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ST. JEROME
THE LETTERS
LETTERS LXII TO LXXIV
LETTER LXII.
TO TRANQUILLINUS.
Tranquillinus, one of Jerome's Roman friends, had written (1) to tell him
of the stand that Oceanus was making against the Origenists at Rome, and (2)
to ask whether any parts of Origen's works might be studied with safety and
profit. Jerome welcomes the tidings about Oceanus and answers the question
of Tranquillinus in the affirmative. He classes Origen with Tertullian, Apollinaris
and others whose works continued to he read in spite of their heresies. Written
in 396 or 397 A. D.
1. Though I formerly doubted the fact, I have now proved that the links which
bind spirit to spirit are stronger than any physical bond. For you, my reverend
friend, cling to me with all your soul, and I am united to you by the love
of Christ. I speak simply and sincerely to your spotless heart: the very paper
on which you write, the very letters which you have formed--voiceless though
they are--in-spire in me a sense of your affection.
2. You
tell me that many have been deceived by the mistaken teaching of Origen,
and that that saintly
man, my
son Oceanus, is doing battle with their madness.
I grieve to think that simple folk have been thrown off their balance, but
I am rejoiced to know that one so learned as Oceanus is doing his best to set
them right again. Moreover you ask me, insignificant though I am, for an opinion
as to the advisability of reading Origen's works. Are we, you say, to reject
him altogether with our brother Faustinus, or are we, as others tell us, to
read him in part? My opinion is that we should sometimes read him for his learning
just as we read Tertullian, Novatus, Arnobius, Apollinarius and some other
church writers both Greek and Latin, and that we should select what is good
and avoid what is bad in their writings according to the words of the Apostle, "Prove
all things: hold fast that which is good"(1) Those, however, who are led
by some perversity in their dispositions to conceive for him too much fondness
or too much aversion seem to me to lie under the curse of the Prophet:--"Woe
unto them that call evil good and good evil; that put bitter for sweet and
sweet for bitter!"(1) For while the ability of his teaching must not lead
us to embrace his wrong opinions, the wrongness of his opinions should not
cause us altogether to reject the useful commentaries which he has published
on the holy scriptures. But if his admirers and his detractors are bent on
having a tug of war one against the other, and if, seeking no mean and observing
no moderation, they must either approve or disapprove his works indiscriminately,
I would choose rather to be a pious boor than a learned blasphemer. Our reverend
brother, Tatian the deacon, heartily salutes you.
LETTER LXIII.
TO THEOPHILUS.
When the dispute arose between Jerome and Epiphanius on the one side and Rufinus
and John of Jerusalem on the other (see Letter LI.), Theophilus bishop of Alexandria,
being appealed to by the latter sent the presbyter Isidore to report to him
on the matter. Isidore reported against Jerome and consequently Theophilus
refused to answer several of his letters. Finally he wrote counselling him
to obey the canons of the church. Jerome replies that to do this has always
been his first object. He then remonstrates with Theophilus on his too great
leniency towards the Origenists and declares it to be productive of the worst
results. The date of the letter is probably 397 A.D.
Jerome to the most blessed Pope(2) Theophilus.
1. Your holiness will remember that at the time when you kept silence towards
me, I never ceased to do my duty by writing to you, not taking so much into
account what you in the exercise of your discretion were then doing as what
it became me to do. And now that I have received a letter from your grace,
I see that my reading of the gospel has not been without fruit. For if the
frequent prayers of a woman changed the determination of an unyielding judge,(3)
how much more must my constant appeals have softened a fatherly heart Auks
yours?
2. I thank
you for your reminder concerning the canons of the Church. Truly, "whom
the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth."(4)
Still I would assure you that nothing is more my aim than to maintain the rights
of Christ, to keep to the lines laid down by the fathers, and always to remember
the faith of Rome; that faith which is praised by the lips of an apostle,(1)
and of which the Alexandrian church boasts to be a sharer.
3. Many religious persons are displeased that you are so long-suffering in
regard to that shocking heresy,(2) and that you suppose yourself able by such
lenity to amend those who are attacking the Church's vitals. They believe that,
while you are waiting for the penitence of a few, your action is fostering
the boldness of abandoned men and making their party stronger. Farewell in
Christ.
LETTER LXIV.
TO FABIOLA.
Fabiola's visit to Bethlehem had been shortened by the threatened invasion
of the Huns which compelled Jerome and his friends to take refuge for a time
on the seaboard of Palestine. Fabiola here took leave of her companions and
set sail for Italy, but not until Jerome had completed this letter for her
use ( 22). It contains a mystical account of the vestments of the High Priest
worked out with Jerome's usual ingenuity and learning. Similar treatises are
ascribed to Tertullian and to Hosius bishop of Cordova, but these have long
since perished. Its date is 396 or 397 A.D.
LETTER LXV.
TO PRINCIPIA.
A commentary on Ps. XLV. addressed to Marcella's friend and companion Principia
(see Letter CXXVII.). Jerome prefaces what he has to say by a defence of his
practice of writing for women, a practice which had exposed him to many foolish
sneers. He deals with the same subject in his dedication of the Commentary
of Sophronius. The date of the letter is 397 A.D.
LETTER LXVI.
TO PAMMACHIUS.
Pammachius a Roman senator, had lost his wife Paulina one of Paula's daughters,
while she was still in the flower of her youth. It was not till two years had
elapsed that Jerome ventured to write to him; and when he did so he dwelt but
little on the life and virtues of Paulina. Probably there was but little to
tell. The greater part of the letter is taken up with commendation of Pammachius
himself who, in spite of his high rank and position, had become a monk and
was now living a life of severe self-denial. Jerome speaks approvingly of the
Hospice for Strangers which, in conjunction with Fabiola, Pammachius had set
up at Portus, and describes his own somewhat similar institutions at Bethlehem.
He also mentions Paula, Eustochium, and the dead Blaesilla, all in terms of
the highest praise. The date of the letter is 397 A.D.
1. Supposing a wound to be healed and a scar to have been formed upon the
skin, any course of treatment designed to remove the mark must in its effort
to improve the appearance renew the smart of the original wound. After two
years of inopportune silence my condolence now comes rather late; yet even
so I am afraid that my present speech may be still more inopportune. I fear
lest in touching the sore spot in your heart I may by my words inflame afresh
a wound which time and reflection have availed to cure. For who can have ears
so dull or hearts so flinty as to hear the name of your Paulina without weeping?
Even though reared on the milk of Hyrcanian tigresses(1) they must still shed
tears. Who can with dry eyes see thus untimely cut down and withered an opening
rose, an undeveloped bud,(2) which has not yet formed itself into a cup nor
spread forth the proud display of its crimson petals? In her a most priceless
pearl is broken. In her a vivid emerald is shattered. Sickness alone shews
us the blessedness of health. We realize better what we have had when we cease
to have it.
2. The
good ground of which we read in the parable brought forth fruit, some an
hundred-fold, some
sixtyfold,
and some thirtyfold.(3) In this threefold
yield I recognize an emblem of the three different rewards of Christ which
have fallen to three women(4) closely united in blood and moral excellence.
Eustochium culls the flowers of virginity. Paula sweeps the toilsome threshing
floor of widowhood. Paulina keeps the bed undefiled of marriage. A mother with
such daughters wins for herself on earth all that Christ has promised to give
in heaven. Then to complete the team--if I may so call it--of four saints turned
out by a single family, and to match the women's virtues by those of a man,
the three have a fit companion in Pammachius who is a cherub such as Ezekiel
describes,(5) brother-in-law to the first. son-in-law to the second, husband
to the third. Husband did I say? Nay, rather a most devoted brother; for the
language of marriage is inadequate to describe the holy bonds of the Spirit.
Of this team Jesus holds the reins, and it is of steeds like these that Habakkuk
sings: "ride upon thy horses and let thy riding be salvation."(6)
With like resolve if with unlike speed they strain after the victor's palm.
Their colours are different; their object is the same. They are harnessed in
one yoke, they obey one driver, not waiting for the lash but answering the
call of his voice with fresh efforts.
3. Let
me use for a moment the language of philosophy. According to the Stoics there
are four virtues
so
closely related and mutually coherent that he who
lacks one lacks all. They are prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance.(1)
While all of you possess the four, yet each is remarkable for one. You have
prudence, your mother has justice, your virgin sister has fortitude, your wedded
wife has temperance. I speak of you as wise, for who can be wiser than one
who, despising the folly of the world, has followed Christ "the power
of God and the wisdom of God"?(2) Or what better instance can there be
of justice than your mother, who having divided her substance among her offspring
has taught them by her own contempt of riches the true object on which to fix
their affections? Who has set a better example of courage than Eustochium,
who by resolving to be a virgin has breached the gates of the nobility and
broken down the pride of a consular house? The first of Roman ladies, she has
brought under the yoke the first of Roman families. Has there ever been temperance
greater than that of Paulina, who, reading the words of the apostle: "marriage
is honourable in all and the bed unde filed,"(3) and not presuming to
aspire to the happiness of her virgin sister or the continence of her widowed
mother, has preferred to keep to the safe track of a lower path rather than
treading on air to lose herself in the clouds? When once she had entered upon
the married state, her one thought day and night was that, as soon as her union
should be blessed with offspring, she would live thenceforth in the second
degree of chastity,(4) and though woman, foremost in the high emprise,(5) would
induce her husband to follow a like course. She would not forsake him but looked
for the day when he would become a companion in salvation. Finding by several
miscarriages that her womb was not barren, she could not give up all hope of
having children and had to allow her own reluctance to give way to the eagerness
of her mother-in-law and the chagrin of her husband. Thus she suffered much
as Rachel suffered,(6) although instead of bringing forth like her a son of
pangs and of the right hand,(7) the heir she had longed for was no other than
her husband. I have learned on good authority that her wish in submitting herself
to her husband was not to take advantage of God's primitive command "Be
faithful and multiply and replenish the earth"(8) but that she only desired
children that she might bring forth virgins to Christ.
4. We
read that the wife of Phinehas the priest, on hearing that the ark of the
Lord had been taken,
was seized
suddenly with the pains of travail and
that she brought forth a son Ichabod and died a mother in the hands of the
women who nursed her.(1) Rachel's son is called Benjamin, that is 'son of excellence'
Or 'of the right hand'; but the son of the other, afterwards to be a distinguished
priest of God, derives his name from the ark.(2) The same thing has come to
pass in our own day, for since Paulina fell asleep the Church has posthumously
borne the monk Pammachius, a patrician by his parentage and marriage, rich
in alms, and lofty in lowliness. The apostle writes to the Corinthians, "Ye
see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men, not many noble are
called."(3) The conditions of the nascent church required this to be so
that the grain of mustard seed might grow up little by little into a tree,(4)
and that the leaven of the gospel might gradually raise more and more the whole
lump of the church.(5) In our day Rome possesses what the world in days gone
by knew not of. Then few of the wise or mighty or noble were Christians; now
many wise powerful and noble are not Christians only but even monks. And among
them all my Pammachius is the wisest, the mightiest, and the noblest; great
among the great, a leader among leaders, he is the commander in chief of all
monks. He and others like him are the offspring which Paulina desired to have
in her life time and which she has given us in her death. "Sing, O barren,
thou that didst not bear; break forth into singing and cry aloud, thou that
didst not travail with child";(6) for in a moment thou hast brought forth
as many sons as there are poor men in Rome.
5. The glowing gems which in old days adorned the neck and face of Paulina
now purchase food for the needy. Her silk dresses and gold brocades are exchanged
for soft woollen garments intended to keep out the cold and not to expose the
body to vain admiration. All that formerly ministered to luxury is now at the
service of virtue. That blind man holding out his hand, and often crying aloud
when there is none to hear, is the heir of Paulina, is co-heir with Pammachius.
That poor cripple who can scarcely drag himself along, owes his support to
the help of a tender girl. Those doors which of old poured forth crowds of
visitors, are now beset only by the wretched. One suffers from a dropsy, big
with death; another mute and without the means of begging, begs the more appealingly
because he cannot beg; another maimed from his childhood implores an alms which
he may not himself enjoy. Still another has his limbs rotted with jaundice
and lives on after his body has become a corpse. To use the language of Virgil:
Had I a hundred tongues, a hundred lips,
I could not tell men's countless sufferings.(1)
Such is
the bodyguard which accompanies Pammachius wherever he walks; in the persons
of such he
ministers to Christ
Himself; and their squalor serves to
whiten his soul. Thus he speeds on his way to heaven, beneficent as a giver
of games to the poor, and kind as a provider of shows for the needy. Other
husbands scatter on the graves of their wives violets, roses, lilies, and purple
flowers; and assuage the grief of their hearts by fulfilling this tender duty.
Our dear Pammachius also waters the holy ashes and the revered bones of Paulina,
but it is with the balm of almsgiving. These are the confections and the perfumes
with which be cherishes the dead embers of his wife knowing that it is written: "Water
will quench a flaming fire; and alms maketh an atonement for sins."(2)
What great power compassion has and what high rewards it is destined to win,
the blessed Cyprian sets forth in an extensive work.(3) It is proved also by
the counsel of Daniel who desired the most impious of kings--had he been willing
to hear him--to be saved by shewing mercy to the poor.(4) Paulina's mother
may well be glad of Paulina's heir. She cannot regret that her daughter's wealth
has passed into new hands when she sees it still spent upon the objects she
had at heart. Nay, rather she must congratulate herself that without any exertion
of her own her wishes are being carried out. The sum available for distribution
is the same as before: only the distributor is changed.
6. Who
can credit the fact that one, who is the glory of the Furian stock and whose
grandfathers
and great
grandfathers have been consuls, moves amid
the senators in their purple clothed in sombre garb, and that, so far from
blushing when he meets the eyes of his companions, he actually derides those
who deride him! "There is a shame that leadeth to death and there is a
shame that leadeth to life."(6) It is a monk's first virtue to despise
the judgments of men and always to remember the apostle's words:--"If
I yet pleased men, I should not be tile servant of Christ."(5) In the
same sense the Lord says to the prophets that He has made their face a brazen
city and a stone of adamant and an iron pillar,(1) to the end that they shall
not be afraid of the insults of the people but shall by the sternness of their
looks discompose the effrontery of those who sneered at them. A finely strung
mind is more readily overcome by contumely than by terror. And men whom no
tortures can overawe are sometimes prevailed over by the fear of shame. Surely
it is no small thing for a man of birth, eloquence, and wealth to avoid the
company of the powerful in the streets, to mingle with the crowd, to cleave
to the poor, to associate on equal terms with the untaught, to cease to be
a leader and to become one of the people. The more he humbles himself, I the
more he is exalted.(2)
7. A pearl
will shine in the midst of squalor and a gem of the first water will sparkle
in the
mire. This is
what the Lord promised when He said: "Them
that honour me I will honour."(3) Others may understand this of the future
when sorrow shall be turned into joy and when, although the world shall pass
away, the saints shall receive a crown which shall never pass. But I for my
part see that the promises made to the saints are fulfilled even in this present
life. Before he began to serve Christ with his whole heart, Pammachius was
a well known person in the senate. Still there were many other senators who
wore the badges of proconsular rank. The whole world is filled with similar
decorations. He was in the first rank it is true, but there were others in
it besides him. Whilst he took precedence of some, others took precedence of
him. The most distinguished privilege loses its prestige when lavished on a
crowd, and dignities themselves become less dignified in the eyes of good men
when held by persons who have no dignity. Thus Tully finely says of Caesar,
when he wished to advance some of his adherents, "he did not so much honour
them as dishonour the honourable positions in which he placed them."(4)
To-day all the churches of Christ are talking of Pammachius. The whole world
admires as a poor man one whom heretofore it ignored as rich. Can anything
be more splendid than the consulate? Yet the honour lasts only for a year and
when another has succeeded to the post its former occupant gives way. Each
man's laurels are i lost in the crowd and sometimes triumphs themselves are
marred by the shortcomings of those who celebrate them. An office which was
once handed down from patrician to patrician, which only men of noble birth
could hold, of which the consul Marius--victor though he was over Numidia and
the Teutons and the Cimbri--was held unworthy on account of the obscurity of
his family, and which Scipio won before his time as the reward of valour,--this
great office is now obtained by merely belonging to the army; and the shining
robe of victory(1) now envelops men who a little while ago were country boors.
Thus we have received more than we have given. The things we have renounced
are small; the things we possess are great. All that Christ promises is duly
performed and for what we have given up we have received an hundredfold.(2)
This was the ground in which Isaac sowed his seed,(3) Isaac who in his readiness
to die(4) bore the cross of the Gospel before the Gospel came.
8. "If thou wilt be perfect," the Lord says, "go and sell that
thou hast and give to the poor .... and come and follow me."(5) If thou
wilt be perfect. Great enterprises are always left to the free choice of those
who hear of them. Thus the apostle refrains from making virginity a positive
duty, because the Lord in speaking of eunuchs who had made themselves such
for the kingdom of heaven's sake finally said: "He that is able to receive
it, let him receive it."(6) For, to quote the apostle, "it is not
of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy."(7)
If thou wilt be perfect. There is no compulsion laid upon you: if you are to
win the prize it must be by the exercise of your own free will. If therefore
you will to be perfect and desire to be as the prophets, as the apostles, as
Christ Himself, sell not a part of your substance (lest the fear of want become
an occasion of unfaithfulness, and so you perish with Ananias and Sapphira(8))
but all that you have. And when you have sold all, give the proceeds not to
the wealthy or to the high-minded but to the poor. Give each man enough for
his immediate need but do not give money to swell what a man has already. "Thou
shall not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn,"(9) and "the
labourer is worthy of his reward."(10) Again "they which wait at
the altar are partakers with the altar."(11) Remember also these words: "having,
food and raiment let us be therewith content."(12) Where you see smoking
dishes, steaming pheasants, massive silver plate, spirited nags, long-haired
boy-slaves, expensive clothing, and embroidered hangings, give nothing there.
For he to whom you would give is richer than you the giver. It is moreover
a kind of sacrilege to give what belongs to the poor to those who are not poor.
Yet to be a perfect and complete Christian it is not enough to despise wealth
or to squander and fling away one's money, a thing which can be lost and found
in a single moment. Crates the Theban(1) did this, so did Antisthenes and several
others, whose lives shew them to have had many faults. The disciple of Christ
must do more for the attainment of spiritual glory than the philosopher of
the world, than the venal slave of flying rumours and of the people's breath.
It is not enough for you to despise wealth unless you follow Christ as well.
And only he follows Christ who forsakes his sins and walks hand in hand with
virtue. We know that Christ is wisdom. He is the treasure which in the scriptures
a man finds in his field.(2) He is the peerless gem which is bought by selling
many pearls.(3) But if you love a captive woman, that is, worldly wisdom, and
if no beauty but hers attracts you, make her bald and cut off her alluring
hair, that is to say, the graces of style, and pare away her dead nails.(4)
Wash her with the nitre of which the prophet speaks,(5) and then take your
ease with her and say "Her left hand is under my head, and her right hand
doth embrace me."(6) Then shall the captive bring to you many children;
from a Moabitess(7) she shall become an Israelitish woman. Christ is that sanctification
without which no man shall see the face of God. Christ is our redemption, for
He is at once our Redeemer and our Ransom.(8) Christ is all, that he who has
left all for Christ may find One in place of all, and may be able to proclaim
freely. "The Lord is my portion."(9)
9. I see
clearly that you have a warm affection for divine learning and that far from
trying--like
some
rash persons--to teach that of which you are yourself
ignorant you make it your first object to learn what you are going to teach.
Your letters in their simplicity are redolent of the prophets and savour strongly
of the apostles. You do not affect a stilted eloquence, nor boylike balance
shallow sentences in clauses neatly-turned. The quickly frothing foam disappears
with equal quickness; and a tumour though it enlarges the size of the body
is injurious to health. It is moreover a shrewd maxim, this of Cato, "Fast
enough if well enough." Long ago it is true in the days of our youth we
laughed outright at this dictum when the finished orator(10) used it in his
exordium. I fancy you remember the mistake(11) shared by the speaker in our
Athenaeum and how the whole room resounded with the cry taken up by the students" Fast
enough if well enough." According to Fabius(1) crafts would be sure to
prosper if none but craftsmen were allowed to criticise them. No man can adequately
estimate a poet unless he is competent himself to write verse No man can comprehend
philosophers, unless he is acquainted with the various theories that they have
held. Material and visible products are best appraised by those who make them.
To what a cruel lot we men of letters are exposed you may gather from the fact
that we are forced to rely on the judgment of the public; and many a man is
in company a formidable opponent who would certainly be despised could he be
seen alone. I have touched on this in passing to make you content, if possible,
with the ear of the learned. Disregard the remarks which uneducated persons
make concerning your ability; but day by day imbibe the marrow of the prophets,
that you may know the mystery of Christ and share this mystery with the patriarchs.
10. Whether
you read or write, whether you wake or sleep, let the herdsman's horn of
Amos(2) always
ring
in your ears. Let the sound of the clarion arouse
your soul, let the divine love carry you out of yourself; and then seek upon
your bed him whom your soul loveth,(3) and boldly say: "I sleep, but my
heart waketh."(4) And when you have found him and taken hold of him, let
him not go. And if you fall asleep for a moment and He escapes from your hands,
do not forthwith despair. Go out into the streets and charge the daughters
of Jerusalem: then shall you find him lying clown in the noontide weary and
drunk with passion, or wet with the dew of night by the flocks of his companions,
or fragrant with many kinds of spices, amid the apples of the garden.(5) There
give to him your breasts, let him suck your learned bosom, let him rest in
the midst of his heritage,(6) his feathers as those of a dove overlaid with
silver and his inward parts with the brightness of gold. This young child,
this mere boy, who is fed on butter and honey,(7) and who is reared among curdled
mountains,(8) quickly grows up to manhood, speedily spoils all(9) that is opposed
to him in you, and when the time is ripe plunders [the spiritual] Damascus
and puts in chains the king of [the spiritual] Assyria.
11. I hear that you have erected a hospice for strangers at Portus and that
you have planted a twig from the tree of Abraham(10) upon the Ausonian shore.
Like neas you are tracing the outlines of a new encampment; only that, whereas
he, when he reached the waters of the Tiber, under pressure of want had to
eat the square flat cakes which formed the tables spoken of by the oracle,(1)
you are able to build a house of bread to rival this little village of Bethlehem(2)
wherein I am staying; and here after their long privations you propose to satisfy
travellers with sudden plenty. Well done. You have surpassed my poor beginning.(3)
You have reached the highest point. You have made your way from the root to
the top of the tree. You are the first of monks in the first city of the world:
you do right therefore to follow the first of the patriarchs. Let Lot, whose
name means 'one who turns aside' choose the plain(4) and let him follow the
left and easy branch of the famous letter of Pythagoras.(5) But do you make
ready for yourself a monument like Sarah's(6) on steep and rocky heights. Let
the City of Books be near;(7) and when you have destroyed the giants, the sons
of Anak,(8) make over your heritage to joy and merriment.(9) Abraham was rich
in gold and silver and cattle, in substance and in raiment: his household was
so large that on an emergency he could bring a picked body of young men into
the field, and could pursue as far as Dan and then slay four kings who bad
already put five kings to flight.(10) Frequently exercising hospitality and
never turning any man away from his door, be was accounted worthy at last to
entertain God himself. He was not satisfied with giving orders to his servants
and hand-maids to attend to his guests, nor did he lessen the favour he conferred
by leaving others to care for them; but as though he had found a prize, he
and Sarah his wife gave themselves to the duties of hospitality. With his own
hands he washed the feet of his guests, upon his own shoulders he brought home
a fat calf from the herd. While the strangers dined he stood by to serve them,
and set before them the dishes cooked by Sarah's hands--though meaning to fast
himself.
12. The
regard which I feel for you, my dear brother, makes me remind you of these
things; for you
must offer
to Christ not only your money but yourself,
to be a "living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable
service,"(11) and you must imitate the son of man who "came not to
be ministered unto but to minister."(1) What the patriarch did for strangers
that our Lord and Master did for His servants and disciples. "Skin for
skin, yea, all that a man hath will he give for his life. But," says the
devil, "touch his flesh and he will curse thee to thy face."(2) The
old enemy knows that the battle with impurity is a harder one than that with
covetousness. It is easy to cast off what clings to us from without, but a
war within our borders involves far greater peril. We have to unfasten things
joined together, we have to sunder things firmly united. Zacchus was rich while
the apostles were poor. lie restored fourfold all that he had taken and gave
to the poor the half of his remaining substance. He welcomed Christ as his
guest, and salvation came unto his house.(3) And yet because he was little
of stature and could not reach the apostolic standard of height, he was not
numbered with the twelve apostles. Now as regards wealth the apostles gave
up nothing at all, but as regards will they one and all gave up the whole world.
If we offer to Christ our souls as well as our riches, he will gladly receive
our offering. But if we give to God only those things which are without while
we give to the devil those things which are within, the division is not fair,
and the divine voice says: "Hast thou not sinned in offering a right,
and yet not dividing aright?"(4)
13. That you, the leader of the patrician order, first set the example of
turning monk should not be to you an occasion of boasting hut rather one of
humility, knowing as you do that the Son of God became the Son of man. However
low you may abase yourself, you cannot be more lowly than Christ. Even supposing
that you walk barefooted, that you dress in sombre garb, that you rank yourself
with the poor, that you condescend to enter the tenements of the needy, that
you are eyes to the blind, hands to the weak, feet to the lame, that you carry
water and hew wood and make fires--even supposing that you do all this, where
are the chains, the buffets, the spittings, the scourgings, the gibbet, the
death which the Lord endured? And even when you have done all the things I
have mentioned, you are still surpassed by your sister Eustochium as well as
by Paula: for considering the weakness of their sex they have done more work
relatively if less absolutely, than you. I myself was not at Rome but in the
desert--would that I had continued there--at the time when your father-in-law
Toxotius was still alive and his daughters were still given up to the world.
But I have heard that they were too dainty to walk in the muddy streets, that
they were carried about in the arms of eunuchs, that they disliked crossing
uneven ground, that they found a silk dress a burthen and felt sunshine too
scorching. But now, squalid and sombre in their dress, they are positive heroines
in comparison with what they used to be. They trim lamps, light fires, sweep
floors, clean vegetables, put heads of cabbage in the pot to boil, lay tables,
hand cups, help dishes and run to and fro to wait on others. And yet there
is no lack of virgins under the same roof with them. Is it then that they have
no servants upon whom they can lay these duties? Surely not. They are unwilling
that others should surpass them in physical toil whom they themselves surpass
in rigour of mind. I say all this not because I doubt your mental ardour but
that I may quicken the pace at which you are running, and in the heat of battle
may add warmth to your warmth.
14. I for my part am building in this province a monastery and a hospice close
by; so that, if Joseph and Mary chance to come to Bethlehem, they may not fail
to find shelter and welcome. Indeed, the number of monks who flock here from
all quarters of the world is so overwhelming that I can neither desist from
my enterprise nor bear so great a burthen. The warning of the gospel has been
all but fulfilled in me, for I did not sufficiently count the cost of the tower
I was about to build;(1) accordingly I have been constrained to send my brother
Paulinian(2) to Italy to sell some ruinous villas which have escaped the hands
of the barbarians, and also the property inherited from our common parents.
For I am loth, now that I have begun it, to give up ministering to the saints,
lest I incur the ridicule of carping and envious persons.
15. Now that I have come to the conclusion of my letter I recall my metaphor
of the four-horse team, and recollect that Blsilla would have made a fifth
had she been spared to share your resolve. I had almost forgotten to mention
her, the first of you all to go to meet the Lord. You who once were five I
now see to be two and three. Blsilla and her sister Paulina rest in sweet sleep:
you with the two others on either side of you will fly upward to Christ more
easily.
LETTER LXVII.
FROM AUGUSTINE.
Jerome having written him a short letter (no longer extant) Augustine now
replies. He speaks with approval of Jerome's treatise On Famous Men, incorrectly
called the Epitaph (see Letter CXII. 3). He also repeats his objections to
Jerome's account of the quarrel between Paul and Peter at Antioch and then
concludes with a request that he will draw up a short notice of the principal
heresies condemned by the Church.
Like the preceding letter of Augustine (Letter LVI.) this also failed to reach
Jerome. It was however published in the West, but without Augustine's knowledge
and by degrees its contents found their way to Bethlehem where they caused
much annoyance and pain. The date of the letter is 397 A.D. In Augustine's
correspondence in this Library it is printed in full as Letter XL.
LETTER LXVIII.
TO CASTRUTIUS.
Castrutius, a blind man of Pannonia, had set out for Bethlehem to visit Jerome.
However, on reaching Cissa (whether that in Thrace or that on the Adriatic
is uncertain) he was induced by his friends to turn back. Jerome writes to
thank him for his intention and to console him for his inability to carry it
out. He then tries to comfort him in his blindness(1) by referring to Christ's
words concerning the man born blind (Joh. ix.(3) and(2) by telling him the
story of Antony and Didymus. The date of the letter is 397 A.D.
1. My
reverend son Heraclius the deacon has reported to me that in your eagerness
to see me you came as
far
as Cissa, and that, though a Pannonian and consequently
a land animal, you did not quail before the surges of the Adriatic and the
dangers of the gean and Ionian seas. He tells me that you would have actually
accomplished your purpose, had not our brethren with affectionate care held
you back. I thank you all the same and regard it as a kindness shewn. For in
the case of friends one must accept the will for the deed. Enemies often give
us the latter, but only sincere attachment can bring us the former. And now
that I am writing to you I beseech you do not regard the bodily affliction
which has befallen you as due to sin. When the Apostles speculated concerning
the man that was born blind from the womb and asked our Lord and Saviour: "Who
did sin, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?" they were told "Neither
hath this man sinned nor his parents, but that the works of God should be made
manifest in him."(1) Do we not see numbers of heathens, Jews, heretics
and men of various opinions rolling in the mire of lust, bathed in blood, surpassing
wolves in ferocity and kites in rapacity, and for all this the plague does
not come nigh their dwellings?(2) They are not smitten as other men, and accordingly
they wax insolent against God and lift up their faces even to heaven. We know
on the other hand that holy men are afflicted with sicknesses, miseries, and
want, and perhaps they are tempted to say "Verily I have cleansed my heart
in vain, and washed my hands in innocency." Yet immediately they go on
to reprove themselves, "If I say, I will speak thus; behold I should offend
against the generation of thy children."(1) If you suppose that your blindness
is caused by sin, and that a disease which physicians are often able to cure
is an evidence of God's anger, you will think Isaac a sinner because he was
so wholly sightless that he was deceived into blessing one whom he did not
mean to bless.(2) You will charge Jacob with sin, whose vision became so dim
that he could not see Ephraim and Manasseh,(3) although with the inner eye
and the prophetic spirit he could foresee the distant future and the Christ
that was to come of his royal line.(4) Were any of the kings holier than Josiah?
Yet he was slain by the sword of the Egyptians.(5) Were there ever loftier
saints than Peter and Paul? Yet their blood stained the blade of Nero. And
to say no more of men, did not the Son of God endure the shame of the cross?
And yet you fancy those blessed who enjoy in this world happiness and pleasure?
God's hottest anger against sinners is when he shews no anger. Wherefore in
Ezekiel he says to Jerusalem: "My jealousy will depart from thee and i
will be quiet and will be no more angry."(6) For "whom the Lord loveth
He chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom He receiveth."(7) The father
does not instruct his son unless he loves him. The master does not correct
his disciple unless he sees in him signs of promise. When once the doctor gives
over caring for the patient, it is a sign that he despairs. You should answer
thus: "as Lazarus in his lifetime(8) received evil things so will I now
gladly suffer torments that future glory may be laid up for me." For "affliction
shall not rise up the second time."(9) If Job, a man holy and spotless
and righteous in his generation, suffered terrible afflictions, his own book
explains the reason why.
2. That
I may not make myself tedious or exceed the due limits of a letter by repeating
old stories,
I will briefly
relate to you an incident which happened
in my childhood. The saintly Athanasius bishop of Alexandria had summoned the
blessed Antony to that city to confute the heretics there. Hereupon Didymus,
a man of great learning who had lost his eyes, came to visit the hermit and,
the conversation turning upon the holy scriptures, Antony could not help admiring
his ability and eulogizing his insight. At last he said: You do not regret,
do you, the loss of your eyes? At first Didymus was ashamed to answer, but
when the question had been repeated a second time and a third, he frankly confessed
that his blindness was a great grief to him. Whereupon Antony said: "I
am surprised that a wise man should grieve at the loss of a faculty which he
shares with ants and flies and gnats, and not rejoice rather in having one
of which only saints and apostles have been thought worthy." From this
story you may perceive how much better it is to have spiritual than carnal
vision and to possess eyes into which the mote of sin cannot fall.(1)
Though you have failed to come this year, I do not yet despair of your coming.
If the reverend deacon(2) who is the bearer of this letter is again caught
in the toils of your affection, and if you come hither in his company I shall
be delighted to welcome you and shall readily acknowledge that the delay in
payment is made up for by the largeness of the interest.
LETTER LXIX.
TO OCEANUS.
Oceanus,
a Roman nobleman zealous for the faith, had asked Jerome to back him in a
protest against
Carterius
a Spanish bishop who contrary to the apostolic
rule that a bishop is to be "the husband of one wife" had married
a second time. Jerome refuses to take the line suggested on the ground that
Carterius's first marriage having preceded his baptism cannot be taken into
account. He therefore advises Oceanus to let the matter drop. The date of the
letter is 397 A.D.
1. I never
supposed, son Oceanus, that the clemency of the Emperor would be assailed
by criminals,
or that
persons just released from prison would after
their own experience of its filth and fetters complain of relaxations allowed
to others. In the gospel he who envies another's salvation is thus addressed: "Friend,
is thine eye evil because I am good?"(3) "God hath concluded them
all in sin(4) that he might have mercy upon all."(5) "When sin abounded
grace did much more abound."(6) The first born of Egypt are slain and
not even a beast belonging to Israel is left behind in Egypt.(7) The heresy
of the Cainites rises before me and the once slain viper lifts up its shattered
head, destroying not partially as most often hitherto but altogether the mystery
of Christ.(8) This heresy declares that there are some sins which Christ cannot
cleanse with His blood, and that the scars left by old transgressions on the
body and the soul are sometimes so deep that they cannot be effaced by the
remedy which He supplies. What else is this but to say that Christ has died
in vain? He has indeed died in vain if there are any whom He cannot make alive.
When John the Baptist points to Christ and says: "Behold the lamb of God
which taketh away the sins(1) of the world"(2) he utters a falsehood if
after all there are persons living whose sins Christ has not taken away. For
either it must be shewn that they are not of the world whom the grace of Christ
thus ignores: or, if it be admitted that they are of the world, we have to
choose between the horns of a dilemma. Either they have been delivered from
their sins, in which case the power of Christ to save all men is proved; or
they remain undelivered and as it were still under the charge of misdoing,
in which case Christ is proved to be powerless. But far be it from us to believe
of the Almighty that He is powerless in aught. For "what things soever
the Father doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise."(3) To ascribe weakness
to the Son is to ascribe it to the Father also. The shepherd carries the whole
sheep and not only this or that part of it: all the epistles of the apostle(4)
speak continually of the grace of Christ. And, lest a single announcement of
this grace might seem a little thing, Peter says: "Grace unto you and
peace be multiplied."(5) The Scripture promises abundance; yet we affirm
scarcity.
2. To
what does all this tend, you ask. I reply; you remember the question that
you proposed. It was
this.
A Spanish bishop named Carterius, old in years
and in the priesthood has married two wives, one before he was baptized, and,
she having died, another since he has passed through the laver; and you are
of opinion that he has violated the precept of the apostle, who in his list
of episcopal qualifications commands that a bishop shall be "the husband
of one wife."(6) I am surprised that you have pilloried an individual
when the whole world is filled with persons ordained in similar circumstances;
I do not mean presbyters or clergy of lower rank, but speak only of bishops
of whom if I were to enumerate them all one by one I should gather a sufficient
number to surpass the crowd which attended the synod of Ariminum.(7) Still
it does not become me to defend one by incriminating many; nor if reason condemns
a sin, to make the number of those who commit it an excuse for it. At Rome
an eloquent pleader caught me, as the phrase goes, between the horns of a dilemma:
whichever way I turned I was held fast. Is it sinful, said he, to marry a wife,
or is it not sinful? I in my simplicity, not being wary enough to avoid the
snare laid for me, replied that it was not sinful. Then he propounded another
question: Is it good deeds which are done away with in baptism or is it evil?
Here again my simplicity induced me to say that it was sins which were forgiven.
At this point, just as I began to fancy myself secure, the horns of the dilemma
commenced to close in on me from this side and from that and their points hidden
before began to shew themselves. If, said he, to marry a wife is not sinful,
and if baptism forgives sins, all that is not done away with is held over.
On the instant a dark mist rose before my eyes as though I had been struck
by a strong boxer. Yet recalling the sophism attributed to Chrysippus:(1) "Whether
you lie or whether you speak the truth, in either case you lie," I came
to myself again and turned upon my opponent with a dilemma of my own. Pray
tell me, I said, does baptism make a new man or does it not? He grudgingly
admitted that it did. I pursued my advantage by saying. Does it make him wholly
new or only partially so? He replied, Wholly. Then I asked, Is there nothing
then of the old man held over in baptism? He assented. Hereupon I propounded
the argument; If baptism makes a man new and creates a wholly new being, and
if there is nothing of the old man held over in the new, that which once was
in the old cannot be imputed to the new. At first my thorny friend held his
tongue; afterwards however, making Piso's mistake,(2) though he had nothing
to say he could not remain silent. Sweat stood upon Iris brow, his cheeks turned
pale, his lips trembled, his tongue clove to his mouth, his throat became dry;
and fear (not age) made him cower. At last he broke out in these words, Have
you not read how the apostle permits none to be ordained priest save the husband
of one wife, and that what he lays stress upon is the fact of the marriage
and not the time at which it is contracted? Now as the fellow had challenged
me with syllogisms, and as I saw that he was feeling his way towards some intricate
and awkward questions, I proceeded to turn his own weapons against him. I said
therefore, Whom did the apostle select for the episcopate, baptized persons
or catechumens? He refused to reply. I however made a fresh onslaught repeating
my question a second time and a third. You would have taken him for Niobe changed
to stone by excessive weeping. I turned to the audience and said: It is all
the same to me, good people, whether I bind my opponent awake or sleeping;
but it is easier to fetter a man who offers no resistance. If those whom the
apostle admits into the ranks of the clergy are not catechumens but the faithful,
and if he who is ordained bishop is always one of the faithful, being one of
the faithful he cannot have the faults of a catechumen imputed to him. Such
were the darts I hurled at my paralysed opponent. Such the quivering spears
I cast at him. At last his mouth opened and he vomited forth the contents of
his mind. Certainly, he blurted out, that is the doctrine of the apostle Paul.
3. Accordingly
I bring out two epistles of the apostle, the first to Timothy, and the second
to
Titus. In
the first is the following passage: "If a
man desire the office of a bishop he desireth a good work. A bishop then must
be blameless, the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober, of good behaviour,
given to hospitality, apt to teach, not given to wine, no striker ... but patient,
not a brawler, not covetous; one that ruleth well his own house, having his
children in subjection with all gravity. (For if a man know not how to rule
his own house, how shall he take care of the church of God?) Not a novice lest
being lifted up with pride he fall into the condenmation of the devil. Moreover
he must have a good report of them which are without; lest he fall into reproach
and the snare of the devil."(1) While immediately at the commencement
of the epistle to Titus the following behests are laid down: "For this
cause left I thee in Crete that thou shouldest set in order the things that
are wanting, and ordain elders in every city, as I had appointed thee: if any
be blameless, the husband of one wife, having faithful children not accused
of riot or unruly. For a bishop must be blameless as the steward of God; not
self-willed, not soon angry, not given to wine, no striker, not given to filthy
lucre; but a lover of hospitality, a lover of good men, sober, just, holy,
temperate; holding fast the faithful word as he hath been taught, that he may
be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the gainsayers."(2)
In both epistles commandment is given that only monogamists should, be chosen
for the clerical office whether as bishops or as presbyters.(3) Indeed with
the ancients these names were synonymous, one alluding to the office, the other
to the age of the clergy. No one at any rate can doubt that the apostle is
speaking only of those who have been baptized. If therefore it in no wise prejudices
the case of one who is to be ordained bishop that before his baptism he has
not possessed all the requisite qualifications (for it is asked what he is
and not what he has been), why should a previous marriage--the one thing which
is in itself not sinful--prove a hindrance to his ordination? You argue that
as his marriage was not a sin it was not done away with at his baptism. This
is news to me indeed, that what in itself was not a sin is to be reckoned as
such. All fornication and contamination with open vice, impiety towards God,
parricide and incest, the change of the natural use of the sexes into that
which is against nature(1) and all extraordinary lusts are washed away in the
fountain of Christ. Can it be possible that the stains of marriage are indelible,
and that harlotry is judged more leniently than honourable wedlock? t do not,
Carterius might say, hold you to blame for the hosts of mistresses and the
troops of favourites(2) that you have kept; I do not charge you with your bloodshedding
and sow-like wallowings in the mire of uncleanness: yet you are ready to drag
from her grave for my confusion my poor wife, who has been dead long years,
and whom I married that I might be kept from those sins into which you have
fallen. Tell this to the heathen who form the church's harvest with which she
stores her granaries; tell this to the catechumens who seek admission to the
number of the faithful; tell them, I say, not to contract marriages before
their baptism, not to enter upon honourable wedlock, but like the Scots and
the Atacotti(3) and the people of Plato's republic(4) to have community of
wives and no discrimination of children, nay more, to beware of any semblance
even of matrimony; lest, after they have come to believe in Christ, He shall
tell them that those whom they have had have not been concubines or mistresses
but wedded wives.
4. Let
every man examine his own conscience and let him deplore the violence he
has done to it at
every period
of his life; and then when he has brought
himself to deliver a true judgment on his own former misdeeds, let him give
ear to the chiding of Jesus: "Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam
out of thine own eye; and then shall thou see clearly to cast out the mote
out of thy brother's eye."(6) Truly like the scribes and pharisees we
strain out the gnat and swallow the camel, we pay tithe of mint and anise,
and we omit the just judgment which God requires.(6) What parallel can be drawn
between a wife and a prostitute? Is it fair to make a marriage now dissolved
by death a ground of accusation, while dissolute living wins for itself a garland
of praise? He, had his former wife lived, would not have married another; but
as for you, bow can you defend the bestial unions you indiscriminately make?
Perhaps indeed you will say that you feared to contract marriage lest by so
doing you might disqualify yourself for ordination. He took a wife that he
might have children by her; you by taking a harlot have lost the hope of children.
He withdrew into the privacy of his own chamber when he sought to obey nature
and to win God's blessing: "Be fruitful and multiply and replenish the
earth."(1) You on the contrary outraged public decency in the hot eagerness
of your lust. He covered a lawful indulgence beneath a veil of modesty; you
pursued an unlawful one shamelessly before the eyes of all. For him it is written "Marriage
is honourable and the bed undefiled." while to you the words are read, "but
whoremongers and adulterers God wilt judge,"(2) and "if any man destroyeth
the temple of God, him shall God destroy."(3) All iniquities, we are told,
are forgiven us at our baptism, and when once we have received God's mercy
we need not afterwards dread from Him the severity of a judge. The apostle
says:--"And such were some of you: but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified,
but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our
God."(4) All sins then are forgiven; it is an honest and faithful saying.
But I ask you, how comes it that, while your uncleanness is washed away, my
cleanness is made unclean? You reply, "No, it is not made unclean, it
remains just what it was. Had it been uncleanness, it would have been washed
away like mine." I want to know what you mean by this shuffling. Your
remarks seem to have no more point in them than the round end of a pestle.
Is a thing sin because it is not sin? or is a thing unclean because it is not
unclean? The Lord, you say, has not forgiven because He had nothing to forgive;
yet because He has not forgiven, that which has not been forgiven still remains.
5. What
the true effect of baptism is, and what is the real grace conveyed by water
hallowed in Christ,
I will
presently tell you; meantime I will deal
with this argument as it deserves. 'An ill knot,' says the common proverb,
'requires but an ill wedge to split it.' The text quoted by the objector, "a
bishop must be the husband of one wife," admits of quite another explanation.
The apostle came of the Jews and the primitive Christian church was gathered
out of the remnants of Israel. Paul knew that the Law allowed men to have children
by several wives,(1) and was aware that the example of the patriarchs had made
polygamy familiar to the people. Even the very priests might at their own discretion
enjoy the same license.(2) He gave commandment therefore that the priests of
the church should not claim this liberty, that they should not take two wives
or three together, but that they should each have but one wife at one time.
Perhaps you may say that this explanation which I have given is disputed; in
that case listen to another. You must not have a monopoly of bending the Law
to suit your will instead of bending your will to suit the Law. Some by a strained
interpretation say that wives are in this passage to be taken for churches
and husbands for their bishops. A decree was made by the fathers assembled
at the council of Nica(3) that no bishop should be translated from one church
to another, lest scorning the society of a poor yet virgin see he should seek
the embraces of a wealthy and adulterous one. For as the word <greek>logismoi</greek>,
that is, "disputings," refers to the fault and misdoing of sons in
the faith,(4) and as the precept concerning the management of a house refers
to the right direction of body and of soul,(5) so by the wives of the bishops
we are to understand their churches. Concerning whom it is written in Isaiah, "Make
haste ye women and come from the show, for it is a people of no understanding."(6)
And again "Rise up, ye women that are wealthy,(7) and hear my voice."(8)
And in the Book of Proverbs, "Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price
is far above rubies. The heart of her husband doth safely trust in her."(9)
In the same book too it is written, "Every wise woman buildeth her house:
but the foolish plucketh it down with her hands."(10) Nor does this, say
they, derogate from the dignity of the episcopate; for the same figure is used
in relation to God. Jeremiah writes: "As a wife treacherously departeth
from her husband, so have ye dealt treacherously with me, O house of Israel."(11)
And the apostle employs the same comparison: "I have espoused you," he
says to his converts, "to one husband, that I may present you as a chaste
virgin to Christ."(12) The word woman is in the Greek ambiguous and should
in all these places be understood as meaning wife. You will say that this interpretation
is harsh and does violence to the sense. In that case give back to the scripture
its simple meaning and save me from the necessity of fighting you on your own
ground.(1) I will ask you the following question, Can a man who before his
baptism has kept a concubine, and after her death has received baptism and
has taken a wife, become a clergyman or not? You will answer me that he can,
because his first partner was a concubine and not a wife. What the apostle
condemns then, it would seem, is not mere sexual intercourse but marriage contracts
and conjugal rights. Many persons, we see, because of narrow circumstances
refuse to take upon them the burthen of matrimony. Instead of taking wives
they live with their maid-servants and bring up as their own the children which
these bear to them. Thus, if through the bounty of the Emperor they gain for
their mistresses the right of wearing a matron's robes,(2) they will at once
come beneath the yoke of the apostle and sorely against their will will have
to receive their partners as their wedded wives. But, if their poverty prevents
them from obtaining an imperial rescript such as I have mentioned, the decrees
of the Church will vary with the laws of Rome. Be careful therefore not to
interpret the words "the husband of one wife," that is, of one woman,
as approving indiscriminate intercourse and condemning only contracts of marriage.
I bring forward all these explanations not for the purpose of resisting the
true and simple sense of the words in question but to shew you that you must
take the holy scriptures as they are written, and that you must not empty of
its efficacy the baptismal rite ordained by the Saviour, or render vain the
whole mystery of the cross.
6. Let
me now fulfil the promise I made a little while ago and with all the skill
of a rhetorician
sing the
praises of water and of baptism. In the beginning
the earth was without form and void, there was no dazzling sun or pale moon,
there were no glittering stars. There was nothing but matter inorganic and
invisible, and even this was lost in abysmal depths and shrouded in a distorting
gloom. The Spirit of God above moved, as a charioteer, over the face of the
waters,(3) and produced from them the infant world, a type of the Christian
child that is drawn from the laver of baptism. A firmament is constructed between
heaven and earth, and to this is allotted the name heaven,--in the Hebrew Shamayim
or 'what comes out of the waters,'--(4) and the waters which are above the
heavens are parted from the others to the praise of God. Wherefore also in
the vision of the prophet Ezekiel there is seen above the cherubim a crystal
stretched forth,(1) that is, the compressed and denser waters. The first living
beings come out of the waters; and believers soar out of the layer with wings
to heaven. Man is formed out of clay(2) and God holds the mystic waters in
the hollow of his hand.(3) In Eden a garden(4) is planted, and a fountain in
the midst of it parts into four heads.(5) This is the same fountain which Ezekiel
later on describes as issuing out of the temple and flowing towards the rising
of the sun, until it heals the bitter waters and quickens those that are dead.(6)
When the world falls into sin nothing but a flood of waters can cleanse it
again. But as soon as the foul bird of wickedness is driven away, the dove
of the Holy Spirit comes to Noah(7) as it came afterwards to Christ in the
Jordan,(8) and, carrying ill its beak a branch betokening restoration and light,
brings tidings of peace to the whole world. Pharaoh and his host, loth to allow
God's people to leave Egypt, are overwhelmed in the Red Sea figuring thereby
our baptism. His destruction is thus described in the book of Psalms: "Thou
didst endow the sea with virtue through thy power: thou brakest the heads of
the dragons in the waters: thou brakest the heads of leviathan in pieces."(9)
For this reason adders and scorpions haunt dry places(10) and whenever they
come near water behave as if rabid or insane.(11) As wood sweetens Marah so
that seventy palm-trees are watered by its streams, so the cross makes the
waters of the law lifegiving to the seventy who are Christ's apostles.(12)
It is Abraham and Isaac who dig wells, the Philistines who try to prevent them.(13)
Beersheba too, the city of the oath,(14) and [Gihon], the scene of Solomon's
coronation,"(15) derive their names from springs. It is beside a well
that Eliezer finds Rebekah.(16) Rachel too is a drawer of water and wins a
kiss thereby(17) from the supplanter(18) Jacob. When the daughters of the priests
of Midian are in a strait to reach the well, Moses opens a way for them and
delivers them from outrage.(19) The Lord's forerunner at Salem (a name which
means peace or perfection) makes ready the people for Christ with spring-water.(20)
The Saviour Himself does not preach the kingdom of heaven until by His baptismal
immersion He has cleansed the Jordan.(21) Water is the matter of His first
miracle(1) and it is from a well that the Samaritan woman is bidden to slake
her thirst.(2) To Nicodemus He secretly says:--"Except a man be born of
water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God."(3)
As His earthly course began with water, so it ended with it. His side is pierced
by the spear, and blood and water flow forth, twin emblems of baptism and of
martyrdom.(4) After His resurrection also, when sending His apostles to the
Gentiles, He commands them to baptize these in the mystery of the Trinity.(5)
The Jewish people repenting of their misdoing are sent forthwith by Peter to
be baptized.(6) Before Sion travails she brings forth children, and a nation
is born at once.(7) Paul the persecutor of the church, that ravening wolf out
of Benjamin,(8) bows his head before Ananias one of Christ's sheep, and only
recovers his sight when he applies the remedy of baptism.(2) By the reading
of the prophet the eunuch of Candace the queen of Ethiopia is made ready for
the baptism of Christ.(10) Though it is against nature the Ethiopian does change
his skin and the leopard his spots.(11) Those who have received only John's
baptism and have no knowledge of the Holy Spirit are baptized again, lest any
should suppose that water unsanctified thereby could suffice for the salvation
of either Jew or Gentile."(12) "The voice of the Lord is upon the
waters ... The Lord is upon many waters ... the Lord maketh the flood to inhabit
it."(13) His "teeth are like a flock of sheep that are even shorn
which came up from the washing; whereof everyone bear twins, and none is barren
among them."(14) If none is barren among them, all of them must have udders
filled with milk and be able to say with the apostle: "Ye are my little
children, of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you;"(15)
and "I have fed you with milk and not with meat."(16) And it is to
the grace of baptism that the prophecy of Micah refers: "He will turn
again, he will have compassion upon us: he will subdue our iniquities, and
will cast all our sins(17) into the depths of the sea."(18)
7. How
then can you say that all sins are drowned in the baptismal layer if a man's
wife is still
to swim
on the surface as evidence against him? The psalmist
says:--"Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.
Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity."(1) It would
seem that we must add something to this song and say "Blessed is the man
to whom the Lord imputeth not a wife." Let us hear also the declaration
which Ezekiel the so called "son of man"(2) makes concerning the
virtue of him who is to be the true son of man, the Christian: "I will
take you," he says, "from among the heathen ... then will I sprinkle
clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean from all your filthiness a new
heart also will I give you and a new spirit."(3) "From all your filthiness" he
says, "will I cleanse you." If all is taken away nothing can be left.
If filthiness is cleansed, how much more is cleanness kept from defilement. "A
new heart also will I give you and a new spirit." Yes, for "in Christ
Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything nor uncircumcision but a new nature."(4)
Wherefore the song also which we sing is a new song,(5) and putting off the
old man(6) we walk not in the oldness of the letter but in the newness of the
spirit.(7) This is the new stone wherein the new name is written, "which
no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it."(8) "Know ye not," says
the apostle, "that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were
baptized into his death? Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death:
that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father,
even so we also should walk in newness of life."(9) Do we read so often
of newness and of making new and yet can no renewing efface the stain which
the word wife brings with it? We are buried with Christ by baptism and we have
risen again by faith in the working of God who hath called Him from the dead.
And "when we were dead in our sins and in the uncircumcision of our flesh,
God hath quickened us together with Him, having forgiven us all trespasses;
blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary
to us, and took it out of the way nailing it to His cross."(10) Can it
be that when our whole being is dead with Christ and when all the sins noted
down in the old "handwriting" are blotted out, the one word "wife" alone
lives on? Time would fail me were I to try to lay before you in order all the
passages in the Holy Scriptures which relate to the efficacy of baptism or
to explain the mysterious doctrine of that second birth which though it is
our second is yet our first in Christ.
8. Before
I make an end of dictating (for I perceive that I have already exceeded the
just limits
of a letter)
I wish to give a brief explanation of the previous
verses of the epistle in which the apostle describes the life of him that is
to be made a bishop. We shall thus recognize him as Doctor of the Nations(1)
not only for his praise of monogamy but also for all his precepts. At the same
time I beg that no one will suppose that in what I write my design is to blacken
the priests of the present day. My one object is to promote the interest of
the church. Just as orators and philosophers in giving their notions of the
perfect orator and the perfect philosopher do not detract from Demosthenes
and Plato but merely set forth abstract ideals; so, when I describe a bishop
and explain the qualifications laid down for the episcopate, I am but supplying
a mirror for priests. Every man's conscience will tell him that it rests with
himself what image he will see reflected there, whether one that will grieve
him by its deformity or one that will gladden him by its beauty. I turn now
to the passage in question.(2) "If a man desire the office of a bishop,
he desireth a good, work." Work, you see, not rank; toil not pleasure;
work that he may increase in lowliness, not grow proud by reason of elevation. "A
bishop then must be blameless." The same thing that he says to Titus, "if
any be blameless."(2) All the virtues are comprehended in this one word;
thus he seems to require an impossible perfection. For if every sin, even every
idle word, is deserving of blame, who is there in this world that is sinless
and blameless? Still he who is chosen to be shepherd of the church must be
one compared with whom other men are rightly regarded as but a flock of sheep.
Rhetoricians define an orator as a good man able to speak. To be worthy of
so high an honour he must be blameless in life and lip. For a teacher loses
all his influence whose words are rendered null by his deeds. "The husband
of one wife." Concerning this requirement I have spoken above. I will
now only warn you that If monogamy is insisted on before baptism the other
conditions laid down must be insisted on before baptism too. For it is impossible
to regard the remaining obligations as binding only on the baptized and this
alone as binding also on the unbaptized. "Vigilant (or "temperate" for <greek>nhfalios</greek> means
both) wise,(4) of good behaviour, given to hospitality, apt to teach." The
priests who minister in God's temple are forbidden to drink wine and strong
drink,(5) to keep their wits from being stupefied with drunkenness and to enable
their understanding to do its duty in God's service. By the word 'wise' those
are excluded who plead simplicity as an excuse for a priest's folly. For if
the brain be not sound, all the members will be amiss. The phrase "of
good behaviour" is an extension of the previous epithet "blameless." One
who has no faults is called "blameless; "one who is rich in virtues
is said to be "of good behaviour." Or the words may be differently
explained in accord with Tully's maxim,(1) 'the main thing is that what you
do you should do gracefully.' For some persons are so ignorant of their own
measure(2) and so stupid and foolish that they make themselves laughing stocks
to those who see them because of their gesture or gait or dress or conversation.
Fancying that they knew what is and what is not good taste they deck themselves
out with finery and bodily adornments and give banquets which profess to be
elegant: but all such attempts at dress and display are nastier than a beggar's
rags. As regards the obligation of priests to be teachers we bare the precepts
of the old Law(3) and the fuller instructions given on the subject to Titus.(4)
For an innocent and unobtrusive conversation does as much harm by its silence
as it does good by its example. If the ravening wolves are to be frightened
away it must be by the barking of dogs and by the staff of the shepherd. "Not
given to wine, no striker." With the virtues they are to aim at he contrasts
the vices they are to avoid.
9. We
have learned what we ought to be: let us now learn what priests ought not
to be Indulgence
in wine is
the fault of diners out and revellers. When
the body is heated with drink it soon boils over with lust. Wine drinking means
self-indulgence, self-indulgence means sensual gratification, sensual gratification
means a breach of chastity. He that lives in pleasure is dead while he lives,(5)
and he that drinks himself drunk is not only dead but buried. One hour's debauch
makes Noah uncover his nakedness which through sixty years of sobriety he had
kept covered.(6) Lot in a fit of intoxication unwittingly adds incest to incontinence,
and wine overcomes the man whom Sodom failed to conquer.(7) A bishop that is
a striker is condemned by Him who gave His back to the smiters,(8) and when
He was reviled reviled not again.(9) "But moderate";(10) one good
thing is set over against two evil things. Drunkenness and passion are to be
held in check by moderation. "Not a brawler, not covetous." Nothing
is more overweening than the assurance of the ignorant who fancy that incessant
chatter will carry conviction with it and are always ready for a dispute that
they may thunder with turgid eloquence against the flock committed to their
charge. That a priest must avoid covetousness even Samuel teaches when he proves
before all the people that he has taken nothing from any man.(1) And the same
lesson is taught by the poverty of the apostles who used to receive sustenance
and refreshment from their brethren and to boast that they neither had nor
wished to have anything besides food and raiment.(2) What the epistle to Timothy
calls covetousness, that to Titus openly censures as the desire for filthy
lucre.(3) "One that ruleth well his own house." Not by increasing
riches, not by providing regal banquets, not by having a pile of finely-wrought
plates, not by slowly steaming pheasants so that the heat may reach the bones
without melting the flesh upon them; no, but by first requiring of his own
household the conduct which he has to inculcate in others. "Having his
children in subjection with all gravity." They must not, that is, follow
the example of the sons of Eli who lay with the women in the vestibule of the
Temple and, supposing religion to consist in plunder, diverted to the gratification
of their own appetites all the best parts of the victims.(4) "Not a novice
lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation of the devil." I
cannot sufficiently express my amazement at the great blindness which makes
men discuss such questions as that of marriage before baptism and causes them
to charge people with a transaction which is dead in baptism, nay even quickened
into a new life with Christ, while no one regards a commandment so clear and
unmistakable as this about bishops not being novices. One who was yesterday
a catechumen is to-day a bishop(5) ; one who was yesterday in the amphitheatre
is to-day in the church; one who spent the evening in the circus stands in
the morning at the altar: one who a little while ago was a patron of actors
is now a dedicator of virgins. Was the apostle ignorant of our shifts and subterfuges?
did he know nothing of our foolish arguments? He not only says that a bishop
must be the husband of one wife, but he has given commandment that he must
be blameless, vigilant, sober, of good behaviour, given to hospitality, apt
to teach, moderate,(6) not given to wine, no striker, not a brawler, not covetous,
not a novice. Yet to all these requirements we shut our eyes and notice nothing
but the wives of the aspirants. Who cannot give instances to shew the need
of the warning: "lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation
of the devil?" A priest(1) who is made such in a moment knows nothing
of the lowliness and meekness which mark the meanest of the faithful, he knows
nothing of Christian courtesy, he is not wise enough to think little of himself.
He passes from one dignity to another, yet he has not fasted, he has not wept,
he has not taken himself to task for his life, he has not striven by constant
meditation to amend it, he has not given his substance to the poor. Yet he
is moved from one see(2) to another, he passes, that is, from pride to pride.
There can be no doubt that arrogance is what the Apostle means when he speaks
of the condemnation and downfall of the devil. And all men fall into this who
are in a moment made masters, actually before they are disciples. "Moreover
he must have a good report of them which are without." The last requirement
is like the first. One who is really "blameless" obtains the unanimous
approval not only of his own household but of outsiders as well. By aliens
and persons outside the church we are to understand Jews, heretics and Gentiles.
A Christian bishop then must be such that they who cavil at his religion may
not venture to cavil at his life. At present however we see but too many bishops
who are willing, like the charioteers in the horse races, to bid money for
the popular applause; while there are some so universally hated that they can
wring no money from their people, a feat which clowns accomplish by means of
a few gestures.
10. Such
are the conditions, son Oceanus, which the master-teachers of the church
ought with anxiety and
fear
to require of others and to observe themselves.
Such too are the canons which they should follow in the choice of persons for
the priesthood; for they must not interpret the law of Christ to suit private
animosities and feuds or to gratify ill-feeling which is sure to recoil on
the man who cherishes it. Consider how unimpeachable is the character of Carterius
in whose life his ill-wishers can find nothing to censure except a marriage
contracted before baptism. "He that said, Do not commit adultery, said
also, Do not kill. If we commit no adultery yet if we kill, we are become transgressors
of the law."(3) "Whosoever shall keep the whole law and yet offend
in one point, he is guilty of all."(4) Accordingly when they cast in our
teeth a marriage entered into before baptism, we must require of them compliance
with all the precepts which are given to the baptized. For they pass over much
that is not allowable while they censure much that is allowed.
LETTER LXX.
TO MAGNUS AN ORATOR OF ROME.
Jerome thanks Magnus. a Roman orator, for his services in bringing a young
man named Sebesius to apologize to him for some fault that he had committed.
He then replies to a criticism of Magnus on his fondness, for making quotations
from profane writers, a practice which he defends by the example of the fathers
of the church and of the inspired penmen of scripture. He ends by hinting that
the objection really comes not from Magnus himself but from Rufinus (here nicknamed
Calpurnius Lanarius). The date of the letter is 397 A.D.
1. That our friend Sebesius has profited by your advice I have learned less
from your letter than from his own penitence. And strange to say the pleasure
which he has given me since his rebuke is greater than the pain he caused me
from his previous waywardness. There has been indeed a conflict between indulgence
in the father, and affection in the son; while the former is anxious to forget
the past, the latter is eager to promise dutiful behaviour in the future. Accordingly
you and I must equally rejoice, you because you have successfully put a pupil
to the test, I because I have received a son again.
2. You
ask me at the close of your letter why it is that sometimes in my writings
I quote examples from
secular
literature and thus defile the whiteness of the
church with the foulness of heathenism. I will now briefly answer your question.
You would never have asked it, had not your mind been wholly taken up with
Tully; you would never have asked it had you made it a practice instead of
studying Volcatius' to read the holy scriptures and the commentators upon them.
For who is there who does not know that both in Moses and in the prophets there
are passages cited from Gentile books and that Solomon proposed questions to
the philosophers of Tyre and answered others put to him by them.(2) In the
commencement of the book of Proverbs he charges us to understand prudent maxims
and shrewd adages, parables and obscure discourse, the words of the wise and
their dark sayings;(3) all of which belong by right to the sphere of the dialectician
and the philosopher. The Apostle Paul also, in writing to Titus, has used a
line of the poet Epimenides: "The Cretians are always liars, evil beasts,
slow bellies."(4) Half of which line was afterwards adopted by Callimachus.
It is not surprising that a literal rendering of the words into Latin should
fail to preserve the metre, seeing that Homer when translated into the same
language is scarcely intelligible even in prose. In another epistle Paul quotes
a line of Menander: "Evil communications corrupt good manners."(1)
And when he is arguing with the Athenians upon the Areopagus he calls Aratus
as a witness citing from him the words "For we are also his offspring;"(2)
in Greek <greek>tou</greek> <greek>gar</greek> <greek>kai</greek> <greek>genos</greek> <greek>esmen</greek>,
the close of a heroic verse. And as if this were not enough, that leader of
the Christian army, that unvanquished pleader for the cause of Christ, skilfully
turns a chance inscription into a proof of the faith.(3) For he had learned
from the true David to wrench the sword of the enemy out of his hand and with
his own blade to cut off the head of the arrogant Goliath.(4) He had read in
Deuteronomy the command given by the voice of the Lord that when a captive
woman had had her head shaved, her eyebrows and all her hair cut off, and her
nails pared, she might then be taken to wife.(5) Is it surprising that I too,
admiring the fairness of her form and the grace of her eloquence, desire to
make that secular wisdom which is my captive and my handmaid, a matron of the
true Israel? Or that shaving off and cutting away all in her that is dead whether
this be idolatry, pleasure, error, or lust, I take her to myself clean and
pure and beget by her servants for the Lord of Sabaoth? My efforts promote
the advantage of Christ's family, my so-called defilement with an alien increases
the number of my fellow-servants. Hosea took a wife of whoredoms, Gomer the
daughter of Diblaim, and this harlot bore him a son called Jezreel or the seed
of God.(6) Isaiah speaks of a sharp razor which shaves "the head of sinners
and the hair of their feet;"(7) and Ezekiel shaves his head as a type
of that Jerusalem which has been an harlot,(8) in sign that whatever in her
is devoid of sense 'and life must be removed.
3. Cyprian, a man renowned both for his eloquence and for his martyr's death,
was as-sailed--so Firmian tells us'--for having used in his treatise against
Demetrius passages from the Prophets and the Apostles which the latter declared
to be fabricated and made up, instead of passages from the philosophers and
poets whose authority he, as a heathen, could not well gainsay. Celsus(10)
and Porphyry(11) have written against us and have been ably answered, the former
by Origen, the latter by Methodius, Eusebius, and Apollinaris.(12) Origen wrote
a treatise in eight books, the work of Methodius(1) extended to ten thousand
lines while Eusebius(2) and Apollinaris(3) composed twenty-five and thirty
volumes respectively. Read these and you will find that compared with them
I am a mere tyro in learning, and that, as my wits have long lain fallow, I
can barely recall as in a dream what I have learned as a boy. The emperor Julian(4)
found time during his Parthian campaign to vomit forth seven books against
Christ and, as so often happens in poetic legends, only wounded himself with
his own sword. Were I to try to confute him with the doctrines of philosophers
and stoics you would doubtless forbid me to strike a mad dog with the club
of Hercules It is true that he presently felt in battle the hand of our Nazarene
or, as he used to call him, the Galilaean,(5) and that a spear-thrust in the
vitals paid him due recompense for his foul calumnies. To prove the antiquity
of the Jewish people Josephus(6) has written two books against Appio a grammarian
of Alexandria; and in these he brings forward so many quotations from secular
writers as to make me marvel how a Hebrew brought up from his childhood to
read the sacred scriptures could also have perused the whole library of the
Greeks. Need I speak of Philo(7) whom critics call the second or the Jewish
Plato?
4. Let
me now run through the list of our own writers. Did not Quadratus(8) a disciple
of the apostles
and bishop
of the Athenian church deliver to the
Emperor Hadrian (on the occasion of his visit to the Eleusinian mysteries)
a treatise in defence of our religion. And so great was the admiration caused
in everyone by his eminent ability that it stilled a most severe persecution.
The philosopher Aristides," a man of great eloquence, presented to the
same Emperor an apology for the Christians composed of extracts from philosophic
writers. His example was afterwards followed by Justin(10) another philosopher
who delivered to Antoninus Plus and his sons" and to the senate a treatise
Against the Gentiles, in which he defended the ignominy of the cross and preached
the resurrection of Christ with all freedom. Need I speak of Melito(1) bishop
of Sardis, of Apollinaris(2) chief-priest of the Church of Hierapolis, of Dionysius(3)
bishop of the Corinthians, of Tatian,(4) of Bardesanes,(5) of Irenaeus(6) successor
to the martyr Pothinus;(7) all of whom have in many volumes explained the uprisings
of the several heresies and tracked them back, each to the philosophic source
from which it flows. Pantaenus,(8) a philosopher of the Stoic school, was on
account of his great reputation for learning sent by Demetrius bishop of Alexandria
to India, to preach Christ to the Brahmans and philosophers there. Clement,(9)
a presbyter of Alexandria, in my judgment the most learned of men, wrote eight
books of Miscellanies(10) and as many of Outline Sketches,(11) a treatise against
the Gentiles, and three volumes called the Pedagogue. Is there any want of
learning in these, or are they not rather drawn from the very heart of philosophy?
Imitating his example Origen(12) wrote ten books of Miscellanies, in which
he compares together the opinions held respectively by Christians and by philosophers,
and confirms all the dogmas of our religion by quotations from Plato and Aristotle,
from Numenius(13) and Cornutus.(14) Miltiades(15) also wrote an excellent treatise
against the Gentiles. Moreover Hippolytus(16) and a Roman senator named Apollonius(17)
have each compiled apologetic works. The books of Julius Africanus(18) who
wrote a history of his own times are still extant, as also are those of Theodore
who was afterwards called Gregory,(19) a man endowed with apostolic miracles
as well as with apostolic virtues. We still have the works of Dionysius(1)
bishop of Alexandria, of Anatolius(2) chief priest of the church of Laodicea,
of the presbyters Pamphilus,(3) Pierius,(4) Lucian,(5) Malchion;(6) of Eusebius(7)
bishop of Csarea, Eustathius(8) of Antioch and Athanasius(9) of Alexandria;
of Eusebius(10) of Emisa, of Triphyllius(11) of Cyprus, of Asterius(13) of
Scythopolis, of the confessor Serapion,(13) of Titus(14) bishop of Bostra;
and of the Cappadocians Basil,(15) Gregory,(16) and Amphilochius.(17) All these
writers so frequently interweave in their books the doctrines and maxims of
the philosophers that you might easily be at a loss which to admire most, their
secular erudition or their knowledge of the scriptures.
5. I will pass on to Latin writers. Can anything be more learned or more pointed
than the style of Tertullian?(18) His Apology and his books Against the Gentiles
contain all the wisdom of the world. Minucius Felix(19) a pleader in the Roman
courts has ransacked all heathen literature to adorn the pages of his Octavius
and of his treatise Against the astrologers(unless indeed this latter is falsely
ascribed to him). Arnobius(20) has published seven books against the Gentiles,
and his pupil Lactantius(21) as many, besides two volumes, one on Anger and
the other on the creative activity of God. If you read any of these you will
find in them an epitome of Cicero's dialogues. The Martyr Victorinus(1) though
as a writer deficient in learning is not deficient in the wish to use what
learning he has. Then there is Cyprian.(2) With what terseness, with what knowledge
of all history, with what splendid rhetoric and argument has he touched the
theme that idols are no Gods! Hilary(2) too, a confessor and bishop of my own
day, has imitated Quintilian's twelve books both in number and in style, and
has also shewn his ability as a writer in his short treatise against Dioscorus
the physician. In the reign of Constantine the presbyter Juvencus(4) set forth
in verse the story of our Lord and Saviour, and did not shrink from forcing
into metre the majestic phrases of the Gospel. Of other writers dead and living
I say nothing. Their aim and their ability are evident to all who read them.(5)
6. You must not adopt the mistaken opinion, that while in dealing with the
Gentiles one may appeal to their literature in all other discussions one ought
to ignore it; for almost all the books of all these writers--except those who
like Epicurus(6) are no scholars--are extremely full of erudition and philosophy.
I incline indeed to fancy--the thought comes into my head as I dictate--that
you yourself know quite well what has always been the practice of the learned
in this matter. I believe that in putting this question to me you are only
the mouthpiece of another who by reason of his love for the histories of Sallust
might well be called Calpurnius Lanarius.(7) Please beg of him not to envy
eaters their teeth because he is toothless himself, and not to make light of
the eyes of gazelles because he is himself a mole. Here as you see there is
abundant material for discussion, but I have already filled the limits at my
disposal.
LETTER LXXI.
TO LUCINIUS.
Lucinius was a wealthy Spaniard of Btica who in conformity with the ascetic
ideas of his time had made a vow of continence with his wife Theodora. Being
much interested in the study of scripture he proposed to visit Bethlehem, and
in A.D. 397 sent several scribes thither to transcribe for him Jerome's principal
writings. To these on their return home Jerome now entrusts the following letter.
In it he encourages Lucinius to fulfil his purpose of coming to Bethlehem,
describes the books Which he is sending to him, and answers two questions relating
to ecclesiastical usage. He also sends him some trilling presents.
Shortly after receiving the letter (written in 398 A.D.) Lucinius died and
Jerome wrote to Theodora to console her for her loss (letter LXXV.).
1. Your
letter which has suddenly arrived was not expected by me, and coming in an
unlooked for way
it has
helped to rouse me from my torpor by the glad
tidings which it conveys. I hasten to embrace with the arms of love one whom
my eyes have never seen, and silently say to myself:--'"oh that I had
wings like a dove! for then would I flee away and be at rest."'(1) Then
would I find him "whom my soul loveth."(2) In you the Lord's words
are now truly fulfilled: "many shall come from the east and west and shall
sit down with Abraham."(3) In those days the faith of my Lucinius was
foreshadowed in Cornelius, "centurion of the band called the Italian band."(4)
And when the apostle Paul writes to the Romans: "whensoever I take my
journey into Spain I will come to you: for I trust to see you in my journey,
and to be brought on my way thitherward by you;"(5) he shews by the tale
of his previous successes what he looked to gain from that province.(6) Laying
in a short time the foundation of the gospel "from Jerusalem and round
about unto Illyricum,"(7) he enters Rome in bonds, that he may free those
who are in the bonds of error and superstition. Two years he dwells in his
own hired house(8) that he may give to us the house eternal which is spoken
of in both the testaments.(9) The apostle, the fisher of men,(10) has cast
forth his net, and, among countless kinds of fish, has landed you like a magnificent
gilt-bream. You have left behind you the bitter waves, the salt tides, the
mountain-fissures; you have despised Leviathan who reigns in the waters.(11)
Your aim is to seek the wilderness with Jesus and to sing the prophet's song: "my
soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land
where no water is; to see thy power and thy glory, so as I have seen thee in
the sanctuary."(12) or, as he sings in another place, "lo, then would
I wander far off and remain in the wilderness. I would hasten my escape from
the windy storm and tempest."(13) Since you have left Sodom and are hastening
to the mountains, I beseech you with a father's affection not to look behind
you. Your hands have grasped the handle of the plough,(1) the hem of the Saviour's
garment,(2) and His locks wet with the dew of night;(3) do not let them go.
Do not come down from the housetop of virtue to seek for the clothes which
you wore of old, nor return home from the field.(4) Do not like Lot set your
heart on the plain or upon the pleasant gardens;(5) for these are watered not,
as the holy land, from heaven but by Jordan's muddy stream made salt by contact
with the Dead Sea.
2. Many
begin but few persevere to the end. "They which run in a race
run all, but one receiveth the crown."(6) But of us on the other hand
it is said: "So run that ye may obtain."(7) Our master of the games
is not grudging; he does not give the palm to one and disgrace another. His
wish is that all his athletes may alike win garlands. My soul rejoices, yet
the very greatness of my joy makes me feel sad. Like Ruth(8) when I try to
speak I burst into tears. Zacchus, the convert of an hour, is accounted worthy
to receive the Saviour as his guest.(9) Martha and Mary make ready a feast
and then welcome the Lord to it.(10) A harlot washes His feet with her tears
and against His burial anoints His body with the ointment of good works.(11)
Simon the leper invites the Master with His disciples and is not refused.(12)
To Abraham it is said: "Get thee out of thy country and from thy kindred
and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will shew thee."(13) He
leaves Chalda, he leaves Mesopotamia; he seeks what he knows not, not to lose
Him whom he has found. He does not deem it possible to keep both his country
and his Lord; even at that early day he is already fulfilling the prophet David's
words: "I am a stranger with thee and a sojourner, as all my fathers were."(14)
He is called "a Hebrew," in Greek <greek>peraihs</greek>,
a passer-over, for not content with present excellence but forgetting those
things which are behind he reaches forth to that which is before.(15) He makes
his own the words of the psalmist: "they shall go from strength to strength."(16)
Thus his name has a mystic meaning and he has opened for you a way to seek
not your own things but those of another. You too must leave your home as he
did, and must take for your parents, brothers, and relations only those who
are linked to you in Christ. "Whosoever," He says, "shall do
the will of my father ... the sameis my brother and sister and mother."(1)
3. You have with you one who was once your partner in the flesh but is now
your partner in the spirit; once your wife but now your sister; once a woman
but now a man; once an inferior but now an equal.(2) Under the same yoke as
you she hastens toward the same heavenly kingdom.
A too
careful management of one's income, a too near calculation of one's expenses--these
are habits
not easily
laid aside. Yet to escape the Egyptian
woman Joseph had to leave his garment with her.(3) And the young man who followed
Jesus having a linen cloth cast about him, when he was assailed by the servants
had to throw away his earthly covering and to flee naked.(4) Elijah also when
he was carried up in a chariot of fire to heaven left his mantle of sheepskin
on earth.(5) Elisha used for sacrifice the oxen and the yokes which hitherto
he had employed in his work.(6) We read in Ecclesiasticus: "he that toucheth
pitch shall be defiled therewith."(7) As long as we are occupied with
the things of the world, as long as our soul is fettered with possessions and
revenues, we cannot think freely of God. "For what fellowship hath righteousness
with unrighteousness? And what communion hath light with darkness? And what
concord hath Christ with Belial? Or what part hath he that believeth with an
infidel?"(8) "Ye cannot," the Lord says, "serve God and
Mammon."(9) Now the laying aside of money is for those who are beginners
in the way, not for those who are made perfect. Heathens like Antisthenes(10)
and Crates(11) the Theban have done as much before now. But to offer one's
self to God, this is the mark of Christians and apostles. These like the widow
out of their penury cast their two mites into the treasury, and giving all
that they have to the Lord are counted worthy to hear his words: "ye also
shall sit upon twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel."(12)
4. You
can see for yourself why I mention these things; without expressly saying
it I am inviting you
to
take up your abode at the holy places. Your
abundance has supported the want of many that some day their riches may abound
to supply your want;(13) you have made to yourself "friends of the mammon
of unrighteousness that they may receive you into everlasting habitations."(1)
Such conduct deserves praise and merits to be compared with the virtue of apostolic
times. Then, as you know, believers sold their possessions and brought the
prices of them and laid them down at the apostles' feet:(2) a symbolic act
designed to shew that men must trample on covetousness. But the Lord yearns
for believers' souls more than for their riches. We read in the Proverbs: "the
ransom of a man's soul are his own riches."(3) We may, indeed, take a
man's own riches to be those which do not come from some one else, or from
plunder; according to the precept: "honour God with thy just labours."(4)
But the sense is better if we understand a man's "own riches" to
be those hidden treasures which no thief can steal and no robber wrest from
him.(5)
5. As for my poor works which from no merits of theirs but simply from your
own kindness you say that you desire to have; I have given them to your servants
to transcribe, I have seen the paper-copies made by them, and I have repeatedly
ordered them to correct them by a diligent comparison with the originals. For
so many are the pilgrims passing to and fro that I have been unable to read
so many volumes. They have found me also troubled by a long illness from which
this Lent I am slowly recovering as they are leaving me. If then you find errors
or omissions which interfere with the sense, these you must impute not to me
but to your own servants; they are due to the ignorance or carelessness of
the copyists, who write down not what they find but what they take to be the
meaning, and do but expose their own mistakes when they try to correct those
of others. It is a false rumour which has reached you to the effect that I
have translated the books of Josephus(6) and the volumes of the holy men Papias(7)
and Polycarp.(8) I have neither the leisure nor the ability to preserve the
charm of these masterpieces in another tongue. Of Origen(9) and Didymus(10)I
have translated a few things, to set before my countrymen some specimens of
Greek teaching. The canon of the Hebrew verity(11)--except the octoteuch(12)
which I have at present in hand--I have placed at the disposal of your slaves
and copyists. Doubtless you already possess the version from the septuagint(13)
which many years ago I diligently revised for the use of students. The new
testament I have restored to the authoritative form of the Greek original.(1)
For as the true text of the old testament can only be tested by a reference
to the Hebrew, so the true text of the new requires for its decision an appeal
to the Greek.
6. You
ask me whether you ought to fast on the Sabbath(2) and to receive the eucharist
daily according
to
the custom--as currently reported--of the churches
of Rome and Spain.(3) Both these points have been treated by the eloquent Hippolytus,(4)
and several writers have collected passages from different authors bearing
upon them. The best advice that I can give you is this. Church-traditions--especially
when they do not run counter to the faith--are to be observed in the form in
which previous generations have handed them down; and the use of one church
is not to be annulled because it is contrary to that of another.(5) As regards
fasting, I wish that we could practise it without intermission as--according
to the Acts of the Apostles(6)--Paul did and the believers with him even in
the season of Pentecost and on the Lord's Day. They are not to be accused of
manichism, for carnal food ought not to be preferred before spiritual. As regards
the holy eucharist you may receive it at all times(7) without qualm of conscience
or disapproval from me. You may listen to the psalmist's words:--"O taste
and see that the Lord is good;"(8) you may sing as he does:--"my
heart poureth forth a good word."(9) But do not mistake my meaning. You
are not to fast on feast-days, neither are you to abstain on the week days
in Pentecost.(10) In such matters each province may follow its own inclinations,
and the traditions which have been handed down should be regarded as apostolic
laws.
7. You
send me two small cloaks and a sheepskin mantle from your wardrobe and ask
me to wear them
myself
or to give them to the poor. In return I send
to you and your sister(11) in the Lord four small haircloths suitable to your
religious profession and to your daily needs, for they are the mark of poverty
and the outward witness of a continual penitence. To these I have added a manuscript
containing Isaiah's ten most obscure visions which I have lately elucidated
with a critical commentary. When you look upon these trifles call to mind the
friend in whom you delight and hasten the voyage which you have for a time
deferred. And because "the way of man is not in himself" but it is
the Lord that "directeth his steps;"(1) if any hindrance should interfere--I
hope none may--to prevent you from coming, I pray that dis