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ST. JEROME
THE LETTERS
LETTERS XLVIII TO LI
LETTER XLVIII.
TO PAMMACHIUS.
An "apology" for the two books "against Jovinian" which
Jerome had written a short time previously, and of which he had sent copies
to Rome. These Pammachius and his other friends had withheld from publication,
thinking that Jerome had unduly exalted virginity at the expense of marriage.
He now writes to make good his position, and to do this makes copious extracts
from the obnoxious treatise. The date of the letter is 393 or 394 A.D.
1. Your own silence is my reason for not having written hitherto. For I feared
that, if I were to write to you without first hearing from you, you would consider
me not so much a conscientious as a troublesome correspondent. But, now that
I have been challenged by your most delightful letter, a letter which calls
upon me to defend my views by an appeal to first principles, I receive my old
fellow-learner, companion, and friend with open arms, as the saying goes; and
I look forward to having in you a champion of my poor writings; if, that is
to say, I can first conciliate your judgment to give sentence in my favor,
and can instruct my advocate in all those points on which I am assailed. For
both your favorite, Cicero, and before him--in his one short treatise--Antonius,(1)
write to this effect, that the chief requisite for victory is to acquaint one's
self carefully with the case which one has to plead.
2. Certain
persons find fault with me because in the books which I have written against
Jovinian
I have been
excessive (so they say) in praise of virginity
and in depreciation of marriage; and they affirm that to preach up chastity
till no comparison is left between a wife and a virgin is equivalent to a condemnation
of matrimony. If I remember aright the point of the dispute, the question at
issue between myself and Jovinian is that he puts marriage on a level with
virginity, while I make it inferior; he declares that there is little or no
difference between the two states, I assert that there is a great deal. Finally--a
result due under God to your agency--he has been condemned because he has dared
to set matrimony on an equality with perpetual chastity. Or, if a virgin and
a wife are to be looked on as the same, how comes it that Rome has refused
to listen to this impious doctrine? A virgin owes her being to a man, but a
man does not owe his to a virgin. There can be no middle course. Either my
view of the matter must be embraced, or else that of Jovinian. If I am blamed
for putting wedlock below virginity, he must be praised for putting the two
states on a level. If, on the other hand, he is condemned for supposing them
equal, his condemnation must be taken as testimony in favor of my treatise.
If men of the world chafe under the notion that they occupy a position inferior
to that of virgins, I wonder that clergymen and monks--who both live celibate
lives--refrain from praising what they consistently practise. They cut themselves
off from their wives to imitate the chastity of virgins, and yet they will
have it that married women are as good as these. They should either be joined
again to their wives whom they have renounced, or, if they persist in living
apart from them, they will have to confess--by their lives if not by their
words--that, in preferring virginity to marriage, they have chosen the better
course, Am I then a mere novice in the Scriptures, reading the sacred volumes
for the first time? And is the line there drawn between virginity and marriage
so fine that I have been unable to observe it? I could know nothing, forsooth,
of the saying, "Be not righteous overmuch!"(1) Thus, while I try
to protect myself on one side, I am wounded on the other; to speak more plainly
still, while I close with Jovinian in hand-to-hand combat, Manichaeus stabs
me in the back. Have I not, I would ask, in the very forefront of my work set
the following preface:(2) "We are no disciples of Marcion(3) or of Manichaeus,(4)
to detract from marriage. Nor are we deceived by the error of Tatian,(5) the
chief of the Encratites,(6) into supposing all cohabitation unclean. For he
condemns and reprobates not marriage only, but foods also which God has created
for us to enjoy,(7) We know that in a large house there are vessels not only
of silver and of gold, but of wood also and of earth.(8) We know, too, that
on the foundation of Christ which Paul the master builder has laid, some build
up gold, silver, and precious stones; others, on the contrary, hay, wood, and
stubble.(9) We are not ignorant that 'marriage is honorable ... and the bed
undefiled.'(10) We have read the first decree of God: 'Be fruitful and multiply
and replenish the earth.'(11) But while we allow marriage, we prefer the virginity
which springs from it. Gold is more precious than silver, but is silver on
that account the less silver? Is it an insult to a tree to prefer its apples
to its roots or its leaves? Is it an injury to corn to put the ear before the
stalk and the blade? As apples come from the tree and grain from the straw,
so virginity comes from wedlock. Yields of one hundredfold, of sixtyfold, and
of thirtyfold(1) may all come from one soil and from one sowing, yet they will
differ widely in quantity. The yield thirtyfold signifies wedlock, for the
joining together of the fingers to express that number, suggestive as it is
of a loving gentle kiss or embracing, aptly represents the relation of husband
and wife. The yield sixtyfold refers to widows who are placed in a position
of distress and tribulation. Accordingly, they are typified by that finger
which is placed under the other to express the number sixty; for, as it is
extremely trying when one has once tasted pleasure to abstain from its enticements,
so the reward of doing this is proportionately great. Moreover, a hundred--I
ask the reader to give me his best attention--necessitates a change from the
left hand to the right; but while the hand is different the fingers are the
same as those which on the left hand signify married women and widows; only
in this instance the circle formed by them indicates the crown of virginity."(2)
3. Does
a man who speaks thus, I would ask you, condemn marriage? If I have called
virginity gold,
I have
spoken of marriage as silver. I have set forth
that the yields an hundredfold, sixtyfold, and thirtyfold--all spring from
one soil and from one sowing, although in amount they differ widely. Will any
of my readers be so unfair as to judge me, not by my words, but by his own
opinion? At any rate, I have dealt much more gently with marriage than most
Latin and Greek writers;(3) who, by referring the hundredfold yield to martyrs,
the sixtyfold to virgins, and the thirtyfold to widows, show that in their
opinion married persons are excluded from the good ground and from the seed
of the great Father.(4) But, lest it might be supposed that, though cautious
at the outset, I was imprudent in the remainder of my work, have I not, after
marking out the divisions of it, on coming to the actual questions immediately
introduced the following:(1) "I ask all of you of both sexes, at once
those who are virgins and continent and those who are married or twice married,
to aid my efforts with your prayers." Jovinian is the foe of all indiscriminately,
but can I condemn as Manichaean heretics persons whose prayers I need and whose
assistance I entreat to help me in my work?
4. As
the brief compass of a letter does not suffer us to delay too long on a single
point, let us
now pass to
those which remain. In explaining the testimony
of the apostle, "The wife hath not power of her own body, but the husband;
and likewise, also, the husband hath not power of his own body, but the wife,"(2)
we have subjoined the following:(3) "The entire question relates to those
who are living in wedlock, whether it is lawful for them to put away their
wives, a thing which the Lord also has forbidden in the Gospel.(4) Hence, also,
the apostle says: 'It is good for a man not to touch' a wife or 'a woman,'(5)
as if there were danger in the contact which he who should so touch one could
not escape. Accordingly, when the Egyptian woman desired to touch Joseph he
flung away his cloak and fled from her hands.(6) But as he who has once married
a wife cannot, except by consent, abstain from intercourse with her or repudiate
her, so long as she does not sin, he must render unto his wife her due,(7)
because he has of his own free will bound himself to render it under compulsion." Can
one who declares that it is a precept of the Lord that wives should not be
put away, and that what God has joined together man must not, without consent,
put asunder(8)--can such an one be said to condemn marriage? Again, in the
verses which follow, the apostle says: "But every man hath his proper
gift of God, one after this manner, and another after that."(9) In explanation
of this saying we made the following remarks:(10) "What I myself would
wish, he says, is clear. But since there are diversities of gifts in the church,(11)
I allow marriage as well, that I may not appear to condemn nature. Reflect,
too, that the gift of virginity is one thing, that of marriage another. For
had there been one reward for married women and for virgins he would never,
after giving the counsel of continence, have gone on to say: 'But every man
hath his proper gift of God, one after this manner and another after that.'
Where each class has its proper gift, there must be some distinction between
the classes. I allow that marriage, as well as virginity, is the gift of God,
but there is a great difference between gift and gift. Finally, the apostle
himself says of one who had lived in incest and afterwards repented:(4) Contrariwise
ye ought rather to forgive him and comfort him, '(1) and 'To whom ye forgive
anything, I forgive also.'(2) And, lest we might suppose a man's gift to be
but a small thing, he has added: 'For if I forgave anything, to whom I forgave
it, for your sakes forgave I it in the sight(3) of Christ.'(4) The gifts of
Christ are different. Hence Joseph as a type of Him had a coat of many colors.(5)
So in the forty-fourth psalm(6) we read of the Church: 'Upon thy right hand
did stand the queen in a vesture of gold, wrought about with divers colors.'(7)
The apostle Peter, too, speaks (of husbands and wives) 'as being heirs together
of the manifold grace of God.'(8) In Greek the expression is still more striking,
the word used being <greek>poikilh</greek>, that is, 'many-colored.'"
5. I ask,
then, what is the meaning of men's obstinate determination to shut their
eyes and to refuse
to look
on what is as clear as day? I have said that
there are diversities of gifts in the Church, and that virginity is one gift
and wedlock another. And shortly after I have used the words: "I allow
marriage also to be a gift of God, but there is a great difference between
gift and gift." Can it be said that I condemn that which in the clearest
terms I declare to be the gift of God? Moreover, if Joseph is taken as a type
of the Lord, his coat of many colors is a type of virgins and widows, celibates
and wedded. Can any one who has any part in Christ's tunic be regarded as an
alien? Have we not spoken of the very queen herself--that is, the Church of
the Saviour--as wearing a vesture of gold wrought about with divers colors?
Moreover, when I came to discuss marriage in connection with the following
verses,(9) I still adhered to the same view.(10) "This passage," I
said, "has indeed no relation to the present controversy; for, following
the decision of the Lord, the apostle teaches that a wife must not be put away
saving for fornication, and that, if she has been put away, she cannot during
the lifetime of her husband marry another man, or, at any rate, that she ought,
if possible, to be reconciled to her husband. In another verse he speaks to
the same effect: 'The wife is bound ... as long as her husband liveth; but
if her husband be dead, she is loosed from the law of her husband;(1) she is
at liberty to be married to, whom she will; only in the Lord,'(2) that is to
a Christian. Thus the apostle, while he allows a second or a third marriage
in the Lord, forbids even a first with a heathen."
6. I ask
my detractors to open their ears and to realize the fact that I have allowed
second and
third marriages" in the Lord." If, then, I have
not condemned second and third marriages, how can I have proscribed a first?
Moreover, in the passage where I interpret the words of the apostle, "Is
any man called being circumcised? Let him not become uncircumcised. Is any
called in uncircumcision? let him not be circumcised"(3) (a passage, it
is true, which some most careful interpreters of Scripture refer to the circumcision
and slavery of the Law), do I not in the clearest terms stand up for the marriage-tie?
My words are these:(4) "'If any man is called in uncircumcision, let him
not be circumcised.' You had a wife, the apostle says, when you believed. Do
not fancy your faith in Christ to be a reason for parting from her. For 'God
hath called us in peace.'(5) 'Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is
nothing but the keeping of the commandments of God.'(6) Neither celibacy nor
wedlock is of the slightest use without works, since even faith, the distinguishing
mark of Christians, if it have not works, is said to be dead,(7) and on such
terms as these the virgins of Vesta or of Juno, who was constant to one(8)
husband, might claim to be numbered among the saints. And a little further
on he says: 'Art thou called being a servant, care not for it; but, if thou
mayest be made free, use it rather;'(9) that is to say, if you have a wife,
and are bound to her, and render her her due, and have not power of your own
body--or, to speak yet more plainly--if you are the slave of a wife, do not
allow this to cause you sorrow, do not sigh over the loss of your virginity.
Even if you can find pretexts for parting from her to enjoy the freedom of
chastity, do not seek your own welfare at the price of another's ruin. Keep
your wife for a little, and do not try too hastily to overcome her reluctance.
Wait till she follows your example. If you only have patience, your wife will
some day become your sister."
7. In
another passage we have discussed the reasons which led Paul to say: "Now
concerning virgins, I have no commandment of the Lord: yet I give my judgment,
as one that hath obtained mercy of the Lord to be faithful."(1) Here also,
while we have ex-tolled virginity, we have been careful to give marriage its
due.(2) "Had the Lord commanded virginity," we said, "He would
have seemed to condemn marriage and to do away with that seed-plot of humanity
from which virginity itself springs. Had He cut away the root how could He
have looked for fruit? Unless He had first laid the foundations, how could
He have built the edifice or crowned it with a roof made to cover its whole
extent?" If we have spoken of marriage as the root whose fruit is virginity,
and if we have made wedlock the foundation on which the building or the roof
of perpetual chastity is raised, which of my detractors can be so captious
or so blind as to ignore the foundation on which the fabric and its roof are
built, while he has before his eyes both the fabric and the roof themselves?
Once more, in another place, we have brought forward the testimony of the apostle
to this effect: "Art thou bound unto a wife? Seek not to be loosed. Art
thou loosed from a wife? Seek not a wife."(3) To this we have appended
the following remarks:(4) "Each of us has his own sphere allotted to him.
Let me have mine, and do you keep yours. If you are bound to a wife, do not
put her away. If I am loosed from a wife, let me not seek a wife. Just as I
do not loose marriage-ties when they are once made, so do you refrain from
binding together what at present is loosed from such ties." Yet another
passage bears unmistakable testimony to the view which we have taken of virginity
and of wedlock:(5) "The apostle casts no snare upon us,(6) nor does he
compel us to be what we do not wish. He only urges us to what is honorable
and seemly, inciting us earnestly to serve the Lord, to be anxious always to
please Him, and to took for His will which He has prepared for us to do. We
are to be like alert and armed soldiers, who immediately execute the orders
given to them and perform them without that travail of mind(7) which, according
to the preacher, is given to the men of this world 'to be exercised therewith.'"(1)
At the end, also, of our comparison of virgins and married women we have summed
up the discussion thus:(2) "When one thing is good and another thing is
better; when that which is good has a different reward from that which is better;
and when there are more rewards than one, then, obviously, there exists a diversity
of gifts. The difference between marriage and virginity is as great as that
between not doing evil and doing good--or, to speak more favorably still, as
that between what is good and what is still better."
8. In
the sequel we go on to Speak thus:(3) "The apostle, in concluding
his discussion of marriage and of virginity, is careful to observe a mean course
in discriminating between them, and, turning neither to the right hand nor
to the left, he keeps to the King's highway,(4) and thus fulfils the injunction,
'Be not righteous overmuch.'(5) Moreover, when he goes on to compare monogamy
with digamy, he puts digamy after monogamy, just as before he subordinated
marriage to virginity." Do we not clearly show by this language what is
typified in the Holy Scriptures by the terms right and left, and also what
we take to be the meaning of the words "Be not righteous overmuch"?
We turn to the left if, following the lust of Jews and Gentiles, we burn for
sexual intercourse; we turn to the right if, following the error of the Manichaeans,
we under a pretence of chastity entangle ourselves in the meshes of unchastity.
But we keep to the King's highway if we aspire to virginity yet refrain from
condemning marriage. Can any one, moreover, be so unfair in his criticism of
my poor treatise as to allege that I condemn first marriages, when he reads
my opinion on second ones as follows:(6) "The apostle, it is true, allows
second marriages, but only to such women as are bent upon them, to such as
cannot contain,(7) lest 'when they have begun to wax wanton against Christ
they marry, having condemnation because they have rejected their first faith,'(8)
and he makes this concession because many 'are turned aside after Satan.'(9)
But they will be happier if they abide as widows. To this he immediately adds
his apostolical authority, 'after my judgment.' Moreover, lest any should consider
that authority, being human, to be of small weight, he goes on to say, 'and
I think also that I have the spirit of God.'(1) Thus, where he urges men to
continence he appeals not to human authority, but to the Spirit of God; but
when he gives them permission to marry he does not mention the Spirit of God,
but allows prudential considerations to turn the balance, relaxing the strictness
of his code in favor of individuals according to their several needs." Having
thus brought forward proofs that second marriages are allowed by the apostle,
we at once added the remarks which follow:(2) "As marriage is permitted
to virgins by reason of the danger of fornication, and as what in itself is
not desirable is thus made excusable, so by reason of the same danger widows
are permitted to marry a second time. For it is better that a woman should
know one man (though he should be a second husband or a third) than that she
should know several. In other words, it is preferable that she should prostitute
herself to one rather than to many." Calumny may do its worst. We have
spoken here not of a first marriage, but of a second, of a third, or (if you
like) of a fourth. But lest any one should apply my words (that it is better
for a woman to prostitute herself to one man than to several) to a first marriage
when my whole argument dealt with digamy and trigamy, I marked my own view
of these practices with the words:(3) "'All things are lawful, but all
things are not expedient.'(4) I do not condemn digamists nor yet trigamists,
nor even, to put an extreme, case, octogamists. I will make a still greater
concession: I am ready to receive even a whore-monger, if penitent. In every
case where fairness is possible, fair consideration must be shown."
9. My
calumniator should blush at his assertion that I condemn first marriages
when he reads my words
just
now quoted: "I do not condemn digamists or
trigamists, or even, to put an extreme case, octogamists." Not to condemn
is one thing, to commend is another. I may concede a practice as allowable
and yet not praise it as meritorious. But if I seem severe in saying, "In
every case where fairness is possible, fair consideration must be shown," no
one, I fancy, will judge me either cruel or stern who reads that the places
prepared for virgins and for wedded persons are different from those prepared
for trigamists, octogamists, and penitents. That Christ Himself, although in
the flesh a virgin, was in the spirit a monogamist, having one wife, even the
Church,(1) I have shown in the latter part of my argument.(2) And yet I am
supposed to condemn marriage! I am said to condemn it, although I use such
words as these:(3) "It is an undoubted fact that the levitical priests
were descended from the stock of Aaron, Eleazar, and Phinehas; and, as all
these were married men, we might well be confronted with them if, led away
by the error of the Encratites, we were to contend that marriage is in itself
deserving of condemnation." Here I blame Tatian, the chief of the Encratites,
for his rejection of marriage, and yet I myself am said to condemn it! Once
more, when I contrast virgins with widows, my own words show what my view is
concerning wedlock, and set forth the threefold gradation which I propose of
virgins, widows--whether in practice or in fact(4)--and wedded wives. "I
do not deny"--these are my words(5)--" the blessedness of widows
who continue such after their baptism, nor do I undervalue the merit of wives
who live in chastity with their husbands; but, just as widows receive a greater
reward from God than wives obedient to their husbands, they, too, must be content
to see virgins preferred before themselves."
10. Again,
when explaining the witness of the apostle to the Galatians, "By
the works of the law shall no flesh be justified," I have spoken to the
following effect: "Marriages also are works of the law. And for this reason
there is a curse upon such as do not produce offspring. They are permitted,
it is true, even under the Gospel; but it is one thing to concede an indulgence
to what is a weakness and quite another to promise a reward to what is a virtue." See
my express declaration that marriage is allowed in the Gospel, yet that those
who are married cannot receive the rewards of chastity so long as they render
their due one to another. If married men feel indignant at this statement,
let them vent their anger not on me but on the Holy Scriptures; nay, more,
upon all bishops, presbyters, and deacons, and the whole company of priests
and levites, who know that they cannot offer sacrifices if they fulfil the
obligations of marriage. Again, when I adduce evidence from the Apocalypse,(6)
is it not clear what view I take concerning virgins, widows, and wives? "These
are they who sing a new song(7) which no man can sing except he be a virgin.
These are 'the first fruits unto God and unto the Lamb,'(1) and they are without
spot. If virgins are the first fruits unto God, then widows and wives who live
in continence must come after the first fruits--that is to say, in the second
place and in the third." We place widows, then, and wives in the second
place and in the third, and for this we are charged by the frenzy of a heretic
with condemning marriage altogether.
11. Throughout
the book I have made many remarks in a tone of great moderation on virginity,
widowhood,
and marriage. But for the sake of brevity, I will
here adduce but one passage, and that of such a kind that no one, I think,
will be found to gainsay it save some one who wishes to prove himself malicious
or mad. In describing our Lord's visit to the marriage at Cana in Galilee,(2)
after some other remarks I have added these:(3) "He who went but once
to a marriage has taught us that a woman should marry but once; and this fact
might tell against virginity if we failed to give marriage its due place--after
virginity that is, and chaste widowhood. But, as it is only heretics who condemn
marriage and tread under foot the ordinance of God, we listen with gladness
to every word said by our Lord in praise of marriage. For the Church does not
condemn marriage, but only subordinates it. It does not reject it altogether,
but regulates it, knowing (as I have said above) that 'in a great house there
are not only vessels of gold and of silver, but also of wood and of earth;
and some to honor and some to dishonor. If a man, therefore, purge himself
... he shall be a vessel unto honor meet ... and prepared unto every good work.'"(4)
I listen with gladness, I say here, to every word said by the apostle in praise
of marriage. Do I listen with gladness to the praise of marriage, and do I
yet condemn marriage? The Church, I say, does not condemn wedlock, but subordinates
it. Whether you like it or not, marriage is subordinated to virginity and widowhood.
Even when marriage continues to fulfil its function, the Church does not condemn
it, but only subordinates it; it does not reject it, but only regulates it.
It is in your power, if you will, to mount the second step of chastity.(5)
Why are you angry if, standing on the third and lowest step, you will not make
haste to go up higher?
12. Since, then, I have so often reminded my reader of my views; and since
I have picked my way like a prudent traveller over every inch of the road,
stating repeatedly that, while I receive marriage as a thing in itself admissible,
I yet prefer continence, widowhood, and virginity, the wise and generous reader
ought to have judged what seemed hard sayings by my general drift, and not
to have charged me with putting forward inconsistent opinions in one and the
same book. For who is so dull or so inexperienced in writing as to praise and
to condemn one and the same object, as to destroy what he has built up, and
to build up what he has destroyed; and when he has vanquished his opponent,
to turn his sword, last of all against himself? Were my detractors country
bred or unacquainted with the arts of rhetoric or of logic, I should pardon
their want of insight; nor should I censure them for accusing me if I saw that
their ignorance was in fault and not their will. As it is men of intellect
who have enjoyed a liberal education make it their object less to understand
me than to wound me, and for such I have this short answer, that they should
correct my faults and not merely censure me for them. The lists are open, I
cry; your enemy has marshalled his forces, his position is plain, and (if I
may quote Virgil(1))--
The foeman calls you: meet him face to face.
Such men should answer their opponent. They ought to keep within the limits
of debate, and not to wield the schoolmaster's rod. Their books should aim
at showing in what my statements have fallen short of the truth, and in what
they have exceeded it. For, although I will not listen to fault-finders, I
will follow the advice of teachers. To direct the fighter how to fight when
you yourself occupy a post of vantage on the wall is a kind of teaching that
does not commend itself; and when you are yourself bathed in perfumes, it is
unworthy to charge a bleeding soldier with cowardice. Nor in saying this do
I lay myself open to a charge of boasting that while others have slept I only
have entered the lists. My meaning simply is that men who have seen me wounded
in this warfare may possibly be a little too cautious in their methods of fighting.
I would not have you engage in an encounter in which you will have nothing
to do but to protect yourself, your right hand remaining motionless while your
left manages your shield. You must either strike or fall. I cannot account
you a victor unless I see your opponent put to the sword.
13. You
are, no doubt, men of vast acquirements; but we too have studied in the schools,
and, like
you, we have
learned from the precepts of Aristotle--or,
rather, from those which he has derived from Gorgias--that there are different
ways of speaking; and we know, among other things, that he who writes for display
uses one style, and he who writes to convince, another.(1) In the former case
the debate is desultory; to confute the opposer, now this argument is adduced
and now that. One argues as one pleases, saying one thing while one means another.
To quote the proverb, "With one hand one offers bread, in the other one
holds a stone."(2) In the latter case a certain frankness and openness
of countenance are necessary. For it is one thing to start a problem and another
to expound what is already proved. The first calls for a disputant, the second
for a teacher. I stand in the thick of the fray, my life in constant danger:
you who profess to teach me are a man of books. "Do not," you say, "attack
unexpectedly or wound by a side-thrust. Strike straight at your opponent. You
should be ashamed to resort to feints instead of force." As if it were
not the perfection of fighting to menace one part and to strike another. Read,
I beg of you, Demosthenes or Cicero, or (if you do not care for pleaders whose
aim is to speak plausibly rather than truly) read Plato, Theophrastus, Xenophon,
Aristotle, and the rest of those who draw their respective rills of wisdom
from the Socratic fountain-head. Do they show any openness? Are they devoid
of artifice? Is not every word they say filled with meaning? And does not this
meaning always make for victory? Origen, Methodius, Eusebius, and Apollinaris(3)
write at great length against Celsus and Porphyry.(4) Consider how subtle are
the arguments, how insidious the engines with which they overthrow what the
spirit of the devil has wrought. Sometimes, it is true, they are compelled
to say not what they think but what is needful; and for this reason they employ
against their opponents the assertions of the Gentiles themselves. I say nothing
of the Latin authors, of Tertullian, Cyprian, Minutius, Victorinus, Lactantius,
Hilary, lest I should appear not so much to be defending myself as to be assailing
others. I will only mention the Apostle Paul, whose words seem to me, as often
as I hear them, to be not words, but peals of thunder. Read his epistles, and
especially those addressed to the Romans, to the Galatians, and to the Ephesians,
in all of which he stands in the thick of the battle, and you will see how
skilful and how careful he is in the proofs which he draws from the Old Testament,
and how warily he cloaks the object which he has in view. His words seem simplicity
itself: the expressions of a guileless and unsophisticated person--one who
has no skill either to plan a dilemma or to avoid it. Still, whichever way
you look, they are thunderbolts. His pleading halts, yet he carries every point
which he takes up. He turns his back upon his foe only to overcome him; he
simulates flight, but only that he may slay. He, then, if any one, ought to
be calumniated; we should speak thus to him: "The proofs which yon have
used against the Jews or against other heretics bear a different meaning in
their own contexts to that which they bear in your epistles. We see passages
taken captive by your pen and pressed into service to win you a victory which
in the volumes from which they are taken have no controversial bearing at all." May
he not reply to us in the words of the Saviour: "I have one mode of speech
for those that are without and another for those that are within; the crowds
hear my parables, but their interpretation is for my disciples alone"?(1)
The Lord puts questions to the Pharisees, but does not elucidate them. To teach
a disciple is one thing; to vanquish an opponent, another. "My mystery
is for me," says the prophet; "my mystery is for me and for them
that are mine."(2)
14. You are indignant with me because I have merely silenced Jovinian and
not instructed him. You, do I say? Nay, rather, they who grieve to hear him
anathematized, and who impeach their own pretended orthodoxy by eulogizing
in another the heresy which they hold themselves. I should have asked him,
forsooth, to surrender peaceably! I had no right to disregard his struggles
and to drag him against his will into the bonds of truth! I might use such
language had the desire of victory induced me to say anything counter to the
rule laid down in Scripture, and had I taken the line--so often adopted by
strong men in controversy--of justifying the means by the result. As it is,
however, I have been an exponent of the apostle rather than a dogmatist on
my own account; and my function has been simply that of a commentator. Anything,
therefore, which seems a hard saying should be imputed to the writer expounded
by me rather than to me the expounder; unless, indeed, he spoke otherwise than
he is represented to have done, and I have by an unfair interpretation wrested
the plain meaning of his words. If any one charges me with this disingenuousness
let him prove his charge from the Scriptures themselves.
I have
said in my book,(1) "If 'it is good for a man not to touch a woman,'
then it is bad for him to touch one, for bad, and bad only, is the opposite
of good. But, if though bad it is made venial, then it is allowed to prevent
something which would be worse than bad," and so on down to the commencement
of the next chapter. The above is my comment upon the apostle's words: "It
is good for a man not to touch a woman. Nevertheless, to avoid fornication,
let every man have his own wife, and let every woman have her own husband."(2)
In what way does my meaning differ from that intended by the apostle? Except
that where he speaks decidedly I do so with hesitation. He defines a dogma,
I hazard an inquiry. He openly says: "It is good for a man not to touch
a woman." I timidly ask if it is good for a man not to touch one. If I
thus waver, I cannot be said to speak positively. He says: "It is good
not to touch." I add what is a possible antithesis to "good." And
immediately afterwards I speak thus:(3) "Notice the apostle's carefulness.
He does not say: 'It is good for a man not to have a wife,' but, 'It is good
for a man not to touch a woman'; as if there is danger in the very touching
of one--danger which he who touches cannot escape." You see, therefore,
that I am not expounding the law as to husbands and wives, but simply discussing
the general question of sexual intercourse--how in comparison with chastity
and virginity, the life of angels, "It is good for a man not to touch
a woman."
"Vanity of vanities," says the Preacher, "all is vanity."(4)
But if all created things are good,(5) as being the handiwork of a good Creator,
how comes it that all things are vanity? If the earth is vanity, are the heavens
vanity too?--and the angels, the thrones, the dominations, the powers, and
the rest of the virtues?(6) No; if things which are good in themselves as being
the handiwork of a good Creator are called vanity, it is because they are compared
with things which are better still. For example, compared with a lamp, a lantern
is good for nothing; compared with a star, a lamp does not shine at all; the
brightest star pales before the moon; put the moon beside the sun, and it no
longer looks bright; compare the sun with Christ, and it is darkness. "I
am that I am," God says;(1) and if you compare all created things with
Him they have no existence. "Give not thy sceptre," says Esther, "unto
them that be nothing"(2)--that is to say, to idols and demons. And certainly
they were idols and demons to whom she prayed that she and hers might not be
given over. In Job also we read how Bildad says of the wicked man: "His
confidence shall be rooted out of his tabernacle, and destruction as a king
shall trample upon him. The companions also of him who is not shall abide in
his tabernacle."(3) This evidently relates to the devil, who must be in
existence, otherwise he could not be said to have companions. Still, because
he is lost to God, he is said not to be.
Now it
was in a similar sense that I declared it to be a bad thing to touch a woman--I
did not say
a wife--because
it is a good thing not to touch one.
And I added:(4) "I call virginity fine corn, wedlock barley, and fornication
cow-dung." Surely both corn and barley are creatures of God. But of the
two multitudes miraculously supplied in the Gospel the larger was fed upon
barley loaves, and the smaller on corn bread.(5) "Thou, Lord," says
the psalmist, "shalt save both man and beast."(6) I have myself said
the same thing in other words, when I have spoken of virginity as gold and
of wedlock as silver.(7) Again, in discussing(8) the one hundred and forty-four
thousand sealed virgins who were not defiled with women,(9) I have tried to
show that all who have not remained virgins are reckoned as defiled when compared
with the perfect chastity of the angels and of our Lord Jesus Christ. But if
any one thinks it hard or reprehensible that I have placed the same interval
between virginity and wedlock as there is between fine corn and barley, let
him read the book of the holy Ambrose "On Widows," and he will find,
among other statements concerning virginity and marriage, the following:(10) "The
apostle has not expressed his preference for marriage so unreservedly as to
quench in men the aspiration after virginity; he commences with a recommendation
of continence, and it is only subsequently that he stoops to mention the remedies
for its opposite. And although to the strong he has pointed out the prize of
their high calling,(1) yet he suffers none to faint by the way;(2) whilst he
applauds those who lead the van, he does, not despise those who bring up the
rear. For he had himself learned that the Lord Jesus gave to some barley bread,
lest they should faint by the way, but offered to others His own body, that
they should strive to attain His kingdom;"(3) and immediately afterwards: "The
nuptial tie, then, is not to be avoided as a crime, but to be refused as a
hard burden. For the law binds the wife to bring forth children in labor and
in sorrow. Her desire is to be to her husband that he should rule over her.(4)
It is not the widow, then, but the bride, who is handed over to labor and sorrow
in childbearing. It is not the virgin, but the married woman, who is subjected
to the sway of a husband." And in another place, "Ye are bought," says
the apostle, "with a price;(5) be not therefore the servants of men."(6)
You see how clearly he defines the servitude which attends the married state.
And a little farther on: "If, then, even a good marriage is servitude,
what must a bad one be, in which husband and wife cannot sanctify, but only
mutually destroy each other?" What I have said about virginity and marriage
diffusely, Ambrose has stated tersely and pointedly, compressing much meaning
into a few words. Virginity is described by him as a means of recommending
continence, marriage as a remedy for incontinence. And when he descends from
broad principles to particular details, he significantly holds out to virgins
the prize of the high calling, yet comforts the married, that they may not
faint by the way. While eulogizing the one class, he does not despise the other.
Marriage he compares to the barley bread set before the multitude, virginity
to the body of Christ given to the disciples. There is much less difference,
it seems to me, between barley and fine corn than between barley and the body
of Christ. Finally, he speaks of marriage as a hard burden, to be avoided if
possible, and as a badge of the most unmistakable servitude. He makes, also,
many other statements, which he has followed up at length in his three books "On
Virgins."
15. From
all which considerations it is clear that I have said nothing at all new
concerning virginity and
marriage, but have followed in all respects
the judgment of older writers--of Ambrose, that is to say, and others who have
discussed the doctrines of the Church. "And I would sooner follow them
in their faults than copy the dull pedantry of the writers of to-day."(1)
Let married men, if they please, swell with rage because I have said,(2) "I
ask you, what kind of good thing is that which forbids a man to pray, and which
prevents him from receiving the body of Christ?" When I do my duty as
a husband, I cannot fulfil the requirements of continence. The same apostle,
in another place, commands us to pray always.(3) "But if we are always
to pray we must never yield to the claims of wedlock for, as often as I render
her due to my wife, I incapacitate myself for prayer." When I spoke thus
it is clear that I relied on the words of the apostle: "Defraud ye not
one the other, except it be with consent for a time, that ye may give yourselves
to ... prayer."(4) The Apostle Paul tells us that when we have intercourse
with our wives we cannot pray. If, then, sexual intercourse prevents what is
less important--that is, prayer--how much more does it prevent what is more
important--that is, the reception of the body of Christ? Peter, too, exhorts
us to continence, that our "prayers be not hindered."(5) How, I should
like to know, have I sinned in all this? What have I done? How have I been
in fault? If the waters of a stream are thick and muddy, it is not the river-bed
which is to blame, but the source. Am I attacked because I have ventured to
add to the words of the apostle these words of my own: "What kind of good
thing is that which prevents a man from receiving the body of Christ?" If
so, I will make answer briefly thus: Which is the more important, to pray or
to receive Christ's body? Surely to receive Christ's body. If, then, sexual
intercourse hinders the less important thing, much more does it hinder that
which is the more important.
I have
said in the same treatise(6) that David and they that were with him could
not have lawfully
eaten the
shew-bread had they not made answer that
for three days they had not been defiled with women(1)--not, of course, with
harlots, intercourse with whom was forbidden by the law, but with their own
wives, to whom they were lawfully united. Moreover, when the people were about
to receive the law on Mount Sinai they were commanded to keep away from their
wives for three days.(2) I know that at Rome it is customary for the faithful
always to receive the body of Christ, a custom which I neither censure nor
indorse. "Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind."(3) But
I appeal to the consciences of those persons who after indulging in sexual
intercourse on the same day receive the communion--having first, as Persius
puts it, "washed off the night in a flowing stream,"(4) and I ask
such why they do not presume to approach the martyrs or to enter the churches.(5)
Is Christ of one mind abroad and of another at home? What is unlawful in church
cannot be lawful at home. Nothing is hidden from God. "The night shineth
as the day" before Him.(6) Let each man examine himself, and so let him
approach the body of Christ.(7) Not, of course, that the deferring of communion
for one day or for two makes a Christian any the holier or that what I have
not deserved to-day I shall deserve to-morrow or the day after. But if I grieve
that I have not shared in Christ's body it does help me to avoid for a little
while my wife's embraces, and to prefer to wedded love the love of Christ.
A hard discipline, you will say, and one not to be borne. What man of the world
could bear it? He that can bear it, I reply, let him bear it;(8) he that cannot
must look to himself. it is my business to say, not what each man can do or
will do, but what the Scriptures inculcate.
16. Again,
objection has been taken to my comments on the apostle in the following passage:(9) "But lest any should suppose from the context of the words
before quoted (namely, 'that ye may give yourselves ... to prayer and come
together again') that the apostle desires this consummation, and does not merely
concede it to obviate a worse downfall, he immediately adds, 'that Satan tempt
you not for your incontinency.'(1) 'And come together again.' What a noble
indulgence the words convey! One which he blushes to speak of in plainer words,
which he prefers only to Satan's temptation, and which has its root in incontinence.
Do we labor to expound this as a dark saying when the writer has himself explained
his meaning? "I speak this,' he says, 'by way of permission, and not as
a command.'(2) Do we still hesitate to speak of wedlock as a thing permitted
instead of as a thing enjoined? or are we afraid that such permission will
exclude second or third marriages or some other case?" What have I said
here which the apostle has not said? The phrase, I suppose, "which he
blushes to speak of in plainer words." I imagine that when he says "come
together," and does not mention for what, he takes a modest way of indicating
what he does not like to name openly--that is, sexual intercourse. Or is the
objection to the words which follow--"which he prefers only to Satan's
temptation, and which has its root in incontinence"? Are they not the
very words of the apostle, only differently arranged--"that Satan tempt
you not for your incontinency"? Or do people cavil because I said, "Do
we still hesitate to speak of wedlock as a thing permitted instead of as a
thing enjoined?" If this seems a hard saying, it should be ascribed to
the apostle, who says, "But I speak this by way of permission, and not
as a command," and not to me, who, except that I have rearranged their
order, have changed neither the words nor their meaning.
17. The
shortness of a letter compels me to hasten on. I pass, accordingly, to the
points which
remain. "I say," remarks the apostle, "to
the unmarried and widows, It is good for them if they abide even as I. But
if they cannot contain, let them marry; for it is better to marry than to burn."(3)
This section I have interpreted thus:(4) "When he has granted to those
who are married the use of wedlock, and has made clear his own wishes and concessions,
he passes on to those who are unmarried or widows, and sets before them his
own example. He calls them happy if they abide even as he,(5) but he goes on,
'if they cannot contain, let them marry.' He thus repeats his former language,
'but only to avoid fornication,' and 'that Satan tempt you not for your incontinence.'
And when he says, 'If they cannot contain, let them marry,' he gives as a reason
for his words that 'it is better to marry than to burn.' It is only good to
marry, because it is bad to burn. But take away the fire of lust, and he will
not say 'it is better to marry.' For a thing is said to be better in antithesis
to something which is worse, and not simply in contrast with what is admittedly
good. It is as though he said, 'It is better to have one eye than none."'
Shortly afterwards, apostrophizing the apostle, I spoke thus:' "If marriage
is good in itself, do not compare it with a conflagration, but simply say,
'It is good to marry.' I must suspect the goodness of a thing which only becomes
a lesser evil in the presence of a greater one. I, for my part, would have
it not a lighter evil but a downright good." The apostle wishes unmarried
women and widows to abstain from sexual intercourse, incites them to follow
his own example, and calls them happy if they abide even as he. But if they
cannot contain, and are tempted to quench the fire of lust by fornication rather
than by continence, it is better, he tells them, to marry than to burn. Upon
which precept I have made this comment: "It is good to marry, simply because
it is bad to burn," not putting forward a view of my own, but only explaining
the apostle's precept, "It is better to marry than to burn;" that
is, it is better to take a husband than to commit fornication. If, then, you
teach that burning or fornication is good, the good will still be surpassed
by what is still better.(2) But if marriage is only a degree better than the
evil to which it is preferred, it cannot be of that unblemished perfection
and blessedness which suggest a comparison with the life of angels. Suppose
I say, "It is better to be a virgin than a married woman;" in this
case I have preferred to what is good what is still better. But suppose I go
a step further and say, "It is better to marry than to commit fornication;" in
that case I have preferred, not a better thing to a good thing, but a good
thing to a bad one. There is a wide difference between the two cases; for,
while virginity is related to marriage as better is to good, marriage is related
to fornication as good is to bad. How, I should like to know, have I sinned
in this explanation? My fixed purpose was not to bend the Scriptures to my
own wishes, but simply to say what I took to be their meaning. A commentator
has no business to dilate on his own views; his duty is to make plain the meaning
of the author whom he professes to interpret. For, if he contradicts the writer
whom he is trying to expound, he will prove to be his opponent rather than
his interpreter. When I am freely expressing my own opinion, and not commenting
upon the Scriptures, then any one that pleases may charge me with having spoken
hardly of marriage. But if he can find no ground for such a charge, he should
attribute such passages in my commentaries as appear severe or harsh to the
author commented on, and not to me, who am only his interpreter.
18. Another
charge brought against me is simply intolerable! It is urged that in explaining
the apostle's
words
concerning husbands and wives, "Such
shall have trouble in the flesh," I have said:(1) "We in our ignorance
had supposed that in the flesh at least wedlock would have rejoicing. But if
married persons are to have trouble in the flesh, the only thing in which they
seemed likely to have pleasure, what motive will be left to make women marry?
for, besides having trouble in spirit and soul, they will also have it even
in the flesh."(2) Do I condemn marriage if I enumerate its troubles, such
as the crying of infants, the death of children the chance of abortion, domestic
losses, and so forth? Whilst Damasus of holy memory was still living, I wrote
a book against Helvidius "On the Perpetual Virginity of the Blessed Mary," in
which, duly to extol the bliss of virginity, I was forced to say much of the
troubles of marriage. Did that excellent man--versed in Scripture as he was,
and a virgin doctor of the virgin Church--find anything to censure in my discourse?
Moreover, in the treatise which I addressed to Eustochium(3) I used much harsher
language regarding marriage, and yet no one was offended at it. Nay, every
lover of chastity strained his ears to catch my eulogy of continence. Read
Tertullian, read Cyprian, read Ambrose, and either accuse me with them or acquit
me with them. My critics resemble the characters of Plautus. Their only wit
lies in detraction; and they try to make themselves out men of learning by
assailing all parties in turn. Thus they bestow their censure impartially upon
myself and upon my opponent, and maintain that we are both beaten, although
one or other of us must have succeeded.
Moreover,
when in discussing digamy and trigamy I have said,(1) "It is
better for a woman to know one man, even though he be a second husband or a
third, than several; it is more tolerable for her to prostitute herself to
one man than to many," have I not immediately subjoined my reason for
so saying? "The Samaritan woman in the Gospel, when she declares that
her present husband is her sixth, is rebuked by the Lord on the ground that
he is not her husband."(2) For my own part, I now once more freely proclaim
that digamy is not condemned in the Church--no, nor yet trigamy--and that a
woman may marry a fifth husband, or a sixth, or a greater number still just
as lawfully as she may marry a second; but that, while such marriages are not
condemned, neither are they commended. They are meant as alleviations of an
unhappy lot, and in no way redound to the glory of continence. I have spoken
to the same effect elsewhere.(3) "When a woman marries more than once--whether
she does so twice or three times matters little--she ceases to be a monogamist.
'All things are lawful ... but all things are not expedient.'(4) I do not condemn
digamists or trigamists, or even, to put an impossible case, octogamists. Let
a woman have an eighth husband if she must; only let her cease to prostitute
herself."
19. I
will come now to the passage in which I am accused of saying that--at least
according to the
true Hebrew
text--the words "God saw that it was
good"(5) are not inserted after the second day of the creation, as they
are after the first, third, and remaining ones, and of adding immediately the
following comment:(6) "We are meant to understand that there is something
not good in the number two, separating us as it does from unity, and prefiguring
the marriage-tie. Just as in the account of Noah's ark all the animals that
enter by twos are unclean, but those of which an uneven number is taken are
clean."(7) In this statement a passing objection is made to what I have
said concerning the second day, whether on the ground that the words mentioned
really occur in the passage, although I say that they do not occur, or because,
assuming them to occur, I have understood them in a sense different from that
which the context evidently requires. As regards the non-occurrence of the
words in question (viz., "God saw that it was good"), let them take
not my evidence, but that of all the Jewish and other translators--Aquila(1)
namely, Symmachus,(2) and Theodotion.(3) But if the words, although occurring
in the account of the other days, do not occur in the account of this, either
let them give a more plausible reason than I have done for their non-occurrence,
or, failing such, let them, whether they like it or not, accept the suggestion
which I have made. Furthermore, if in Noah's ark all the animals that enter
by twos are unclean, whilst those of which an uneven number is taken are clean,
and if there is no dispute about the accuracy of the text, let them explain
if they can why it is so written. But if they cannot explain it, then, whether
they will or not, they must embrace my explanation of the matter. Either produce
better fare and ask me to be your guest, or else rest content with the meal
that I offer you, however poor it may be.(4)
I must
now mention the ecclesiastical writers who have dealt with this question
of the odd number.
They are, among
the Greeks, Clement, Hippolytus, Origen,
Dionysius, Eusebius, Didymus; and, among ourselves, Tertullian, Cyprian, Victorinus,
Lactantius, Hilary. What Cyprian said to Fortunatus about the number seven
is clear from the letter which he sent to him.(5) Or perhaps I ought to bring
forward the reasonings of Pythagoras, Archytas of Tarentum, and Publius Scipio
in (Cicero's) sixth book "Concerning the Common Weal." If my detractors
will not listen to any of these I will make the grammar schools shout in their
ears the words of Virgil:
Uneven numbers are the joy of God.(6)
20. To say, as I have done, that virginity is cleaner than wedlock, that the
even numbers must give way to the odd, that the types of the Old Testament
establish the truth of the Gospel: this, it appears, is a great sin subversive
of the churches and intolerable to the world. The remaining points which are
censured in my treatise are, I take it, of less importance, or else resolve
themselves into this. I have, therefore, refrained from answering them, both
that I may not exceed the limit at my disposal, and that I may not seem to
distrust your intelligence, knowing as I do that you are ready to be my champion
even before I ask you. With my last breath, then, I protest that neither now
nor at any former time have I condemned marriage. I have merely answered an
opponent without any fear that they of my own party would lay snares for me.
I extol virginity to the skies, not because I myself possess it, but because,
not possessing it, I admire it all the more. Surely it is a modest and ingenuous
confession to praise in others that which you lack yourself. The weight of
my body keeps me fixed to the ground, but do I fail to admire the flying birds
or to praise the dove because, in the words of Virgil,(1) it:
Glides on its liquid path with motionless swift wings?
Let no
man deceive himself, let no man, giving ear to the voice of flattery, rush
upon ruin. The first
virginity
man derives from his birth, the second
from his second birth.(2) The words are not mine; it is an old saying, "No
man can serve two masters;"(3) that is, the flesh and the spirit. For "the
flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh; and these
are contrary the one to the other," so that we cannot do the things that
we would.(4) When, then, anything in my little work seems to you harsh, have
regard not to my words, but to the Scripture, whence they are taken.
21. Christ
Himself is a virgin;(5) and His mother is also a virgin; yea, though she
is His mother,
she is a
virgin still. For Jesus has entered in through
the closed doors,(6) and in His sepulchre--a new one hewn out of the hardest
rock--no man is laid either before Him or after Him.(7) Mary is "a garden
enclosed ... a fountain sealed,"(8) and from that fountain flows, according
to Joel,(9) the river which waters the torrent bed either" of cords or
of thorns;(11) the cords being those of the sins by which we were beforetime
bound,(12) the thorns those which choked the seed the goodman of the house
had sown.(13) She is the east gate, spoken of by the prophet Ezekiel,(14) always
shut and always shining, and either concealing or revealing the Holy of Holies;
and through her "the Sun of Righteousness,"(15) our "high priest
after the order of Melchizedek,"(16) goes in and out. Let my critics explain
to me how Jesus can have entered in through closed doors when He allowed His
hands and His side to be handled, and showed that He had bones and flesh," thus
proving that His was a true body and no mere phantom of one, and I will explain
how the holy Mary can be at once a mother and a virgin. A mother before she
was wedded, she remained a virgin after bearing her son. Therefore, as I was
going to say, the virgin Christ and the virgin Mary have dedicated in themselves
the first fruits of virginity for both sexes.(1) The apostles have either been
virgins or, though married, have lived celibate lives. Those persons who are
chosen to be bishops, priests, and deacons are either virgins or widowers;
or at least when once they have received the priesthood, are vowed to perpetual
chastity. Why do we delude ourselves and feel vexed if while we are continually
straining after sexual indulgence, we find the palm of chastity denied to us?
We wish to fare sumptuously, and to enjoy the embraces of our wives, yet at
the same time we desire to reign with Christ among virgins and widows. Shall
there be but one reward, then, for hunger and for excess, for filth and for
finery, for sackcloth and for silk? Lazarus,(2) in his lifetime, received evil
things, and the rich man, clothed in purple, fat and sleek, while he lived
enjoyed the good things of the flesh but, now that they are dead, they occupy
different positions. Misery has given place to satisfaction, and satisfaction
to misery. And it rests with us whether we will follow Lazarus or the rich
man.
LETTER XLIX.
TO PAMMACHIUS.
Jerome
encloses the preceding letter, thanks Pammachius for his efforts to suppress
his treatise "against Jovinian," but
declares these to be useless, and exhorts him, if he still has any hesitation
in his mind, to turn
to the Scriptures and the commentaries made upon them by Origen and others.
Written at the same time as the preceding letter.
1. Christian modesty sometimes requires us to be silent even to our friends,
and to nurse our humility in peace, where the renewal of an old friendship
would expose us l to the charge of self-seeking. Thus, when you have kept silence
I have kept silence too, and have not cared to remonstrate with you, lest I
should be thought more anxious to conciliate a person of influence than to
cultivate a friend. But, now that it has become a duty to reply to your letter,
I will endeavor always to be beforehand with you, and not so much to answer
your queries as to write independently of them. Thus, if I have shown my modesty
hitherto by silence, I will henceforth show it still more by coming forward
to speak.
2. I quite
recognize the kindness and forethought which have induced you to withdraw
from circulation
some
copies of my work against Jovinian. Your diligence,
however, has been of no avail, for several people coming from the city have
repeatedly read aloud to me passages which they have come across in Rome. In
this province, also, the books have already been circulated; and, as you have
read yourself in Horace, "Words once uttered cannot be recalled."(1)
I am not so fortunate as are most of the writers of the day--able, that is,
to correct my trifles whenever I like. When once I have written anything, either
my admirers or my ill-wishers--from different motives, but with equal zeal--sow
my work broadcast among the public; and their language, whether it is that
of eulogy or of criticism, is apt to run to excess.(2) They are guided not
by the merits of the piece, but by their own angry feelings. Accordingly, I
have done what I could. I have dedicated to you a defence of the work in question,
feeling sure that when you have read it you will yourself satisfy the doubts
of others on my behalf; or else, if you too turn up your nose at the task,
you will have to explain in some new manner that section of the apostle(3)
in which he discusses virginity and marriage.
3. I do
not speak thus that I may provoke you to write on the subject yourself--although
I know
your zeal in
the study of the sacred writings to be greater than my
own--but that you may compel my tormentors to do so. They are educated; in
their own eyes no mean scholars; competent not merely to censure but to instruct
me. If they write on the subject, my view will be the sooner neglected when
it is compared with theirs. Read, I pray you, and diligently consider the words
of the apostle, and you will then see that--with a view to avoid misrepresentation--I
have been much more gentle towards married persons than he was disposed to
be. Origen, Dionysius, Pierius, Eusebius of Caesarea, Didymus, Apollinaris,
have used great latitude in the interpretation of this epistle.(4) When Pierius,
sifting and expounding the apostle's meaning, comes to the words, "I would
that all men were even as I myself,"(5) he makes this comment upon them: "In
saying this Paul plainly preaches abstinence from marriage." Is the fault
here mine, or am I responsible for harshness? Compared with this sentence of
Pierius,(1) all that I have ever written is mild indeed. Consult the commentaries
of the above-named writers and take advantage of the Church libraries; you
will then more speedily finish as you would wish the enterprise which you have
so happily begun.(2)
4. I hear that the hopes of the entire city are centred in you, and that bishop(3)
and people are, agreed in wishing for your exaltation. To be a bishop (4 is
much, to deserve to be one is more.
If you read the books of the sixteen prophets(5) which I have rendered into
Latin from the Hebrew; and if, when you have done so, you express satisfaction
with my labors, the news will encourage me to take out of my desk some other
works now shut up in it. I have lately translated Job into our mother tongue:
you will be able to borrow a copy of it from your cousin, the saintly Marcella.
Read it both in Greek and in Latin, and compare the old version with my rendering.
You will then clearly see that the difference between them is that between
truth and falsehood. Some of my commentaries upon the twelve prophets I have
sent to the reverend father Domnio, also the four books of Kings--that is,
the two called Samuel and the two called Malachim.(6) If you care to read these
you will learn for yourself how difficult it is to understand the Holy Scriptures,
and particularly the prophets; and how through the fault of the translators
passages which for the Jews flow clearly on for us abound with mistakes. Once
more, you must not in my small writings look for any such eloquence as that
which for Christ's sake you disregard in Cicero. A version made for the use
of the Church, even though it may possess a literary charm, ought to disguise
and avoid it as far as possible; in order that it may not speak to the idle
schools and few disciples of the philosophers, but may address itself rather
to the entire human race.
LETTER L.
TO DOMNIO.
Domnio,
a Roman (called in Letter XLV. "the Lot of our time"), had
written to Jerome to tell him that an ignorant monk had been traducing his
books "against Jovinian." Jerome, in reply, sharply rebukes the folly
of his critic and comments on the want of straightforwardness in his conduct.
He concludes the letter with an emphatic restatement of his original position.
Written in 394 A.D.
1. Your
letter is full at once of affection and of complaining. The affection is
your own, which
prompts
you unceasingly to warn me of impending danger,
and which makes you on my behalf of safest things distrustful and afraid.(1)
The complaining is of those who have no love for me, and seek an occasion against
me in my sins. They speak against their brother, they slander their own mother's
son.(2) You write to me of these--nay, of one in particular--a lounger who
is to be seen in the streets, at crossings, and in public places; a monk who
is a noisy news-monger, clever only in detraction, and eager, in spite of the
beam in his own eye, to remove the mote in his neighbor's.(3) And you tell
me that he preaches publicly against me, gnawing, rending, and tearing asunder
with his fangs the books that I have written against Jovinian. You inform me,
moreover, that this home-grown dialectician, this mainstay of the Plautine
company, has read neither the "Categories" of Aristotle nor his treatise "On
Interpretation," nor his "Analytics," nor yet the "Topics" of
Cicero, but that, moving as he does only in uneducated circles, and frequenting
no society but that of weak women, he ventures to construct illogical syllogisms
and to unravel by subtle arguments what he is pleased to call my sophisms.
How foolish I have been to suppose that without philosophy there can be no
knowledge of these subjects; and to account it a more important part of composition
to erase than to write! In vain have I perused the commentaries of Alexander;
to no purpose has a skilled teacher used the "Introduction" of Porphyry
to instruct me in logic; and--to make light of human learning--I have gained
nothing at all by having Gregory of Nazianzum and Didymus as my catechists
in the Holy Scriptures. My acquisition of Hebrew has been wasted labor; and
so also has been the daily study which from my youth I have bestowed upon the
Law and the Prophets, the Gospels and the Apostles.
2. Here we have a man who has reached perfection without a teacher, so as
to be a vehicle of the spirit and a self-taught genius. He surpasses Cicero
in eloquence, Aristotle in argument, Plato in discretion, Aristarchus in learning,
Didymus, that man of brass, in the number of his books; and not only Didymus,
but all the writers of his time in his knowledge of the Scriptures. It is reported
that you have only to give him a theme and he is always ready--like Carneades(1)--to
argue on this side or on that, for justice or against it. The world escaped
a great danger, and civil actions and suits concerning succession were saved
from a yawning gulf on the day when, despising the bar, he transferred himself
to the Church. For, had he been unwilling, who could ever have been proved
innocent? And, if he once began to reckon the points of the case upon his fingers,
and to spread his syllogistic nets, what criminal would his pleading have failed
to save? Had he but stamped his foot, or fixed his eyes, or knitted his brow,
or moved his hand, or twirled his beard, he would at once have thrown dust
in the eyes of the jury. No wonder that such a complete Latinist and so profound
a master of eloquence overcomes poor me, who--as I have been some time(2) away
(from Rome), and without opportunities for speaking Latin--am half a Greek
if not altogether a barbarian. No wonder, I say, that he overcomes me when
his eloquence has crushed Jovinian in person. Good Jesus! what! even Jovinian
that great and clever man! So clever, indeed, that no one can understand his
writings, and that when he sings it is only for himself--and for the muses!
3. Pray,
my dear father, warn this man not to hold language contrary to his profession,
and not to
undo with
his words the chastity which he professes
by his garb. Whether he elects to be a virgin or a married celibate--and the
choice must rest with himself--he must not compare wives with virgins, for
that would be to have striven in vain against Jovinian's eloquence. He likes,
I am told, to visit the cells of widows and virgins, and to lecture them with
his brows knit on sacred literature. What is it that he teaches these poor
women in the privacy of their own chambers? Is it to feel assured that virgins
are no better than wives? Is it to make the most of the flower of their age,
to eat and drink, to frequent the baths, to live in luxury, and not to disdain
the use of perfumes? Or does he preach to them chastity, fasting, and neglect
of their persons? No doubt the precepts that he inculcates are full of virtue.
But if so, let him admit publicly what he says privately. Or, if his private
teaching is the same as his public, he should keep aloof altogether from the
society of girls. He is a young man--a monk, and in his own eyes an eloquent
one (do not pearls fall from his lips, and are not his elegant phrases sprinkled
with comic salt and humor?)--I am surprised, therefore, that he can without
a blush frequent noblemen's houses, pay constant visits to married ladies,
make our religion a subject of contention, distort the faith of Christ by misapplying
words, and--in addition to all this--detract from one who is his brother in
the Lord. He may, however, have supposed me to be in error (for "in many
things we offend all," and" if any man offend not in word he is a
perfect man"(1)). In that case he should have written to convict me or
to question me, the course taken by Pammachius, a man of high attainments and
position. To this latter I defended myself as best I could, and in a lengthy
letter explained the exact sense of my words. He might at least have copied
the diffidence which led you to extract and arrange such passages as seemed
to give offence; asking me for corrections or explanations, and not supposing
me so mad that in one and the same book I should write for marriage and against
it.
4. Let
him spare himself, let him spare me, let him spare the Christian name. Let
him realize his position
as a monk, not by talking and arguing, but by
holding his peace and sitting still. Let him read the words of Jeremiah: "It
is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his youth. He sitteth alone and
keepeth silence, because he hath borne it upon him."(2) Or if he has really
the right to apply the censor's rod to all writers, and fancies himself a man
of learning because he alone understands Jovinian (you know the proverb: Balbus
best knows what Balbus means); yet, as Atilius(3) reminds us, "we are
not all writers." Jovinian himself--an unlettered man of letters if ever
there was one--will with most justice proclaim the fact to him. "That
the bishops condemn me," he says, "is not reason but treason. I want
no answers from nobodies, who, while they have authority to put me down, have
not the wit to teach me. Let one write against me who has a tongue that I can
understand, and whom to vanquish will be to vanquish all.
"'I
know full well: believe me, I have felt
The hero's force when rising o'er his shield
He hurls his whizzing spear.'(1)
He is
strong in argument, intricate and tenacious, one to fight with his head down.
Often has he cried
out against
me in the streets from late one night
till early the next. He is a well-built man, and his thews are those of an
athlete. Secretly I believe him to be a follower of my teaching. He never blushes
or stops to weigh his words: his only aim is to speak as loud as possible.
So famous is he for his eloquence that his sayings are held up as models to
our curly-headed youngsters.(2) How often, when I have met him at meetings,
has he aroused my wrath and put me into a passion! How often has he spat upon
me, and then departed spat upon! But these are vulgar methods, and any of my
followers can use them. I appeal to books, to those memorials which must be
handed down to posterity. Let us speak by our writings, that the silent reader
may judge between us; and that, as I have a flock of disciples, he may have
one also--flatterers and parasites worthy of the Gnatho and Phormio(8) who
is their master."
5. It
is no difficult matter, my dear Domnio, to chatter at street corners or in
apothecaries'
shops and to
pass judgment on the world. "So-and-so
has made a good speech, so-and-so a bad one; this man knows the Scriptures,
that one is crazy; this man talks glibly, that never says a word at all." But
who considers him worthy thus to judge every one? To make an outcry against
a man in every street, and to heap, not definite charges, but vague imputations,
on his head, is nothing. Any buffoon or litigiously disposed person can do
as much. Let him put forth his hand, put pen to paper, and bestir himself;
let him write books and prove in them all he can. Let him give me a chance
of replying to his eloquence. I can return bite for bite, if I like; when hurt
myself, I can fix my teeth in my opponent. I too have had a liberal education.
As Juvenal says, "I also have often withdrawn my hand from the ferule."(4)
Of me, too, it may be said in the words of Horace, "Flee from him; he
has hay on his horn."(5) But I prefer to be a disciple of Him who says, "I
gave my back to the smiters ... I hid not my face from shame and spitting."(6)
When He was reviled He reviled not again. After the buffeting, the cross, the
scourge, the blasphemies, at the very last He prayed for His crucifiers, saying, "Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do."(1) I, too, pardon the error
of a brother. He has been deceived, I feel sure, by the art of the devil. Among
the women he was held clever and eloquent; but, when my poor writings reached
Rome, dreading me as a rival, he tried to rob me of my laurels. No man on earth,
he resolved, should please his eloquent self, unless such as commanded respect
rather than sought it, and showed themselves men to be feared more than favored.
A man of consummate address, he desired, like an old soldier, with one stroke
of the sword to strike down both his enemies,(2) and to make clear to every
one that, whatever view he might take, Scripture was always with him. Well,
he must condescend to send me his account of the matter, and to correct my
indiscreet language, not by censure but by instruction. If he tries to do this,
he will find that what seems forcible on a lounge is not equally forcible in
court; and that it is one thing to discuss the doctrines of the divine law
amid the spindles and work-baskets of girls and another to argue concerning
them among men of education. As it is, without hesitation or shame, he raises
again and again the noisy shout, "Jerome condemns marriage," and,
whilst he constantly moves among women with child, crying infants, and marriage-beds,
he suppresses the words of the apostle just to cover me--poor me--with odium.
However, when he comes by and by to write books and to grapple with me at close
quarters, then he will feel it, then he will stick fast; Epicurus and Aristippus(3)
will not be near him then; the swineherds(4) will not come to his aid; the
prolific sow(6) will not so much as grunt. For I also may say, with Turnus:
Father, I too can launch a forceful spear,
And when I strike blood follows from the wound.(6)
But if
he refuses to write, and fancies that abuse is as effective as criticism,
then, in spite of all
the
lands and seas and peoples which lie between us,
he must hear at least the echo of my cry, "I do not condemn marriage," "I
do not condemn wedlock." Indeed--and this I say to make my meaning quite
clear to him--I should like every one to take a wife who, because they get
frightened in the night, cannot manage to sleep alone.(7)
LETTER LI.
FROM EPIPHANIUS, BISHOP OF SALAMIS, IN CYPRUS, TO JOHN, BISHOP OF JERUSALEM.
A coolness
had arisen between these two bishops in connection with the Origenistic controversy,
which at this
time was at its height. Epiphanius had openly charged
John with being an Origenist, and had also uncanonically conferred priests'
orders on Jerome's brother Paulinian, in order that the monastery at Bethlehem
might henceforth be entirely independent of John. Naturally, John resented
this conduct and showed his resentment. The present letter is a kind of half-apology
made by Epiphanius for what he had done, and like all such, it only seems to
have made matters worse. The controversy is fully detailed in the treatise "Against
John of Jerusalem" in this volume, esp. 11-14.
An interesting
paragraph ( 9) narrates how Epiphanius destroyed at Anablatha a church-curtain
on which
was depicted "a likeness of Christ or of some
saint"--an early instance of the iconoclastic spirit.
Originally written in Greek, the letter was (by the writer's request) rendered
into Latin by Jerome. Its date is 394 A.D.
To the lord bishop and dearly beloved brother, John, Epiphanius sends greeting.
1. It
surely becomes us, dearly beloved, not to abuse our rank as clergy, so as
to make it an occasion
of
pride, but by diligently keeping and observing
God's commandments, to be in reality what in name we profess to be. For, if
the Holy Scriptures say, "Their lots shall not profit them,"(1) what
pride in our clerical position(2) will be able to avail us who sin not only
in thought and feeling, but in speech? I have heard, of course, that you are
incensed against me, that you are angry, and that you threaten to write about
me--not merely to particular places and provinces, but to the uttermost ends
of the earth. Where is that fear of God which should make us tremble with the
trembling spoken of by the Lord--"Whosoever is angry with his brother
without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment"?(3) Not that I greatly
care for your writing what you please. For Isaiah tells us(4) of letters written
on papyrus and cast upon the waters -- missives soon carried away by time and
tide. I have done you no harm, I have inflicted no injury upon you, I have
extorted nothing from you by violence. My action concerned a monastery whose
inmates were foreigners in no way subject to your provincial jurisdiction.
Moreover their regard for my insignificance and for the letters which I frequently
addressed to them had commenced to produce a feeling of dislike to communion
with you. Feeling, therefore, that too great strictness or scrupulosity on
my part might have the effect of alienating them from the Church with its ancient
faith, I ordained one of the brothers deacon, and after he had ministered as
such, admitted him to the priesthood. You should, I think, have been grateful
to me for this, knowing, as you surely must, that it is the fear of God which
has compelled me to act in this way, and particularly when you recollect that
God's priesthood is everywhere the same, and that I have simply made provision
for the wants of the Church. For, although each individual bishop of the Church
has under him churches which are placed in his charge, and although no man
may stretch himself beyond his measure,(1) yet the love of Christ, which is
without dissimulation,(2) is set up as an example to us all; and we must consider
not so much the thing done as the time and place, the mode and motive, of doing
it. I saw that the monastery contained a large number of reverend brothers,
and that the reverend presbyters, Jerome and Vincent, through modesty and humility,
were unwilling to offer the sacrifices permitted to their rank, and to labor
in that part of their calling which ministers more than any other to the salvation
of Christians. I knew, moreover, that you could not find or lay hands on this
servant of God(3) who had several times fled from you simply because he was
reluctant to undertake the onerous duties of the priesthood, and that no other
bishop could easily find him. Accordingly, I was a good deal surprised when,
by the ordering of God, he came to me with the deacons of the monastery and
others of the brethren, to make satisfaction to me for some grievance or other
which I had against them. While, therefore, the Collect(4) was being celebrated
in the church of the villa which adjoins our monastery--he being quite ignorant
and wholly unsuspicious of my purpose--I gave orders to a number of deacons
to seize him and to stop his mouth, lest in his eagerness to free himself he
might adjure me in the name of Christ. First of all, then, I ordained him deacon,
setting before him the fear of God, and forcing him to minister; for he made
a hard struggle against it, crying out that he was unworthy, and protesting
that this heavy burden was beyond his strength. It was with difficulty, then,
that I overcame his reluctance, persuading him as well as I could with passages
from Scripture, and setting before him the commandments of God. And when he
had ministered in the offering of the holy sacrifices, once more with great
difficulty I closed his mouth and ordained him presbyter. Then, using the same
arguments as before, I induced him to sit in the place set apart for the presbyters.
After this I wrote to the reverend presbyters and other brothers of the monastery,
chiding them for not having written to me about him. For a year before I had
heard many of them complain that they had no one to celebrate for them the
sacraments of the Lord. All then agreed in asking him to undertake the duty,
pointing out how great his usefulness would be to the community of the monastery.
I blamed them for omitting to write to me and to propose that I should ordain
him, when the opportunity was given to them to do so.
2. All
this I have done, as I said just now, relying on that Christian love which
you, I feel sure,
cherish
towards my insignificance; not to mention the
fact that I held the ordination in a monastery, and not within the limits of
your jurisdiction. How truly blessed is the mildness and complacency of the
bishops of (my own) Cyprus, as well as their simplicity, though to your refinement
and discrimination it appears deserving only of God's pity! For many bishops
in communion with me have ordained presbyters in my province whom I had been
unable to capture, and have sent to me deacons and subdeacons(1) whom I have
been glad to receive. I myself, too, have urged the bishop Philo of blessed
memory, and the reverend Theoprepus, to make provision for the Church of Christ
by ordaining presbyters in those churches of Cyprus which, although they were
accounted to belong to my see, happened to be close to them, and this for the
reason that my province was large and straggling. But for my part I have never
ordained deaconesses nor sent them into the provinces of others,(2) nor have
I done anything to rend the Church. Why, then, have you thought fit to be so
angry and indignant with me for that work of God which I have wrought for the
edification of the brethren, and not for their destruction?(3) Moreover, I
have been much surprised at the assertion which you have made to my clergy,
that you sent me a message by that reverend presbyter, the abbot Gregory, that
I was to ordain no one, and that I promised to comply, saying, "Am I a
stripling, or do I not know the canons?" By God's word I am telling you
the truth when I say that I know and have heard nothing of all this, and that
I have not the slightest recollection of using any language of the sort. As,
however, I have had misgivings, lest possibly, being only a man, I may have
forgotten this among so many other matters, I have made inquiry of the reverend
Gregory, and of the presbyter Zeno, who is with him. Of these, the abbot Gregory
replies that he knows nothing whatever about the matter, while Zeno says that
the presbyter Rufinus, in the course of some desultory remarks, spoke these
words. "Will the reverend bishop, think you, venture to ordain any persons?" but
that the conversation went no further. I, Epiphanius, however, have never either
received the message or answered it. Do not, then, dearly beloved, allow your
anger to overcome you or your indignation to get the better of you, lest, you
should disquiet yourself in vain; and lest you should be thought to be putting
forward this grievance only to get scope for tendencies of another kind,(1)
and thus to have sought out an occasion of sinning. It is to avoid this that
the prophet prays to the Lord, saying: "Turn not aside my heart to words
of wickedness, to making excuses for my sins."(2)
3. This
also I have been surprised to hear, that certain persons who are in the habit
of carrying
tales backwards
and forwards, and of always adding something
fresh to what they have heard, to stir up grievances and disputes between brothers,
have succeeded in disquieting you by saying that, when I offer sacrifices to
God, I am wont to say this prayer on your behalf: "Grant, O Lord, to John
grace to believe aright." Do not suppose me so untutored as to be capable
of saying this so openly. To tell you the simple truth, my dearest brother,
although I continually use this prayer mentally, I have never confided it to
the ears of others, lest I should seem to dishonor you. But when I repeat the
prayers required by the ritual of the mysteries, then I say on behalf of all
and of you as well as others, "Guard him, that he may preach the truth," or
at least this, "Do Thou, O Lord, grant him Thine aid, and guard him, that
he may preach the word of truth, "as occasion offers itself for the words,
and as the turn comes for the particular prayer. Wherefore I beseech you, dearly
beloved, and, casting myself down at your feet, I entreat you to grant to me
and to yourself this one prayer, that you would save yourself, as it is written, "from
an untoward generation." Withdraw, dearly beloved, from the heresy of
Origen and from all heresies. For I see that all your indignation has been
roused against me simply because I have told you that you ought not to eulogize
one who is the spiritual father of Arius, and the root and parent of all heresies.
And when I appealed to you not to go astray, and warned you of the consequences,
you traversed my words, and reduced me to tears and sadness; and not me only,
but many other Catholics who were present.(2) This I take to be the origin
of your indignation and of your passion on the present occasion. On this account
you threaten to send out letters against me, and to circulate your version
of the matter in all directions;(3) and thus, while with a view to defending
your heresy you kindle men's passions against me, you break through the charity
which I have shown towards you, and act with so little discretion that you
make me regret that I have held communion with you, and that I have by so doing
upheld the erroneous opinions of Origen.
4. I speak
plainly. To use the language of Scripture, I do not spare to pluck out my
own eye if
it cause
me to offend, nor to cut off my hand and my foot
if they cause me to do so.(4) And you must be treated in the same way whether
you are my eyes, or my hands, or my feet. For what Catholic, what Christian
who adorns his faith with good works, can hear with calmness Origen's teaching
and counsel, or believe in his extraordinary preaching? "The Son," he
tells us, "cannot see the Father, and the Holy Spirit cannot see the Son." These
words occur in his book "On First Principles;" thus we read, and
thus Origen has spoken. "For as it is unsuitable to say that the Son can
see the Father, it is consequently unsuitable to suppose that the Spirit can
see the Son."(5) Can any one, moreover, brook Origen's assertion that
men's souls were once angels in heaven, and that having sinned in the upper
world, they have been cast down into this, and have been confined in bodies
as in barrows or tombs, to pay the penalty for their former sins; and that
the bodies of believers are not temples of Christ but prisons of the condemned?
Again, he tampers with the true meaning of the narrative by a false use of
allegory, multiplying words without limit; and undermines the faith of the
simple by the most varied arguments. Now he maintains that souls, in Greek
the "cool things," from a word meaning to be cool,(1) are so called
because in coming down from the heavenly places to the lower world they have
lost their former heat;(2) and now, that our bodies are called by the Greeks
chains, from a word meaning chain,(3) or else (on the analogy of our own Latin
word) "things fallen,"(4) because our souls have fallen from heaven;
and that the other word for body which the abundance of the Greek idiom supplies(5)
is by many taken to mean a funeral monument,(6) because the soul is shut up
within it in the same way as the corpses of the dead are shut up in tombs and
barrows. If this doctrine is true what becomes of our faith? Where is the preaching
of the resurrection? Where is the teaching of the apostles, which lasts on
to this day in the churches of Christ? Where is the blessing to Adam, and to
his seed, and to Noah and his sons? "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish
the earth."(7) According to Origen, these words must be a curse and not
a blessing; for he turns angels into human souls, compelling them to leave
the place of highest rank and to come down lower, as though God were unable
through the action of His blessing to grant souls to the human race, had the
angels not sinned, and as though for every birth on earth there must be a fall
in heaven. We are to give up, then, the teaching of apostles and prophets,
of the law, and of our Lord and Saviour Himself, in spite of His language loud
as thunder in the gospel. Origen, on the other hand, commands and urges--not
to say binds--his disciples not to pray to ascend into heaven, lest sinning
once more worse than they had sinned on earth they should be hurled down into
the world again. Such foolish and insane notions he generally confirms by distorting
the sense of the Scriptures and making them mean what they do not mean at all.
He quotes this passage from the Psalms: "Before thou didst humble me by
reason of my wickedness, I went wrong;"(8) and this, "Return unto
thy rest, O my soul;"(9) this also, "Bring my soul out of prison;"(10)
and this, "I will make confession unto the Lord in the land of the living,"(1)
although there can be no doubt that the meaning of the divine Scripture is
different from the interpretation by which he unfairly wrests it to the support
of his own heresy. This way of acting is common to the Manichaeans, the Gnostics,
the Ebionites, the Marcionites, and the votaries of the other eighty heresies,(2)
all of whom draw their proofs from the pure well of the Scriptures, not, however,
interpreting it in the sense in which it is written, but trying to make the
simple language of the Church's writers accord with their own wishes.
5. Of
one position which he strives to maintain I hardly know whether it calls
for my tears or my
laughter. This
wonderful doctor presumes to teach that the
devil will once more be what he at one time was, that he will return to his
former dignity and rise again to the kingdom of heaven. Oh horror! that a man
should be so frantic and foolish as to hold that John the Baptist, Peter, the
apostle and evangelist John, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and the rest of the prophets,
are made co-heirs of the devil in the kingdom of heaven! I pass over his idle
explanation of the coats of skins,(3) and say nothing of the efforts and arguments
he has used to induce us to believe that these coats of skins represent human
bodies. Among many other things, he says this: "Was God a tanner or a
saddler, that He should prepare the hides of animals, and should stitch from
them coats of skins for Adam and Eve?" "It is clear," he goes
on, "that he is speaking of human bodies." If this is so, how is
it that before the coats of skins, and the disobedience, and the fall from
paradise, Adam speaks not in an allegory, but literally, thus: "This is
now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh;"(4) or what is the ground
of the divine narrative, "And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall
upon Adam, and he slept; and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh
instead thereof; and the rib which the Lord God had taken from man, made He
a woman"(5) for him? Or what bodies can Adam and Eve have covered with
fig-leaves after eating of the forbidden tree?(6) Who can patiently listen
to the perilous arguments of Origen when he denies the resurrection of this
flesh, as he most clearly does in his book of explanations of the first psalm
and in many other places? Or who can tolerate him when he gives us a paradise
in the third heaven, and transfers that which the Scripture mentions from earth
to the heavenly places, and when he explains allegorically all the trees which
are mentioned in Genesis, saying in effect that the trees are angelic potencies,
a sense which the true drift of the passage does not admit? For the divine
Scripture has not said, "God put down Adam and Eve upon the earth," but "He
drove them out of the paradise, and made them dwell over against the paradise."(1)
He does not say "under the paradise." "He placed ... cherubims
and a flaming sword ... to keep the way of (2) the tree of life."(3) He
says nothing about an ascent to it. "And a river went out of Eden."(4)
He does not say "went down from Eden." "It was parted and became
into four heads. The name of the first is Pison ... and the name of the second
is Gihon."(5) I myself have seen the waters of Gihon, have seen them with
my bodily eyes. It is this Gihon to which Jeremiah points when he says, "What
hast thou to do in the way of Egypt to drink the muddy water of Gihon?"(6)
I have drunk also from the great river Euphrates, not spiritual but actual
water, such as you can touch with your hand and imbibe with your mouth. But
where there are rivers which admit of being seen and of being drunk, it follows
that there also there will be fig-trees and other trees; and it is of these
that the Lord says, "Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat."(7)
They are like other trees and timber, just as the rivers are like other rivers
and waters. But if the water is visible and real, then the fig-tree and the
rest of the timber must be real also, and Adam and Eve must have been originally
formed with real and not phantasmal bodies, and not, as Origen would have us
believe, have afterwards received them on account of their sin. But, you say, "we
read that Saint Paul was caught up to the third heaven, into paradise."(8)
You explain the words rightly: "When he mentions the third heaven, and
then adds the word paradise, he shows that heaven is in one place and paradise
in another." Must not every one reject and despise such special pleading
as that by which Origen says of the waters that are above the firmament(9)
that they are not waters, but heroic beings of angelic power,(10) and again
of the waters that are over the earth--that is, below the firmament--that they
are potencies(1) of the contrary sort--that is, demons? If so, why do we read
in the account of the deluge that the windows of heaven were opened, and that
the waters of the deluge prevailed? in consequence of which the fountains of
the deep were opened, and the whole earth was covered with the waters.(2)
6. Oh!
the madness and folly of those who have forsaken the teaching of the book
of Proverbs, "My son, keep thy father's commandment, and forsake
not the law of thy mother,"(3) and have turned to error, and say to the
fool that he shall be their leader, and do not despise the foolish things which
are said by the foolish man, even as the scripture bears witness, "The
foolish man speaketh foolishly, and his heart understandeth vanity."(4)
I beseech you, dearly beloved, and by the love which I feel towards you, I
implore you--as though it were my own members on which I would have pity(5)--by
word and letter to fulfil that which is written, "Do not I hate them,
O Lord, that hate thee? and am not I grieved with those that rise up against
thee?"(6) Origen's words are the words of an enemy, hateful and repugnant
to God and to His saints; and not only those which I have quoted, but countless
others. For it is not now my intention to argue against all his opinions. Origen
has not lived in my day, nor has he robbed me. I have not conceived a dislike
to him nor quarrelled with him because of an inheritance or of any worldly
matter; but--to speak plainly--I grieve, and grieve bitterly, to see numbers
of my brothers, and of those in particular who show the most promise, and have
reached the highest rank in the sacred ministry,(7) deceived by his persuasive
arguments, and made by his most perverse teaching the food of the devil, whereby
the saying is fulfilled: "He derides every stronghold, and his fare is
choice, and he hath gathered captives as the sand."(8) But may God free
you, my brother, and the holy people of Christ which is intrusted to you, and
all the brothers who are with you, and especially the presbyter Rufinus, from
the heresy of Origen, and other heresies, and from the perdition to which they
lead. For, if for one word or for two opposed to the faith many heresies have
been rejected by the Church, how much more shall he be held a heretic who has
contrived such perverse interpretations and such mischievous doctrines to destroy
the faith, and has in fact declared himself the enemy of the Church! For, among
other wicked things, he has presumed to say this, too, that Adam lost the image
of God, although Scripture nowhere declares that he did. Were it so, never
would all the creatures in the world be subject to Adam's seed--that is, to
the entire human race--yet, in the words of the apostle, everything "is
tamed and hath been tamed of mankind."(1) For never would all things be
subjected to men if men had not--together with their authority over all--the
image of God. But the divine Scripture conjoins and associates with this the
grace of the blessing which was conferred upon Adam and upon the generations
which descended from him. No one can by twisting the meaning of words presume
to say that this grace of God was given to one only, and that he alone was
made in the image of God (he and his wife, that is, for while he was formed
of clay she was made of one of his ribs), but that those who were subsequently
conceived in the womb and not born as was Adam did not possess God's image,
for the Scripture immediately subjoins the following statement: "And Adam
lived two hundred and thirty years,(2) and knew Eve his wife, and she bare
him a son in his image and after his likeness, and called his name Seth."(3)
And again, in the tenth generation, two thousand two hundred and forty-two
years afterwards,(4) God, to vindicate His own image and to show that the grace
which He had given to men still continued in them, gives the following commandment: "Flesh
... with the blood thereof shall ye not eat. And surely your blood will I require
at the hand of every man that sheddeth it; for in the image of God have I made
man."(5) From Noah to Abraham ten generations passed away,(6) and from
Abraham's time to David's, fourteen more,(7) and these twenty-four generations
make up, taken together, two thousand one hundred and seventeen years.(8) Yet
the Holy Spirit in the thirty-ninth(9) psalm, while lamenting that all men
walk in a vain show, and that they are subject to sins, speaks thus: "For
all that every man walketh in the image."(1) Also after David's time,
in the reign of Solomon his son, we read a somewhat similar reference to the
divine likeness. For in the book of Wisdom, which is inscribed with his name,
Solomon says: "God created man to be immortal, and made him to be an image
of His own eternity."(2) And again, about eleven hundred and eleven years
afterwards, we read in the New Testament that men have not lost the image of
God. For James, an apostle and brother of the Lord, whom I have mentioned above--that
we may not be entangled in the snares of Origen--teaches us that man does possess
God's image and likeness. For, after a somewhat discursive account of the human
tongue, he has gone on to say of it: "It is an unruly evil ... therewith
bless we God, even the Father and therewith curse we men, which are made after
the similitude of God."(3) Paul, too, the "chosen vessel,"(4)
who in his preaching has fully maintained the doctrine of the gospel, instructs
us that man is made in the image and after the likeness of God. "A man," he
says, "ought not to wear long hair, forasmuch as he is the image and glory
of God."(5) He speaks of "the image" simply, but explains the
nature of the likeness by the word "glory."