) The love of God and the fear
of hell will easily break such bonds.
Scripture,
you will argue, bids us obey our parents.(6) Yes, but whoso loves them more
than Christ loses
his own soul.(7) The enemy takes sword in hand
to slay me, and shall I think of a mother's tears? Or shall I desert the service
of Christ for the sake of a father to whom, if I am Christ's servant, I owe
no rites of burial,(8) albeit if I am Christ's true servant I owe these to
all? Peter with his cowardly advice was an offence to the Lord on the eve of
His passion;(9) and to the brethren who strove to restrain him from going up
to Jerusalem, Paul's one answer was: "What mean ye to weep and to break
my heart? For I am ready not to be bound only, but also to die at Jerusalem
for the name of the Lord Jesus."(1) The battering-ram of natural affection
which so often shatters faith must recoil powerless from the wall of the Gospel. "My
mother and my brethren are these whosoever do the will of my Father which is
in heaven."(2) If they believe in Christ let them bid me God-speed, for
I go to fight in His name. And if they do not believe, "let the dead bury
their dead."(3)
4. But
all this, you argue, only touches the case of martyrs. Ah! my brother, you
are mistaken, you are
mistaken,
if you suppose that there is ever a time
when the Christian does not suffer persecution. Then are you most hardly beset
when you know not that you are beset at all. "Our adversary as a roaring
lion walketh about seeking whom he may devour,"(4) and do you think of
peace? "He sitteth in the lurking-places of the villages: in the secret
places doth he murder the innocent; his eyes are privily set against the poor.
He lieth in wait secretly as a lion in his den; he lieth in wait to catch the
poor;"(5) and do you slumber under a shady tree, so as to fall an easy
prey? On one side self-indulgence presses me hard; on another covetousness
strives to make an inroad; my belly wishes to be a God to me, in place of Christ,(6)
and lust would fain drive away the Holy Spirit that dwells in me and defile
His temple.(7) I am pursued, I say, by an enemy whose name is Legion and his
wiles untold;(8) and, hapless wretch that I am, how shall I hold myself a victor
when I am being led away a captive?
5. My
dear brother, weigh well the various forms of transgression, and think not
that the sins which
I have
mentioned are less flagrant than that of idolatry.
Nay, hear the apostle's view of the matter. "For this ye know," he
writes, "that no whore-monger or unclean person, nor covetous man, who
is an idolater, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God."(9)
In a general way all that is of the devil savors of enmity to God, and what
is of the devil is idolatry, since all idols are subject to him. Yet Paul elsewhere
lays down the law in express and unmistakable terms, saying: "Mortify
your members, which are upon the earth, laying aside fornication, uncleanness,
evil concupiscence and covetousness, which are(1) idolatry, for which things'
sake the wrath of God cometh."(2)
Idolatry
is not confined to casting incense upon an altar with finger and thumb, or
to pouring libations
of wine
out of a cup into a bowl. Covetousness
is idolatry, or else the selling of the Lord for thirty pieces of silver was
a righteous act.(3) Lust involves profanation, or else men may defile with
common harlots(4) those members of Christ which should be "a living sacrifice
acceptable to God."(5) Fraud is idolatry, or else they are worthy of imitation
who, in the Acts of the Apostles, sold their inheritance, and because they
kept back part of the price, perished by an instant doom.(6) Consider well,
my brother; nothing is yours to keep. "Whosoever he be of you," the
Lord says, "that forsaketh not all that he hath, he cannot be my disciple."(7)
Why are you such a half-hearted Christian?
6. See
how Peter left his net;(8) see how the publican rose from the receipt of
custom.(9) In a
moment he became
an apostle. "The Son of man hath not
where to lay his head,"(10) and do you plan wide porticos and spacious
halls? If you look to inherit the good things of the world you can no longer
be a joint-heir with Christ.(11) You are called a monk, and has the name no
meaning? What brings you, a solitary, into the throng of men? The advice that
I give is that of no inexperienced mariner who has never lost either ship or
cargo, and has never known a gale. Lately shipwrecked as I have been myself,
my warnings to other voyagers spring from my own fears. On one side, like Charybdis,
self-indulgence sucks into its vortex the soul's salvation. On the other, like
Scylla, lust, with a smile on her girl's face, lures it on to wreck its chastity.
The coast is savage, and the devil with a crew of pirates carries irons to
fetter his captives. Be not credulous, be not over-confident. The sea may be
as smooth and smiling as a pond, its quiet surface may be scarcely ruffled
by a breath of air, yet sometimes its waves are as high as mountains. There
is danger in its depths, the foe is lurking there. Ease your sheets, spread
your sails, fasten the cross as an ensign on your prow. The calm that you speak
of is itself a tempest. "Why so?" you will perhaps argue; "are
not all my fellow-townsmen Christians?" Your case, I reply, is not that
of others. Listen to the words of the Lord: "If thou wilt be perfect go
and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and come and follow me."(1)
You have already promised to be perfect. For when you forsook the army and
made yourself an eunuch for the kingdom of heaven's sake,(2) you did so that
you might follow the perfect life. Now the perfect servant of Christ has nothing
beside Christ. Or if he have anything beside Christ he is not perfect. And
if he be not perfect when he has promised God to be so, his profession is a
lie. But "the mouth that lieth slayeth the soul."(3) To conclude,
then, if you are perfect you will not set your heart on your father's goods;
and if you are not perfect you have deceived the Lord. The Gospel thunders
forth its divine warning: "Ye cannot serve two masters,"(4) and does
any one dare to make Christ a liar by serving at once both God and Mammon?
Repeatedly does He proclaim, "If any one will come after me let him deny
himself and take up his cross and follow me."(5) If I load myself with
gold can I think that I am following Christ? Surely not. "He that saith
he abideth in Him ought himself also so to walk even as He walked."(6)
7. I know
you will rejoin that you possess nothing. Why, then, if you are so well prepared
for battle,
do
you not take the field? Perhaps you think that
you can wage war in your own country, although the Lord could do no signs in
His?(7) Why not? you ask. Take the answer which comes to you with his authority: "No
prophet is accepted in his own country."(8) But, you will say, I do not
seek honor; the approval of my conscience is enough for me. Neither did the
Lord seek it; for when the multitudes would have made Him a king he fled from
them.(9) But where there is no honor there is contempt; and where there is
contempt there is frequent rudeness; and where there is rudeness there is vexation;
and where there is vexation there is no rest; and where there is no rest the
mind is apt to be diverted from its purpose. Again, where, through restlessness,
earnestness loses any of its force, it is lessened by what it loses, and that
which is lessened cannot be called perfect. The upshot of all which is that
a monk cannot be perfect in his own country. Now, not to aim at perfection
is itself a sin.
8. Driven
from this line of defence you will appeal to the example of the clergy. These,
you will
say, remain
in their cities, and yet they are surely
above criticism. Far be it from me to censure the successors of the apostles,
who with holy words consecrate the body of Christ, and who make us Christians.(1)
Having the keys of the kingdom of heaven, they judge men to some extent before
the day of judgment, and guard the chastity of the bride of Christ. But, as
I have before hinted, the case of monks is different from that of the clergy.
The clergy feed Christ's sheep; I as a monk am fed by them. They live of the
altar:(2) I, if I bring no gift to it, have the axe laid to my root as to that
of a barren tree.(3) Nor can I plead poverty as an excuse, for the Lord in
the gospel has praised an aged widow for casting into the treasury the last
two coins that she had.(4) I may not sit in the presence of a presbyter;(5)
he, if I sin, may deliver me to Satan, "for the destruction of the flesh
that the spirit may be saved."(6) Under the old law he who disobeyed the
priests was put outside the camp and stoned by the people, or else he was beheaded
and expiated his contempt with his blood.(7) But now the disobedient person
is cut down with the spiritual sword, or he is expelled from the church and
torn to pieces by ravening demons. Should the entreaties of your brethren induce
you to take orders, I shall rejoice that you are lifted up, and fear lest you
may be cast down. You will say: "If a man desire the office of a bishop,
he desireth a good work."(8) I know that; but you should add what follows:
such an one "must be blameless, the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober,
chaste, of good behavior, given to hospitality, apt to teach, not given to
wine, no striker but patient."(9) After fully explaining the qualifications
of a bishop the apostle speaks of ministers of the third degree with equal
care. "Likewise must the deacons be grave," he writes, "not
double-tongued, not given to much wine, not greedy of filthy lucre, holding
the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience. And let these also first be
proved; then, let them minister, being found blameless."(10) Woe to the
man who goes in to the supper without a wedding garment. Nothing remains for
him but the stern question, "Friend, how camest thou in hither?" And
when he is speechless the order will be given, "Bind him hand and foot,
and take him away, and cast him into outer darkness; there shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth."(1) Woe to him who, when he has received a talent,
has bound it in a napkin; and, whilst others make profits, only preserves what
he has received. His angry lord shall rebuke him in a moment. "Thou wicked
servant," he will say, "wherefore gavest thou not my money into the
bank that at my coming I might have required mine own with usury?"(2)
That is to say, you should have laid before the altar what you were not able
to bear. For whilst you, a slothful trader, keep a penny in your hands, you
occupy the place of another who might double the money. Wherefore, as he who
ministers well purchases to himself a good degree,(3) so he who approaches
the cup of the Lord unworthily shall be guilty of the body and blood of the
Lord. (4)
9. Not
all bishops are bishops indeed. You consider Peter; mark Judas as well. You
notice Stephen;
look
also on Nicolas, sentenced in the Apocalypse by the
Lord's own lips,(5) whose shameful imaginations gave rise to the heresy of
the Nicolaitans. "Let a man examine himself and so let him come."(6)
For it is not ecclesiastical rank that makes a man a Christian. The centurion
Cornelius was still a heathen when he was cleansed by the gift of the Holy
Spirit. Daniel was but a child when he judged the elders.(7) Amos was stripping
mulberry bushes when, in a moment, he was made a prophet.(8) David was only
a shepherd when he was chosen to be king.(9) And the least of His disciples
was the one whom Jesus loved the most. My brother, sit down in the lower room,
that when one less honorable comes you may be bidden to go up higher.(10) Upon
whom does the Lord rest but upon him that is lowly and of a contrite spirit,
and that trembleth at His word?(11) To whom God has committed much, of him
He will ask the more.(12) "Mighty men shall be mightily tormented."(13)
No man need pride himself in the day of judgment on merely physical chastity,
for then shall men give account for every idle word,(14) and the reviling of
a brother shall be counted as the sin of murder.(15) Paul and Peter now reign
with Christ, and it is not easy to take the place of the one or to hold the
office of the other. There may come an angel to rend the veil of your temple,(1)
and to remove your candlestick out of its place.(2) If you intend to build
the tower, first count the cost.(3) Salt that has lost its savor is good for
nothing but to be cast out and to be trodden under foot of swine.(4) If a monk
fall, a priest shall intercede for him; but who shall intercede for a fallen
priest?
10. At
last my discourse is clear of the reefs: at last this frail bark has passed
from the breakers
into deep
water. I may now spread my sails to the
breeze; and, as I leave the rocks of controversy astern, my epilogue will be
like the joyful shout of mariners. O desert, bright with the flowers of Christ!
O solitude whence come the stones of which, in the Apocalypse, the city of
the great king is built!(5) O wilderness, gladdened with God's especial presence!
What keeps you in the world, my brother, yon who are above the world?(6) How
long shall gloomy roofs oppress you? How long shall smoky cities immure you?
Believe me, I have more light than you. Sweet it is to lay aside the weight
of the body and to soar into the pure bright ether. Do you dread poverty? Christ
calls the poor blessed.(7) Does toil frighten you? No athlete is crowned but
in the sweat of his brow. Are you anxious as regards food? Faith fears no famine.
Do you dread the bare ground for limbs wasted with fasting? The Lord lies there
beside you. Do you recoil from an unwashed head and uncombed hair? Christ is
your true head.(8) Does the boundless solitude of the desert terrify you? In
the spirit you may walk always in paradise. Do but turn your thoughts thither
and you will be no more in the desert. Is your skin rough and scaly because
you no longer bathe? He that is once washed in Christ needeth not to wash again.(9)
To all your objections the apostle gives this one brief answer: "The sufferings
of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory" which
shall come after them, "which shall be revealed in us."(10) You are
too greedy of enjoyment, my brother, if you wish to rejoice with the world
here, and to reign with Christ hereafter.
11. it shall come, it shall come, that day when this corruptible shall put
on incorruption, and this mortal shall put on immortality.(1) Then shall that
servant be blessed whom the Lord shall find watching.(2) Then at the sound
of the trumpet(3) the earth and its peoples shall tremble, but you shall rejoice.
The world shall howl at the Lord who comes to judge it, and the tribes of the
earth shall smite the breast. Once mighty kings shall tremble in their nakedness.
Venus shall be exposed, and her son too Jupiter with his fiery bolts will be
brought to trial; and Plato, with his disciples, will be but a fool. Aristotle's
arguments shall be of no avail. You may seem a poor man and country bred, but
then you shall exult and laugh, and say: Behold my crucified Lord behold my
judge. This is He who was once an infant wrapped in swaddling clothes and crying
in a manger.(4) This is He whose parents were a workingman and a working-woman.(5)
This is He, who, carried into Egypt in His mother's bosom, though He was God,
fled before the face of man. This is He who was clothed in a scarlet robe and
crowned with thorns.(6) This is He who was called a sorcerer and a man with
a devil and a Samaritan.(7) Jew, behold the hands which you nailed to the cross.
Roman, behold the side which you pierced with the spear. See both of you whether
it was this body that the disciples stole secretly and by night.(8) For this
you profess to believe.
My brother, it is affection which has urged me to speak thus; that you who
now find the Christian life so hard may have your reward in that day.
LETTER XV.
TO POPE DAMASUS.
This letter,
written in 376 or 377 A.D., illustrates Jerome's attitude towards the see
of Rome at
this time
held by Damasus, afterwards his warm friend and
admirer. Referring lo Rome as the scene of his own baptism and as a church
where the true faith has remained unimpaired ( 1), and laying down the strict
doctrine of salvation only within the pale of the church ( 2), Jerome asks "the
successor of the fisherman" two questions, viz.:(1) who is the true bishop
of the three claimants of the see of Antioch, and(2) which is the correct terminology,
to speak of three "hypostases" in the Godhead, or of one? On the
latter question he expresses fully his own opinion.
1. Since
the East, shattered as it is by the long-standing feuds, subsisting between
its peoples, is bit
by bit tearing into shreds the seamless vest of
the Lord, "woven from the top throughout,"(1) since the foxes are
destroying the vineyard of Christ,(2) and since among the broken cisterns that
hold no water it is hard to discover "the sealed fountain" and "the
garden inclosed,"(3) I think it my duty to consult the chair of Peter,
and to turn to a church whose faith has been praised by Paul.(4) I appeal for
spiritual food to the church whence I have received the garb of Christ.(5)
The wide space of sea and land that lies between us cannot deter me from searching
for "the pearl of great price."(6) "Wheresoever the body is,
there will the eagles be gathered together."(7) Evil children have squandered
their patrimony; you alone keep your heritage intact. The fruitful soil of
Rome, when it receives the pure seed of the Lord, bears fruit an hundredfold;
but here the seed corn is choked in the furrows and nothing grows but darnel
or oats.(8) In the West the Sun of righteousness(9) is even now rising; in
the East, Lucifer, who fell from heaven,(10) has once more set his throne above
the stars.(11) "Ye are the light of the world,"(12) "ye are
the salt of the earth,"(13) ye are "vessels of gold and of silver." Here
are vessels of wood or of earth,(14) which wait for the rod of iron,(15) and
eternal fire.
2. Yet, though your greatness terrifies me, your kindness attracts me. From
the priest I demand the safe-keeping of the victim, from the shepherd the protection
due to the sheep. Away with all that is overweening; let the state of Roman
majesty withdraw. My words are spoken to the successor of the fisherman, to
the disciple of the cross. As I follow no leader save Christ, so I communicate
with none but your blessedness, that is with the chair of Peter. For this,
I know, is the rock on which the church is built!(16) This is the house where
alone the paschal lamb can be rightly eaten.(17) This is the ark of Noah, and
he who is not found in it shall perish when the flood prevails.(18) But since
by reason of my sins I have betaken myself to this desert which lies between
Syria and the uncivilized waste, I cannot, owing to the great distance between
us, always ask of your sanctity the holy thing of the Lord.(19) Consequently
I here follow the Egyptian confessors(1) who share your faith, and anchor my
frail craft under the shadow of their great argosies. I know nothing of Vitalis;
I reject Meletius; I have nothing to do with Paulinus.(2) He that gathers not
with you scatters;(3) he that is not of Christ is of Antichrist.
3. Just
now, I am sorry to say, those Arians, the Campenses,(4) are trying to extort
from me, a Roman
Christian,
their unheard-of formula of three hypostases.(5)
And this, too, after the definition of Nicaea(6) and the decree of Alexandria,(7)
in which the West has joined. Where, I should like to know, are the apostles
of these doctrines? Where is their Paul, their new doctor of the Gentiles?
I ask them what three hypostases are supposed to mean. They reply three persons
subsisting. I rejoin that this is my belief. They are not satisfied with the
meaning, they demand the term. Surely some secret venom lurks in the words. "If
any man refuse," I cry, "to acknowledge three hypostases in the sense
of three things hypostatized, that is three persons subsisting, let him be
anathema." Yet, because I do not learn their words, I am counted a heretic. "But,
if any one, understanding by hypostasis essence,(8) deny that in the three
persons there is one hypostasis, he has no part in Christ." Because this
is my confession I, like you, am branded with the stigma of Sabellianism.(9)
4. If
you think fit enact a decree; and then I shall not hesitate to speak of three
hypostases. Order
a new creed
to supersede the Nicene; and then, whether
we are Arians or orthodox, one confession will do for us all. In the whole
range of secular learning hypostasis never means anything but essence. And
can any one, I ask, be so profane as to speak of three essences or substances
in the Godhead? There is one nature of God and one only; and this, and this
alone, truly is. For absolute being is derived from no other source but is
all its own. All things besides, that is all things created, although they
appear to be, are not. For there was a time when they were not, and that which
once was not may again cease to be. God alone who is eternal, that is to say,
who has no beginning, really deserves to be called an essence. Therefore also
He says to Moses from the bush, "I am that I am," and Moses says
of Him, "I am hath sent me."(1) As the angels, the sky, the earth,
the seas, all existed at the time, it must have been as the absolute being
that God claimed for himself that name of essence, which apparently was common
to all. But because His nature alone is perfect, and because in the three persons
there subsists but one Godhead, which truly is and is one nature; whosoever
in the name of religion declares that there are in the Godhead three elements,
three hypostases, that is, or essences, is striving really to predicate three
natures of God. And if this is true, why are we severed by walls from Arius,
when in dishonesty we are one with him? Let Ursicinus be made the colleague
of your blessedness; let Auxentius be associated with Ambrose.(2) But may the
faith of Rome never come to such a pass! May the devout hearts of your people
never be infected with such unholy doctrines! Let us be satisfied to speak
of one substance and of three subsisting persons--perfect, equal, coeternal.
Let us keep to one hypostasis, if such be your pleasure, and say nothing of
three. It is a bad sign when those who mean the same thing use different words.
Let us be satisfied with the form of creed which we have hitherto used. Or,
if you think it right that I should speak of three hypostases, explaining what
I mean by them, I am ready to submit. But, believe me, there is poison hidden
under their honey; the angel of Satan has transformed himself into an angel
of light.(3) They give a plausible explanation of the term hypostasis; yet
when I profess to hold it in the same sense they count me a heretic. Why are
they so tenacious of a word? Why do they shelter themselves under ambiguous
language? If their belief corresponds to their explanation of it, I do not
condemn them for keeping it. On the other hand, if my belief corresponds to
their expressed opinions, they should allow me to set forth their meaning in
my own words.
5. I implore your blessedness, therefore, by the crucified Saviour of the
world, and by the consubstantial trinity, to authorize me by letter either
to use or to refuse this formula of three hypostases. And test the obscurity
of my present abode may baffle the bearers of your letter, I pray you to address
it to Evagrius, the presbyter, with whom you are well acquainted. I beg you
also to signify with whom I am to communicate at Antioch. Not, I hope, with
the Campenses;(1) for they--with their allies the heretics of Tarsus(2)--only
desire communion with you to preach with greater authority their traditional
doctrine of three hypostases.
LETTER XVI.
TO POPE DAMASUS.
This letter,
written a few months after the preceding, is another appeal to Damasus to
solve the
writer's doubts.
Jerome once more refers to his baptism
at Rome, and declares that his one answer to the factions at Antioch is, "He
who clings to the chair of Peter is accepted by me." Written from the
desert in the year 377 or 378.
1. By her importunity the widow in the gospel at last gained a hearing,(3)
and by the same means one friend induced another to give him bread at midnight,
when his door was shut and his servants were in bed.(4) The publican's prayers
overcame God,(5) although God is invincible. Nineveh was saved by its tears
from the impending ruin caused by its sin.(6) To what end, you ask, these far-fetched
references? To this end, I make answer; that you in your greatness should look
upon me in my littleness; that you, the rich shepherd, should not despise me,
the ailing sheep. Christ Himself brought the robber from the cross to paradise,(7)
and, to show that repentance is never too late, He turned a murderer's death
into a martyrdom. Gladly does Christ embrace the prodigal son when he returns
to Him;(8) and, leaving the ninety and nine, the good shepherd carries home
on His shoulders the one poor sheep that is left.(9) From a persecutor Paul
becomes a preacher. His bodily eyes are blinded to clear the eyes of his soul,(10)
and he who once haled Christ's servants in chains before the council of the
Jews,(1) lives afterwards to glory in the bonds of Christ.(2)
2. As I have already written to you,(3) I, who have received Christ's garb
in Rome, am now detained in the waste that borders Syria. No sentence of banishment,
however, has been passed upon me; the punishment which I am undergoing is self-inflicted.
But, as the heathen poet says:
They change
not mind but sky who cross the sea.(4) The untiring foe follows me closely,
and the assaults
that
I suffer in the desert are severer than ever.
For the Arian frenzy raves, and the powers of the world support it. The church
is rent into three factions, and each of these is eager to seize me for its
own. The influence of the monks is of long standing, and it is directed against
me. I meantime keep crying: "He who clings to the chair of Peter is accepted
by me." Meletius, Vitalis, and Paulinus(6) all profess to cleave to you,
and I could believe the assertion if it were made by one of them only. As it
is, either two of them or else all three are guilty of falsehood. Therefore
I implore your blessedness, by our Lord's cross and passion, those necessary
glories of our faith, as you hold an apostolic office, to give an apostolic
decision. Only tell me by letter with whom I am to communicate in Syria, and
I will pray for you that you may sit in judgment enthroned with the twelve;(6)
that when you grow old, like Peter, you may be girded not by yourself but by
another,(7) and that, like Paul, you may be made a citizen of the heavenly
kingdom.(8) Do not despise a soul for which Christ died.
LETTER XVII.
TO THE PRESBYTER MARCUS.
In this
letter, addressed to one who seems to have had some pre-eminence among the
monks of the Chalcidian
desert, Jerome complains of the hard treatment
meted out to him because of his refusal to take any part Z in the great theological
dispute then raging in Syria. He protests his own orthodoxy, and begs permission
to remain where he is until the return of spring, when he will retire from "the
inhospitable desert," Written in A.D. 378 or 379.
1. I had
made up my mind to use the words of the psalmist: "While the
wicked was before me I was dumb with silence; I was humbled, and I held my
peace even from good:"(1) and "I, as a deaf man, heard not; and I
was as a dumb man that openeth not his mouth. Thus I was as a man that heareth
not."(2) But charity overcomes all things,(3) and my regard for you defeats
my determination. I am, indeed, less careful to retaliate upon my assailants
than to comply with your request. For among Christians, as one has said,(4)
not he who endures an outrage is unhappy, but he who commits it.
2. And first, before I speak to you of my belief (which you know full well),
I am forced to cry out against the inhumanity of this country. A hackneyed
quotation best expresses my meaning:
What savages are these who will not grant
A rest to strangers, even on their sands!
They threaten war and drive us from their coasts.(5)
I take
this from a Gentile poet that one who disregards the peace of Christ may
at least learn its meaning
from a heathen. I am called a heretic, although
I preach the consubstantial trinity. I am accused of the Sabellian impiety,
although I proclaim with unwearied voice that in the Godhead there are three
distinct,(6) real, whole, and perfect persons. The Arians do right to accuse
me, but the orthodox forfeit their orthodoxy when they assail a faith like
mine. They may, if they like, condemn me as a heretic; but if they do they
must also condemn Egypt and the West, Damasus and Peter.(7) Why do they fasten
the guilt on one and leave his companions uncensured? If there is but little
water in the stream, it is the fault, not of the channel, but of the source.
I blush to say it, but from the caves which serve us for cells we monks of
the desert condemn the world. Rolling in sack-cloth and ashes,(8) we pass sentence
on bishops. What use is the robe of a penitent if it covers the pride of a
king? Chains, squalor, and long hair are by right tokens of sorrow, and not
ensigns of royalty. I merely ask leave to remain silent. Why do they torment
a man who does not deserve their ill-will? I am a heretic, you say. What is
it to you if I am? Stay quiet, and all is said. You are afraid, I suppose,
that, with my fluent knowledge of Syriac and Greek, I shall make a tour of
the churches, lead the people into error, and form a schism! I have robbed
no man of anything; neither have I taken what I have not earned. With my own
hand(1) daily and in the sweat of my brow(2) I labor for my food, knowing that
it is written by the apostle: "If any will not work, neither shall he
eat."(3)
3. Reverend
and holy father, Jesus is my witness with what groans and tears I have written
all this. "I have kept silence, saith the Lord, but shall
I always keep silence? Surely not."(4) I cannot have so much as a corner
of the desert. Every day I am asked for my confession of faith; as though when
I was regenerated in baptism I had made none. I accept their formulas, but
they are still dissatisfied. I sign my name to them, but they still refuse
to believe me. One thing only will content them, that I should leave the country.
I am on the point of departure. They have already torn away from me my dear
brothers, who are a part of my very life. They are, as you see, anxious to
depart--nay, they are actually departing; it is preferable, they say, to live
among wild beasts rather than with Christians such as these. I myself, too,
would be at this moment a fugitive were I not withheld by physical infirmity
and by the severity of the winter. I ask to be allowed the shelter of the desert
for a few months till spring returns; or if this seems too long a delay, I
am ready to depart now. "The earth is the Lord' s and the fulness thereof."(5)
Let them climb up to heaven alone;(6) for them alone Christ died; they possess
all things and glory in all. Be it so. "But God forbid that I should glory
save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified
unto me and I unto the world."(7)
4. As regards the questions which you have thought fit to put to me concerning
the faith, I have given to the reverend Cyril(8) a written confession which
sufficiently answers them. He who does not so believe has no part in Christ.
My faith is attested both by your ears and by those of your blessed brother,
Zenobius, to whom, as well as to yourself, we all of us here send our best
greeting.
LETTER XVIII. TO POPE DAMASUS.
This (written
from Constantinople in A.D. 381) is the earliest of Jerome's expository letters.
In it he explains
at length the vision recorded in the
sixth chapter of Isaiah, and enlarges upon its mystical meaning. "Some
of my predecessors," he writes, "make 'the Lord sitting upon a throne'
God the Father, and suppose the seraphim to represent the Son and the Holy
Spirit. I do not agree with them, for John expressly tells us(1) that it was
Christ and not the Father whom the prophet saw." And again, "The
word seraphim means either ' glow ' or ' beginning of speech,' and the two
seraphim thus stand for the Old and New Testaments.(2) 'Did not our heart burn
within us,' said the disciples, 'while he opened to us the Scriptures?'(3)
Moreover, the Old Testament is written in Hebrew, and this unquestionably was
man's original language." Jerome then speaks of the unity of the sacred
books. "Whatever," he asserts, "we read in the Old Testament
we find also in the Gospel; and what we red in the Gospel is deduced from the
Old Testament.(4) There is no discord between them, no disagreement. In both
Testaments the Trinity is preached.&q