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ST. JEROME
THE LETTERS
LETTERS CXVII TO CXXIII
LETTER CXVII.
TO A MOTHER AND DAUGHTER LIVING IN GAUL.
A monk of Gaul had during a visit to Bethlehem asked Jerome for advice under
the following circumstances. His mother was a church-widow and his sister a
religious virgin but the two could not agree. They were accordingly living
apart but neither by herself. For each had taken into her house a monk ostensibly
to act as steward but really to be a paramour. At the request of his visitor
Jerome now writes to both mother and daughter urging them to dismiss their
companions; or at any rate to live together: and pointing out the grave scandal
that must otherwise be caused.
From the treatise against Vigilantius ( 3) we learn that ill-natured critics
maintained that the persons and circumstances described in the letter were
alike fictitious and that Jerome in writing it was but exercising his ingenuity
on a congenial theme.
The date is A. D. 405.
INTRODUCTION.
1. A certain
brother from Gaul has told me that his virgin-sister and widowed mother,
though living
in the
same city, have separate abodes and have taken
to themselves clerical protectors either as guests or stewards; and that by
thus associating with strangers they have caused more scandal than by living
apart. When I groaned and expressed what I felt more by silence than words; "I
beseech you," said he, "rebuke them in a letter and recall them to
mutual harmony; make them once more mother and daughter." To whom I replied, "a
nice task this that you lay upon me, for me a stranger to reconcile two women
whom you, a son and brother, have failed to influence. You speak as though
I occupied the chair of a bishop instead of being shut up m a monastic cell
where, far removed from the world's turmoil, I lament the sins of the past
and try to avoid the temptations of the present. Moreover, it is surely inconsistent,
while one buries oneself out of sight, to allow one's tongue free course through
the world." "You are too fearful," he replied; "where is
that old hardihood of yours which made you 'scour the world with copious salt,'
as Horace says of Lucilius?"(1) "It is this," I rejoined, "that
makes me shy and forbids me to open my lips. For through accusing crime I have
been myself made out a criminal. Men have disputed and denied my assertions
until, as the proverb goes, I hardly know whether I have ears or feeling left.
The very walls have resounded with curses levelled at me, and 'I was the song
of drunkards.'(2) Under the compulsion of an unhappy experience I have learned
to be silent, thinking it better to set a watch before my mouth and to keep
the door of my lips than to incline my heart to any evil thing,(3) or, while
censuring the faults of others, myself to fall into that of detraction." In
answer to this he said: "Speaking the truth is not detraction. Nor will
you lecture the world by administering a particular rebuke; for there are few
persons, if any, open to this special charge. I beg of you, therefore, as I
have put myself to the trouble of this long journey, that you will not suffer
me to have come for nothing. The Lord knows that, after the sight of the holy
places, my principal object in coming has been to heal by a letter from you
the division between my sister ant my mother." "Well," I replied, "I
will do as you wish, for after all the letters will be to persons beyond the
sea and words written with reference to definite persons can seldom offend
other people. But I must ask you to keep what I say secret. You will take my
advice with you to encourage you by the way; if it is listened to, I will rejoice
as much as you; while if, as I rather think, it is rejected, I shall have wasted
my words and you will have made a long journey for nothing."
THE LETTER.
2. In the first place my sister and my daughter, I wish you to know that I
am not writing to you because I suspect anything evil of you. On the contrary
I implore you to live in harmony, so as to give no ground for any such suspicions.
Moreover had I supposed you fast bound in sin--far be this from you--I should
never have written, for I should have known that my words would be addressed
to deaf ears. Again, if I write to you somewhat sharply, I beg of you to ascribe
this not to any harshness on my part but to the nature of the ailment which
I attempt to treat. Cautery and the knife are the only remedies when mortification
has once set in; poison is the only antidote known for poison; great pain can
only be relieved by inflicting greater pain. Lastly I must say this that even
if your own consciences acquit you of misdoing, yet the very rumour of such
brings disgrace upon you. Mother and daughter are names of affection; they
imply natural ties and reciprocal duties; they form the closest of human relations
after that which binds the soul to God. If you love each other, your conduct
calls for no praise: but if you hate each other, you have committed a crime.
The Lord Jesus was subject to His parents.(1) He reverenced that mother of
whom He was Himself the parent; He respected the foster-father whom He had
Himself fostered; for He remembered that He had been carried in the womb of
the one and in the arms of the other. Wherefore also when He hung upon the
cross He commended to His disciple(2) the mother whom He had never before His
passion parted from Himself.
3. Well,
I shall say no more to the mother, for perhaps age, weakness, and loneliness
make sufficient
excuses
for her; but to you the daughter I say: "Is
a mother's house too small for you whose womb was not too small? When you have
lived with her for ten months in the one, can you not bear to live with her
for one day in the other? or are you unable to meet her gaze? Can it be that
one who has borne you and reared you, who has brought you up and knows you,
is dreaded by you as a witness of your homelife? If you are a true virgin,
why do you fear her careful guardianship; and, if you have fallen, why do you
not openly marry? Wedlock is like a plank offered to a shipwrecked man and
by its means you may remedy what previously you have done amiss. I do not mean
that you are not to repent of your sin or that you are to continue in evil
courses; but, when a tie of the kind has been formed, I despair of breaking
it altogether. However, a return to your mother will make it easier for you
to bewail the virginity which you have lost through leaving her. Or if you
are still unspotted and have not lost your chastity, be careful of it for you
may lose it. Why must you live in a house where you must daily struggle for
life and death? Can any one sleep soundly with a viper near him? No; for, though
it may not attack him it is sure to frighten him. It is better to be where
there is no danger, than to be in danger and to escape. In the one case we
have a calm; in the other careful steering is necessary. In the one case we
are filled with joy; in the other we do but avoid sorrow.
4. But
you will perhaps reply: "my mother is not well-behaved, she desires
the things of the world, she loves riches, she disregards fasting, she stains
her eyes with antimony, she likes to walk abroad in gay attire, she hinders
me from the monastic vow, and so I cannot live with her." But first of
all, even though she is as you say, you will have the greater reward for refusing
to forsake her with all her faults. She has carried you in her womb, she has
reared you; with gentle affection she has borne with the troublesome ways of
your childhood. She has washed your linen, she has tended you when sick, and
the sickness of maternity was not only borne for you but caused by you. She
has brought you up to womanhood, she has taught you to love Christ. You ought
not to be displeased with the behaviour of a mother who has consecrated you
as a virgin to the service of your spouse. Still if you cannot put up with
her dainty ways and feel obliged to shun them, and if your mother really is,
as people so often say, a woman of the world, you have others, virgins like
yourself, the holy company of chastity. Why, when you forsake your mother,
do you choose for companion a than who perhaps has left behind him a sister
and mother of his own? You tell me that she is hard to get on with and that
he is easy; that she is quarrelsome and that he is amiable. I will ask you
one question: Did you go straight from your home to the man, or did you fall
in with him afterwards? If you went straight to him, the reason why you left
your mother is plain. If you fell in with him afterwards, you shew by your
choice what you missed under your mother's roof.[1] The pain that I inflict
is severe and I feel the knife as much as you. "He that walketh uprightly
walketh surely."[2] Only that my conscience would smite me, I should keep
silence and be slow to blame others where I am not guiltless myself. Having
a beans in my own eye I should be reluctant to see the mote in my neighbour's.
But as it is I live far away among Christian brothers; my life with them is
honourable as eyewitnesses of it can testify; I rarely see, or am seen by,
others. It is most shameless, therefore, in you to refuse to copy me in respect
of self-restraint, when you profess to take me as your model. If you say: "my
conscience is enough for me too. God is my judge who is witness of my life.
I care not what men may say;" let me urge upon you the apostle's words: "provide
things honest" not only in the sight of God but also "in the sight
of all men."[3] If any one carps at you for being a Christian a virgin,
mind it not; you have left your mother it may be said to live in a monastery
among virgins, but censure on this score is your glory. When men blame a maid
of God not for self-indulgence but only for insensibility to affection, what
they condemn as callous disregard of a parent is really a lively devotion towards
God. For you prefer to your mother Him whom you are bidden to prefer to your
own soul.[1] And if the day ever comes that she also shall so prefer Him, she
will find in you not a daughter only but a sister as well.
5. "What then?" you will say, "is it a crime to have a man
of religion in the house with me?" You seize me by the collar and drag
me into court either to sanction what I disapprove or else to incur the dislike
of many. A man of religion never separates a daughter from her mother. He welcomes
both and respects both. A daughter may be as religious as she pleases; still
a mother who is a widow is a guaranty for her chastity. If this person whoever
he is is of the same age with yourself, he should honour your mother as though
she were his own; and, if he is older, he should love you as a daughter and
subject you to a mother's discipline. It is not good either for your reputation
or for his that he should like you more than your mother: for his affection
might appear to be less for you than for your youth. This is what I should
say if a monk were not your brother and if you had no relatives able to protect
you. But what excuse has a stranger for thrusting himself in where there are
both a mother and a brother, the one a widow and the other a monk? It is good
for you to feel that you are a daughter and a sister. However, if you cannot
manage both, and if your mother is too hard a morsel to swallow, your brother
at any rate should satisfy you. Or, if he is too harsh, she that bore you may
prove more gentle. Why do you turn pale? Why do you get excited? Why do you
blush, and with trembling lips betray the restlessness of your mind? One thing
only can surpass a woman's love for her mother and brother; and that is her
passion for her husband.
6. I am told, moreover, that you frequent suburban villas and their pleasant
gardens in the company of relatives and intimate friends. I have no doubt that
it is some female cousin or connexion who for her own satisfaction carries
you about with her as a novel kind of attendant. Far be it from me to suspect
that you would desire men's society; even though they should be those of your
own family. But pray, maiden, answer me this; do you appear alone in your kinsfolk's
society? or do you bring your favourite with you? Shameless as you may be,
you will hardly venture to flaunt him in the eyes of the world. If you ever
do so, your whole circle will cry out about both you and him; every one's finger
will be pointed at you; and your cousins who in your presence to please you
call him a monk and a man of religion, will laugh at you behind your back for
having such an unnatural husband. If on the other hand you go out alone--which
I rather suppose to be the case--you will find yourself clothed in sober garb
among slave youths, women married or soon to be so, wanton girls, and dandies
with long hair and tight-fitting vests.[1] Some bearded fop will offer you
his hand he will hold you up if you feel tired, and the pressure of his fingers
will either be a temptation to you, or will shew that you are a temptation
to him. Again when you sit down to table with married men and women, you will
have to see kisses in which you have no part, and dishes partaken of which
are not for you. Moreover it cannot but do you harm to see other women attired
in silk dresses and gold brocades. At table also whether you like it or not,
you will be forced to eat flesh and that of different kinds. To make you drink
wine they will praise it as a creature of God. To induce you to take baths
they will speak of dirt with disgust; and, when on second thoughts you do as
you are bid, they will with one voice salute you as spotless and open, a thorough
lady. Meantime some singer will give to the company a selection of softly flowing
airs; and as he will not venture to look at other men's wives, he will constantly
fix his eyes on you who have no protector. He will speak by nods and convey
by his tone what he is afraid to put into words. Amid inducements to sensuality
so marked as these, even iron wills are apt to be overcome with desire; an
appetite which is the more imperious in virgins because they suppose. that
sweetest of which they have no experience. Heathen legends tell us that sailors
actually ran their ships on the rocks that they might listen to the songs of
the Sirens; and that the lyre of Orpheus had power to draw to itself trees
and animals and to soften flints. In the banquet-hall chastity is hard to keep.
A shining skin shews a sin-stained soul.
7. As a schoolboy I have read of one--and have seen his effigy true to the
life in the streets--who continued to cherish an unlawful passion even when
his flesh scarcely clung to his bones, and whose malady remained uncured until
death cured it. What then will become of you a young girl physically sound,
dainty, stout, and ruddy, if you allow yourself free range among flesh-dishes,
wines, and baths, not to mention married men and bachelors? Even if when solicited
you refuse to consent, you will take the fact of your being asked as evidence
that you are considered handsome. A sensual mind pursues dishonourable objects
with greater zest than honourable ones; and when a thing is forbidden hankers
after it with greater pleasure. Your very dress, cheap and sombre as it is,
is an index of your secret feelings. For it has no creases and trails along
the ground to make you appear taller than you are. Your vest is purposely ripped
asunder to shew what is beneath and while hiding what is repulsive, to reveal
what is fair. As you walk, the very creaking of your black and shiny shoes
attracts the notice of the young men. You wear stays to keep your breasts in
place, and a heaving girdle closely confines your chest. Your hair covers either
your forehead or your ears. Sometimes too you let your shawl drop so as to
lay bare your white shoulders; and, as if unwilling that they should be seen,
you quickly conceal what you have purposely disclosed. And when in public you
for modesty's sake cover your face, like a practised harlot you only shew what
is likely to please.
8. You
will exclaim "How do you know what I am like, or how, when you
are so far away, can you see what I am doing?" Your own brother's tears
and sobs have told me, his frequent and scarcely endurable bursts of grief.
Would that he had lied or that his words had been words of apprehension only
and not of accusation. But, believe me, liars do not shed tears. He is indignant
that you prefer to himself a young man, not it is true clothed in silk or wearing
his hair long but muscular and dainty in the midst of his squalor; and that
this fellow holds the purse-strings, looks after the weaving, allots the servants
their tasks, rules the household, and buys from the market all that is needed.
He is at once steward and master, and, as he anticipates the slaves in their
duties,[1] he is carped at by all the domestics. Everything that their mistress
has not given them they declare that he has stolen from them. Servants as a
class are full of complaints; and no matter what you give them, it is always
too little. For they do not consider how much you have but only how much you
give; and they make up for their chagrin in the only way they can, that is,
by grumbling. One calls him a parasite, another an impostor, another a money-seeker,
another by some novel appellation that hits his fancy. They noise it abroad
that he is constantly at your bed-side, that when you are sick he runs to fetch
nurses, that he holds basins, airs sheets, and folds bandages for you. The
world is only too ready to believe scandal, and stories invented at home soon
get afloat abroad. Nor need you be surprised if your servantmen and servantmaids
get up such tales about you, when even your mother and your brother complain
of your conduct.
9. Do,
therefore, what I advise you and entreat you to do: if possible, be reconciled
with your
mother; or,
if this may not be, at least come to terms
with your brother. Or if you are filled with an implacable hatred of relationships
usually so dear, separate at all events from the man, whom you are said to
prefer to your own flesh and blood, and, if even this is impossible for you,
(for, if you could leave him, you would certainly return to your own) pay more
regard to appearances in harbouring him as your companion. Live in a separate
building and take your meals apart; for if you remain under one roof with him
slanderers will say that you share with him your bed. You may thus easily get
help from him when you feel you need it, and yet to a considerable degree escape
public discredit. Yet you must take care not to contract the stain of which
Jeremiah tells us that no nitre or fuller's soap can wash it out.[1] When you
wish him to come to see you, always have witnesses present; either friends,
or freedmen, or slaves. A good conscience is afraid of no man's eyes. Let him
come in unembarrassed and go out at his ease. Let his silent looks, his unspoken
words and his whole carriage, though at times they may imply embarrassment,
yet indicate peace of mind. Pray, open your ears and listen to the outcry of
the whole city. Yon have already both of you lost your own names and are known
each by that of the other. You are spoken of as his, and he is said to be yours.
Your mother and your brother have heard this and are ready to take you in between
them. They implore you to consent to this arrangement, so that the scandal
of your intimacy with this man which is confined to yourself may give place
to a glory common to all. You can live with your mother and he with your brother.
You can more boldly shew your regard for one who is your brother's comrade;
and your mother will more properly esteem one who is the friend of her son
and not of her daughter. But if you frown and refuse to accept my advice, this
letter will openly expostulate with you. 'Why,' it will say, 'do you beset
another man's servant? Why do you make Christ's minister your slave? Look at
the people and scan each face as it comes under your view. When he reads in
the church all eyes are fixed upon you; and you, using the licence of a wife,
glory in your shame. Secret infamy no longer contents you; you call boldness
freedom; "you have a whore's forehead and refuse to be ashamed."[2]
10. Once more you exclaim that I am over-suspicious, a thinker of evil, too
ready to follow rumours. What? I suspicious? I ill-natured? I, who as I said
in the beginning have taken up my pen because I have no suspicions? Or is it
you that are careless, loose, disdainful? You who at the age of twenty-five
have netted in your embrace a youth whose beard has scarcely grown? An excellent
instructor he must be, able no doubt by his severe looks both to warn and frighten
you! No age is safe from lust, yet gray hairs are some security for decent
conduct. A day will surely come (for time glides by imperceptibly) when your
handsome young favourite will find a wealthier or more youthful mistress. For
women soon age and particularly if they live with men. You will be sorry for
your decision and regret your obstinacy in a day when your means and reputation
shall be alike gone, and when this unhappy intimacy shall be happily broken
off. But perhaps you feel sure of your ground and see no reason to fear a breach
where affection has had so long a time to develop and grow.
11. To you also, her mother, I must say a word. Your years put you beyond
the reach of scandal; do not take advantage of this to indulge in sin. It is
more fitting that your daughter should learn from you how to part from a companion
than that you should learn from her how to give up a paramour. You have a son,
a daughter, and a son-in-law, or at least one who is your daughter's partner.[1]
Why then should you seek other society than theirs, or wish to kindle anew
expiring flames? It would be more becoming in you to screen your daughter fault
than to make it an excuse for your own misdoing. Your son is a monk, and, if
he were to live with you, he would strengthen you in your religious profession
and in your vow of widowhood. Why should you take in a complete stranger, especially
in a house not large enough to hold a son and a daughter? You are old enough
to have grand-children. Invite the pair home then. Your daughter went away
by herself; let her return with this man. I say 'man' and not 'husband' that
none may cavil. The word describes his sex and not his relation to her. Or
if she blushes to accept your offer or finds the house in which she was born
too narrow for her, then move both of you to her abode. However limited may
be its accommodation, it can take in a mother and a brother better than a stranger.
In fact, if she lives in the same house and occupies the same room with a man,
she cannot long preserve her chastity. It is different when two women and two
men live together. If the third person concerned--he, I mean, who fosters your
old age--will not make one of the party and causes only dissension and confusion,
the pair of you[1] can do without him. But if the three of you remain together,
then your brother and son[2] will offer him a sister and a mother. Others may
speak of the two strangers as step-father and son-in-law; but your son must
speak of them as his foster-father and his brother.
NOTE.
12. Working quickly I have completed this letter in a single night anxious
alike to gratify a friend and to try my hand on a rhetorical theme. Then early
in the morning he has knocked at my door on the point of starting. I wish also
to shew my detractors that like them I too can say the first thing that comes
into my head. I have, therefore, introduced few quotations from the scriptures
and have not, as in most of my books, interwoven its flowers in my discourse.
The letter has been, in fact, dictated off-hand and poured forth by lamp-light
so fast that my tongue has outstripped my secretaries' pens and that my volubility
has baffled the expedients of shorthand. I have said this much that those who
make no allowances for want of ability may make some for want of time.
LETTER CXVIII.
TO JULIAN.
Jerome writes to Julian, a wealthy nobleman apparently of Dalmatia ( 5), to
console him for the loss of his wife and two daughters all of whom had recently
died. He reminds Julian of the trials of Job and recommends him to imitate
the patience of the patriarch. He also urges him to follow the example set
by Pammachius and Paulinus, that is, to give up his riches and to become a
monk for the sake of Christ. The date of the letter is 406 A.D.
1. At the very instant of his departure Ausonius, a son to me as he is a brother
to you, gave me a late glimpse of himself but quickly hurried away again, saying
good-morning and good-bye together. Yet he thought that be would return empty-handed
unless he could bring you some trifle from me however hastily written. Clothed
in scarlet as befitted his rank, he had already strapped on his sword-belt[3]
and sent down a requisition to have a stage-horse saddled. Still he made me
send for my secretary and dictate a letter to him. This I did with such rapidity
that his nimble hand could hardly keep pace with my words or manage to put
down my hurried sentences. Thus hasty dictation has taken the place of careful
writing; and, if I break my long silence, it is but to offer you an expression
of good will. This is an impromptu letter without logical order or charm of
style. You must ,look on me for once as a friend only; you will find, I assure
you, nothing of the orator here. Bear in mind that it has been dashed off on
the spur of the moment and given as a provision for the way to one in a hurry
to depart.
Holy scripture
says: "a tale out of season is as musick in mourning."[1]
Accordingly I have disdained the graces of rhetoric and those charms of eloquence
which boys find so captivating, and have fallen back on the serious tone of
the sacred writings. For in these are to be found true medicines for wounds
and sure remedies for sorrow. In these a mother receives back her only son
even on the bier.[2] In these a crowd of mourners hears the words: "the
maid is not dead but sleepeth."[3] In these one that is four days dead
comes forth bound at the call of the Lord."[4]
2. I hear
that in a short space of time you have suffered. several bereavements, that
you have buried
in
quick succession two young unmarried daughters, and
that Faustina, most chaste and loyal of wives, your sister in the fervour of
her faith and your one comfort in the loss of your children, has suddenly fallen
asleep and been taken from you. You have been like a shipwrecked man, who has
no sooner reached the shore than he falls into the hands of brigands, or in
the eloquent language of the prophet like one "who did flee from a lion,
and a bear met him; or went into the house, and leaned his hand on the wall,
and a serpent bit him."[5] Pecuniary losses have followed your bereavements;
the entire province has been overrun by a barbarian enemy, and in the general
devastation your private property has been destroyed, your flocks and herds
have been driven off, and your poor slaves either made prisoners or else slain.
To crown all, your only daughter, made all the more dear to you by the loss
of the others, has for her husband a young nobleman who, to say nothing worse
of him, has given you more occasion for sorrow than for rejoicing. Such is
the list of the trials that have been laid upon you; such is the conflict waged
by the old enemy against Julian a raw recruit to Christ's standard. If you
look only to yourself your troubles are indeed great but if you look to the
strong Warrior,[6] they are but child's play and the conflict is only the semblance
of one. After untold trials a wicked wife was still left to the blessed Job,
the devil hoping that he might learn from her to blaspheme God. You on the
other hand have been deprived of an excellent one that you might learn to go
without consolation in the hour of misfortune. Yet it is far harder to put
up with a wife whom you dislike than it is to mourn for one whom you dearly
love. Moreover when Job's children died they found a common tomb beneath the
ruins of his house, and all he could do to shew his parental affection was
to rend his garments to fall upon the ground and to worship, saying: "Naked
came I out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither: the Lord
gave and the Lord hath taken away: it has been as the Lord pleased: blessed
be the name of the Lord."[1] But you, to put the matter briefly, have
been allowed to perform the obsequies of your dear ones; and those obsequies
have been attended by many respectful kinsmen and comforting friends. Again
Job lost all his wealth at once; and, as, one after another, the messengers
of woe unfolded new calamities, he flinched as little as the sage of whom Horace
writes:[2]--
Shatter the world to atoms if you will.
Fearless will be the man on whom it falls.
But with you the case is different. The greater part of your substance has
been left to you, and your trials have not been greater than you can bear.
For you have not yet attained to such perfection that the devil has to marshal
all his forces against you.
3. Long
ago this wealthy proprietor and still wealthier father was made by a sudden
stroke destitute
and bereaved.
But as, in spite of all that befel
him, he had not sinned before God or spoken foolishly, the Lord--exulting in
the victory of his servant and regarding Job's patience as His own triumph--said
to the devil: "Hast thou considered my servant Job, that there is none
like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God and
escheweth evil? and still he holdeth fast his integrity?"[3] He finely
adds the last clause because it is difficult for innocence to refrain from
murmuring when it is overborne by misfortune; and to avoid making a shipwreck
of faith when it sees that its sufferings are unjustly inflicted. The devil
answered the Lord and said: "Skin for skin, yea, all that a man hath will
he give for his life. But put forth thine hand now, and touch his bone and
his flesh, and he will curse thee to thy face."[4] See how crafty the
adversary is, and how hardened in sin his evil days have made him! He knows
the difference between things external and internal. He knows that even the
philosophers of the world call the former <greek>adiafora</greek>,
that is indifferent, and that the perfection of virtue does not consist in
losing or disdaining them. It is the latter, those that are internal and objects
of preference,[1] the loss of which inevitably causes chagrin. Wherefore he
boldly contradicts what God has said and declares that Job deserves no praise
at all; since he has yielded up no part of himself but only what is outside
himself, since he has given for his own skin the skins of his children, and
since he has but laid down his purse to secure the health of his body. From
this your sagacity may perceive that your trials have so far only reached the
point at which you give hide for hide, skin for skin, and are ready to give
all that you have for your life. The Lord has not yet stretched forth His hand
upon you, or touched your flesh, or broken your bones. Yet it is when such
afflictions as these are laid upon you that it is Bard not to groan and not
to 'bless' God to His face, that is to curse Him. The word 'bless' is used
in the same way in the books of Kings where it is said of Naboth that he 'blessed'
God and the king and was therefore stoned by the people.[2] But the Lord knew
His champion and felt sure that this great hero would even in this last and
severest conflict prove unconquerable. Therefore He said: "Behold he is
in thine hand; but save his life."[3] The holy man's flesh is placed at
the devil's disposal, but his vital powers are withheld. For if the devil had
smitten that on which sensation and mental judgment depend, the guilt arising
from a misuse of these faculties I would have lain at the door not of him who
committed the sin but of him who had overthrown the balance of his mind.
4. Others
may praise you if they will, and celebrate your victories over the devil.
They may eulogize
you
for the smiling face with which you bore the loss
of your daughters, or for the resolution with which, forty days after they
fell asleep, you exchanged your mourning for a white robe to attend the dedication
of a martyr's bones; unconcerned for a bereavement which was the concern of
the whole city, and anxious only to share in a martyr's triumph. Nay, say they,
when you bore your wife to burial, it was not as one dead but as one setting
forth on a journey. But I shall not deceive you with flattering words or take
the ground froth under your feet with slippery praises. Rather will I say what
it is good for you to hear: "My son, if thou come to serve the Lord, prepare
thy soul for temptation,"[1] and "when thou shalt have done all those
things which are commanded thee, say, I am an unprofitable servant; I have
done that which was my duty to do."[2] Say to God: "the children
that thou hast taken from me were Thine own gift. The hand-maiden that Thou
hast taken to Thyself Thou also didst lend to me for a season to be my solace.
I am not aggrieved that Thou hast taken her back, but thankful rather that
Thou hast previously given her to me."
Once upon
a time a rich young man boasted that he had fulfilled all the requirements
of the law,
but the Lord
said to him (as we read in the gospel): "One
thing thou lackest: if thou wilt be perfect, go thy way, sell whatsoever thou
hast, and give to the poor; and come and follow me."[3] He who declared
that he had done all things gave way at the first onset to the power of riches.
Wherefore they who are rich find it hard to enter the kingdom of heaven, a
kingdom which desires for its citizens souls that soar aloft free from all
ties and hindrances. "Go thy way," the Lord says, "and sell" not
a part of thy substance but "all that thou hast, and give to the poor;" not
to thy friends or kinsfolk or relatives, not to thy wife or to thy children.
I will even go farther and say: keep back nothing for yourself because you
fear to be some day poor, lest by so doing you share the condemnation of Ananias
and Sapphira;[4] but give everything to the poor and make to yourself friends
of the mammon of unrighteousness that they may receive you into everlasting
habitations.[5] Obey the Master's injunction "follow me,"[6] and
take the Lord of the world for your possession; that you may be able to sing
with the prophet, "The Lord is my portion,"[7] and like a true Levite[8]
may possess no earthly inheritance. I cannot but advise you thus if you wish
to be perfect, if you desire to attain the pinnacle of the apostles' glory,
if you wish to take up your cross and to follow Christ. When once you have
put your hand to the plough you must not look back;[9] when once you stand
on the housetop you must think no more of your clothes within; to escape your
Egyptian mistress[10] you must abandon the cloak that belongs to this world.
Even Elijah, in his quick translation to heaven could not take his mantle with
him, but left in the world the garments of the world.[11] Such conduct, you
will object, is for him who would emulate the apostles, for the man who aspires
to be perfect. But why should not you aspire to be perfect? Why should not
you who hold a foremost place in the world hold a foremost place also in Christ's
household? Is it because you have been married? Peter was married too, but
when he forsook his ship and his nets he forsook his wife also.[1] The Lord
who wills that all men shall be saved and prefers the repentance of a sinner
to his death[2] has, in His almighty providence, removed from you this excuse.
Your wife can no longer draw you earthwards, but you can follow her as she
draws you heaven-wards. Provide good things for your children who have gone
home before you to the Lord. Do not let their portions go to swell their sister's
fortune, but use them to ransom four own soul and to give sustenance to the
needy. These are the necklaces your daughters expect from you; these are the
jewels they wish to see sparkle on their foreheads. The money which they would
have wasted in buying silks may well be considered saved when it provides cheap
clothing for the poor. They ask you for their portions. Now that they are united
to their spouse they are loth to appear poor and undistinguished: they desire
to have the ornaments that befit their rank.
5. Nor
may you excuse yourself on the score of your noble station and the responsibilities
of wealth.
Look
at Pammachius and at Paulinus that presbyter
of glowing faith both of whom have offered to the Lord not only their riches
but themselves. In spite of the devil and his shuffling they have by no means
given skin for skin, but have consecrated their own flesh and bones, yea and
their very souls unto the Lord. Surely these may lead you to higher things
both by their example and by their preaching, that is, by their deeds and words.
You are of noble birth, so are they: but in Christ they are made nobler still.
You are rich and held in repute, so once were they: but now instead of being
rich and held in repute they are poor and obscure, yet, because it is for Christ's
sake, they are really richer and more famous than ever. You too, it is true,
show yourself beneficent, you are said to minister to the wants of the saints,
to entertain monks, and to present large sums of money to churches. This however
is only the a b c of your soldiership. You despise money; the world's philosophers
have done the same. One of these[3]--to say nothing of the rest--cast the price
of many possessions into the sea, saying as he did so "To the bottom with
you, ye provokers of evil lusts. I shall drown you in the sea that you may
never drown me in sin." If then a philosopher--a creature of vanity whom
popular applause can buy and sell--laid down all his burthen at once, how can
you think that you have reached virtue's crowning height when you have yielded
up but a portion of yours? It is you yourself that the Lord wishes for, "a
living sacrifice ... acceptable unto God."[1] Yourself, I say, and not
what you have. And therefore, as he trained Israel by subjecting it to many
plagues and afflictions, so does He now admonish you by sending you trials
of different kinds. "For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth
every son whom he receiveth."[2] The poor widow did but cast two mites
into the treasury; yet because she cast in all that she had it is said of her
that she surpassed all the rich in offering gifts to God.[3] Such gifts are
valued not by their weight but by the good-will with which they are made. You
may have spent your substance upon numbers of people, and a portion of your
fellows may have reason to rejoice in your bounty; yet those who have received
nothing at your hands are still more numerous. Neither the wealth of Darius
nor the riches of Croesus would suffice to satisfy the wants of the world's
poor. But if you once give yourself to the Lord and resolve to follow the Saviour
in the perfection of apostolic virtue, then you will come to see what your
place has hitherto been, and how you have lagged in the rear of Christ's army.
Hardly had you begun to mourn for your dead daughters when the fear of Christ
dried the tears of paternal affection upon your cheeks. It was a great triumph
of faith, true. But how much greater was that won by Abraham who was content
to slay his only son, of whom he had been told that he was to inherit the world,
yet did not cease to hope that after death Isaac would live again.[4] Jephthah
too offered up his virgin daughter. and for this is placed by the apostle in
the roll of the saints.[5] I would not therefore have you offer to the Lord
only what a thief may steal from you or an enemy fall upon, or a proscription
confiscate, what is liable to fluctuations in value now going up and now down,
what belongs to a succession of masters who follow each other as fast as in
the sea wave follows wave, and--to say everything in a word--what, whether
you like it or not, you must leave behind you when you die. Rather offer to
God that which no enemy can carry off and no tyrant take from you, which will
go down with you into the grave, nay on to the kingdom of heaven and the enchantments
of paradise. You already build monasteries and support in the various islands
of Dalmatia a large number of holy men. But you would do better still if you
were to live among these holy men usa holy man yourself. "Be ye holy,
saith the Lord, for I am holy."[1] The apostles boasted that they had
left all things and had followed the Saviour."[2] We do not read that
they left anything except their ship and their nets; yet they were crowned
with the approval of Him who was to be their judge. Why? Because in offering
up themselves they had indeed left all that they had.
6. I say
all this not in disparagement of your good works or because I wish to underrate
your generosity
in almsgiving,
but because I do not wish you to
be a monk among men of the world and a man of the world among monks. I shall
require every sacrifice of you for I hear that your mind is devoted to the
service of God. If some friend, or follower, or kinsman tries to combat this
counsel of mine and to recall you to the pleasures of a handsome table, be
sure that he is thinking less of your soul than of his own belly, and remember
that death in a moment terminates both elegant entertainments and all other
pleasures provided by wealth. Within the short space of twenty days you have
lost two daughters, the one eight years old and the other six; and do you suppose
that one so old as you are yourself can live much longer? David tells you how
long a time you can look for: "the days of our years are threescore years
and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their
strength labour and sorrow."[3] Happy is he and to be held worthy of the
highest bliss whom old age shall find a servant of Christ and whom the last
day shall discover fighting for the Saviour's cause. "He shall not be
ashamed when he speaketh with his enemies in the gate."[4] On his entrance
into paradise it shall be said to him: "thou in thy lifetime receivedst
evil things but nowhere thou art comforted."[5] The Lord will not avenge
the same sin twice. Lazarus, formerly poor and full of ulcers, whose sores
the dogs licked and who barely managed to live, poor wretch, on the crumbs
that fell from the rich man's table, is now welcomed into Abraham's bosom and
has the joy of finding a father in the great patriarch. It is difficult nay
impossible for a man to enjoy both the good things of the present and those
of the future, to satisfy his belly here and his mind yonder, to pass from
the pleasures of this life to the pleasures of that, to be first in both worlds,
and to be held in honour both on earth and in heaven.
7. And if in your secret thoughts you are troubled because I who give you
this advice am not myself what I desire you to be, and because you have seen
some after beginning well fall midway on their journey; I shall briefly plead
in reply that the words which I speak are not mine but those of the Lord and
Saviour, and that I urge upon you not the standard which is possible to myself
but the ideal which every true servant of Christ must wish for and realize.
Athletes as a rule are stronger than their backers; yet the weaker presses
the stronger to put forth all his efforts Look not upon Judas denying his Lord
but upon Paul confessing Him. Jacob's father was a man of great wealth; yet,
when Jacob went to Mesopotamia, he went alone and destitute leaning upon his
staff. When he felt weary he had to lie down by the wayside and, delicately
nurtured as he had been by his mother Rebekah, was forced to content himself
with a stone for a pillow. Yet it was then[1] that he saw the ladder set up
from earth to heaven, and the angels ascending and descending on it, and the
Lord above it holding out a helping hand to such as fall and encouraging the
climbers to fresh efforts by the vision of Himself. Therefore is the spot called
Bethel or the house of God; for there day by day there is ascending and descending.
When they are careless, even holy men lose their footing; and sinners, if they
wash away their stains with tears regain their place. I say this not that those
coming down may frighten you but that those going up may stimulate you. For
evil can never supply a model and even in worldly affairs incentives to virtue
come always from the brighter side.
But I have forgotten my purpose and the limits set to my letter. I should
have liked to say a great deal more. Indeed all that I can say is inadequate
alike to satisfy the seriousness of the subject and the claims of your rank.
But here is our Ausonius beginning to be impatient for the sheets, hurrying
the secretaries, and in his impatience at the neighing of his horse, accusing
my poor wits of slowness. Remember me, then, and prosper in Christ. And one
thing more; follow the example set you at home by the holy Vera,[2] who like
a true follower of Christ does not fear to endure the hardships of pilgrimage.
Find in a woman your 'leader in this high emprise.'[3]
LETTER CXIX.
TO MINERVIUS AND ALEXANDER.
Minervius
and Alexander two monks of Toulouse had written to Jerome asking him to explain
for them
a large
number of passages in scripture. Jerome in
his reply postpones most of these to a future time but deals with two in detail
viz. (I) "we shall not all sleep but we shall all be changed," I
Cor. xv. 51; and (2) "we shall be caught up in the clouds," I Th.
iv. 17. With regard to (I) Jerome prefers the reading "we shall all sleep
but we shall not all be changed," and with regard to (2) he looks upon
the language as metaphorical and interprets it to mean that believers will
be ' assumed ' into the company of the apostles and prophets.The date of the
letter is 406 A.D.
LETTER CXX.
TO HEDIBIA.[1]
At the request of Hedibia, a lady of Gaul much interested in the study of
scripture, Jerome deals with the following twelve questions. It will be noticed
that several of them belong to the historical criticism of our own day.
(1) How can anyone be perfect? and How ought a widow without children to live
to God?
(2) What is the meaning of Matt. xxvi. 29?
(3) How are the discrepancies in the evangelical narratives to be accounted
for? How can Matt. xxviii. I be reconciled with Mark xvi. I, 2?
(4) How can Matt. xxviii. 9 (Saturday evening) be reconciled with John xx.
1--18 (Sunday morning)?
(5) How can Matt. xxviii. 9 be reconciled with John xx. 17?
(6) How was it that, if there was a guard of soldiers at the sepulchre, Peter
and John were allowed to go in freely? (Matt. xxvii. 66: John xx. 1-8.)
(7) How is the statement of Matthew and Mark that the apostles were ordered
to go into Galilee to see Jesus there to be reconciled with that of Luke and
John who make Him appear to them in Jerusalem?
(8) What is the meaning of Matt. xxvii. 50, 51?
(9) How is the statement of John xx. 22 that Jesus breathed on his apostles
the Holy Ghost to be reconciled with that of Luke (Luke xxiv. 49: Acts i. 4)
that He would send it to them after His ascension?
(10) What is the meaning of the passage, Rom. ix. 14-29?
(11) What is the meaning of 2 Cor. ii. 16? (12) What is the meaning of I Th.
v. 23? The date of the letter is 406 or 407 A.D.
LETTER CXXI.
TO ALGASIA.
Jerome writes to a lady of Gaul named Algasis to answer eleven questions which
she had submitted to him. They were as follows:--
(1) How is Luke vii. 18, 19, to be reconciled with John i. 36?
(2) What is the meaning of Matt. xii. 20?
(3) And of Matt. xvi. 24?
(4) And of Matt. xxiv. 19, 20?
(5) And of Luke ix. 53?
(6) What is the meaning of the parable of the unjust steward?
(7) What is the meaning of Rom. v. 7? (8) And of Rom. vii.8?
(9) And of Rom. ix. 3?
(10) And of Col. ii. 18?
(11) And of 2 Th. ii. 3?
The date of the letter is 406 A.D.
LETTER CXXII.
TO RUSTICUS.
Rusticus and Artemia his wife having made a vow of continence broke it. Artemia
proceeded to Palestine to do penance for her sin and Rusticus promised to follow
her. However he failed to do so, and Jerome was asked to write this letter
in the hope that it might induce him to fulfil his promise. The date is about
408 A.D.
1. I am
induced to write to you, a stranger to a stranger, by the entreaties of that
holy servant
of Christ
Hedibia[1] and of my daughter in the faith Artemia,
once your wife but now no longer your wife but your sister and fellow-servant.
Not content with assuring her own salvation she has sought yours also, in former
days at home and now in the holy places. She is anxious to emulate the thoughtfulness
of the apostles Andrew and Philip; who after Christ had found them, desired
in their turn to find, the one his brother Simon and the other his friend Nathanael.[2]
To the former of these it was said "Thou art Simon, the son of Jona: thou
shall be called Cephas which is by interpretation a stone;"[3] while the
latter, whose name Nathanael means the gift of God, was comforted by Christ's
witness to him: "behold an Israelite indeed in whom is no guile."[4]
So of old Lot[5] desired to rescue his wife as well as his two daughters, and
refusing to leave blazing Sodom and Gomorrah until he was himself half-on-fire,
tried to lead forth one who was tied and bound by her past sins. But in her
despair she lost her composure, and looking back became a monument of an unbelieving
soul.[6] Yet, as if to make up for the loss of a single woman, Lot's glowing
faith set free the whole city of Zoar. In fact when he left the dark valleys
in which Sodom lay and came to the mountains the sun rose upon him as he entered
Zoar or the little City; so-called because the little faith that Lot possessed,
though unable to save greater places, was at least able to preserve smaller
ones. For one who had gone so far astray as to live in Gomorrah could not all
at once reach the noonland where Abraham, the friend of God,[7] entertained
God and His angels.[8] (For it was in Egypt that Joseph fed his brothers, and
when the bride speaks to the Bridegroom her cry is: "tell me where thou
feedest, where thou makest thy flock to rest at noon."[9]) Good men have
always sorrowed for the sins of others. Samuel of old lamented for Saul[10]
because he neglected to treat the ulcers of pride with the balm of penitence.
And Paul wept for the Corinthians[1] who refused to wash out with their tears
the stains of fornication. For the same reason Ezekiel swallowed the book where
were written within and without song, and lamentation and woe;[2] the song
in praise of the righteous, the lamentation over the penitent, and the woe
for those of whom it is written, "When the wicked man falleth into the
depths of evil, then is he filled with scorn."[3] It is to these that
Isaiah alludes when he says: "in that day did the Lord God of hosts call
to weeping and to mourning and to baldness and to girding with sackcloth: and
behold joy and gladness, slaying oxen; and killing sheep, eating flesh" and
saying, "let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die."[4] Yet of such
persons Ezekiel is bidden to speak thus: "O thou son of man, speak unto
the house of Israel; Thus ye speak, saying, If our transgressions and our sins
be upon us, and we pine away in them, how should we then live? Say unto them,
As I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked;
but that the wicked turn from his way and live," and again, "turn
ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, O house of Israel?"[5]
Nothing makes God so angry as when men from despair of better things cleave
to those which are worse; and indeed this despair in itself is a sign of unbelief.
One who despairs of salvation can have no expectation of a judgment to come.
For if he dreaded such, he would by doing good works prepare to meet his Judge.
Let us hear what God says through Jeremiah, "withhold thy foot from a
rough way and thy throat from thirst"[6] and again" shall they fall,
and not arise? Shall he turn away, and not return? "[7] Let us hear also
what God says by Isaiah: "When thou shalt turn and bewail thyself, then
shall thou be saved, and then shalt thou know where thou hast hitherto been."[8]
We do not realize the miseries of sickness till returning health reveals them
to us. So sins serve as a foil to the blessedness of virtue; and light shines
more brightly when it is relieved against darkness. Ezekiel uses language like
that of the other prophets because he is animated by a similar spirit. "Repent," he
cries, "and turn yourselves from all your transgressions; so iniquity
shall not be your ruin. Cast away from you all your transgressions whereby
ye have transgressed; and make you a new heart and a new spirit: for why will
ye die, O house of Israel? For I have no pleasure in the death of him that
dieth, saith the Lord."[9] Wherefore in a subsequent passage he says: "As
I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked:
but that the wicked turn from his way and live."[1] These words shew us
that the mind must not through disbelief in the promised blessings give way
to despair; and that the soul once marked out for perdition must not refuse
to apply remedies on the ground that its wounds are past curing. Ezekiel describes
God as swearing, that if we refuse to believe His promise in regard to our
salvation we may at least believe His oath. It is with full confidence that
the righteous man prays and says, "Turn us, O God of our salvation, and
cause thine anger toward us to cease,"[2] and again, "Lord, by thy
favour thou hast made my mountain to stand strong: thou didst hide thy face
and I was troubled."[3] He means to say, "when I forsook the foulness
of my faults for the beauty of virtue, God strengthened my weakness with His
grace." Lo, I hear. His promise: "I will pursue mine enemies and
overtake them: neither will I turn again till they are consumed,"[4] so
that I who was once thine enemy and a fugitive from thee, shall be laid hold
of by thine hand. Cease not from pursuing me till my wickedness is consumed,
and I return to my old husband who will give me my wool and my flax, my oil
and my fine flour and will feed me with the richest foods.[5] He it was who
hedged up and enclosed my evil ways[6] that I might find Him the true way.
who says in the gospel, "I am the way, the truth, and the life."[7]
Hear the words of the prophet: "they that sow in tears shall reap in joy.
He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come
again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him."[8] Say also with
him: "All the night make I my bed to swim; I water my couch with my tears "[9]:
and again, "As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my
soul after thee, O God. My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God: when
shall I come and appear before God? My tears have been my meat day and night,"[10]
and in another place, "O God, thou art my God; early will I seek thee:
my soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and weary land
where no water is. So have I looked upon thee in the sanctuary."[11] For
although my soul has thirsted after thee, yet much more have I sought thee
by the labour of my flesh and have not been able to look upon thee in thy sanctuary;
not at any rate till I have first dwelt in a land barren of sin, where the
weary wayfarer is no more assailed by the adversary, and where there are no
pools or rivers of lust.
The Saviour
also wept over the city of Jerusalem because its inhabitants had not repented;[1]
and
Peter
washed out his triple denial with bitter tears,[2]
thus fulfilling the words of the prophet: "rivers of waters run down mine
eyes."[3] Jeremiah too laments over his impenitent people, saying: "Oh
that my head were waters and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep
day and night for ... my people!"[4] And farther on he gives a reason
for his lamentation: "weep ye not for the dead," he writes, "neither
bemoan him: but weep sore for him that goeth away: for he shall return no more."[5]
The Jew and the Gentile therefore are not to be bemoaned, for they have never
been in the Church and have died once for all (it is of these that the Saviour
says: "let the dead bury their dead"[6]); weep rather for those who
by reason of their crimes and sins go away from the Church, and who suffering
condemnation for their faults shall no more return to it. It is in this sense
that the prophet speaks to ministers of the Church, calling them its walls
and towers, and saying to each in turn, "O wall, let tears run down."[7]
In this way, it is prophetically implied, you will fulfil the apostolic precept:" rejoice
with them that do rejoice and weep with them that weep,"[8] and by your
tears you will melt the hard hearts of sinners till they too weep; whereas,
if they persist in evil doing they will find these words applied to them, "I
... planted thee a noble vine wholly a right seed: how then art thou turned
into the degenerate plant of a strange vine unto me?"[9] and again "saying
to a stock, Thou art my father; and to a stone, Thou hast brought me forth:
for they have turned their back unto me, and not their face."[10] He means,
they would not turn towards God in penitence; but in the hardness of their
hearts turned their backs upon Him to insult Him. Wherefore also the Lord says
to Jeremiah: "hast thou seen that which backsliding Israel hath done?
She is gone up upon every high mountain and under every green tree, and there
hath played the harlot. And I said after she" had played the harlot and "had
done all these things, Turn thou unto me. But she returned not."[11]
2. How
hard hearted we are and how merciful God is! who even after our many sins
urges us to seek
salvation.
Yet not even so are we willing to turn to
better things. Hear the words of the Lord: "If a man put away his wife,
and she go from him, and become another man's and shall afterwards desire to
return to him, will he at all receive her? Will he not loathe her rather? But
thou hast played the harlot with many lovers: yet return again to me, saith
the Lord." In place of the last clause the true Hebrew text (which is
not preserved in the Greek and Latin versions) gives the following: "thou
hast forsaken me, yet return, and I will receive thee, saith the Lord."[1]
Isaiah also speaking in tim same sense uses almost the same words: "Return," he
cries, "O children of Israel, ye who think deep counsel and wicked."[2]
Return thou unto me and I will redeem thee. I am God, and there is no God else
beside me; a just God and a Saviour; there is none beside me. Look unto me,
and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth.[3] Remember this and shew yourselves
men: bring it again to mind, O ye transgressors. Return in heart and remember
the former things of old: for I am God and there is none else."[4] Joel
also writes: "turn ye even to me with all your heart, and with fasting
and with weeping and with mourning: and rend your heart and not your garments
and turn unto the Lord your God; for he is gracious and merciful ... and repenteth
him of the evil."[5] How great His mercy is and how excessive--if I may
so say--and unspeakable is His pitifulness, the prophet Hosea tells us when
he speaks in the Lord's name: "how shall I give thee up, Ephraim? how
shall I deliver thee, Israel? how shall I make thee as Admah? How shall I set
thee as Zeboim? Mine heart is turned within me, my repentings are kindled together.
I will not execute the fierceness of mine anger.'[6] David also says in a psalm: "in
death there is no remembrance of thee; in the grave who shall give thee thanks? "[7]
and in another place: "I acknowledged my sin unto thee, and mine iniquity
have I not hid. I said, I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord; and
thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin. For this shall every one that is godly
pray unto thee in a time when thou mayest be found: surely in the floods of
great waters they shall not come nigh unto him."[8]
3. Think
how great that weeping must be which deserves to be compared to a flood of
waters. Whosoever
so
weeps and says with the prophet Jeremiah "let
not the apple of mine eye cease "[9] shall straightway find the words
fulfilled of him: "mercy and truth are met together: righteousness and
peace have kissed each other;"[10] so that, if righteousness and truth
terrify him, mercy and peace may encourage him to seek salvation.
The whole
repentance of a sinner is exhibited to us in the fifty-first[1] psalm written
by David
after he
had gone in unto Bathsheba the wife of Uriah
the Hittite,[2] and when, to the rebuke of the prophet Nathan he had replied, "I
have sinned." Immediately that he confessed his fault he was comforted
by the words: "the Lord also hath put away thy sin."[3] He had added
murder to adultery; yet bursting into tears he says: "Have mercy upon
me, O God, according to thy loving kindness: according unto the multitude of
thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions."[4] A sin so great needed
to find great mercy. Accordingly he goes on to say: "Wash me throughly
from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin. For I acknowledge my transgressions:
and my sin is ever before me. Against thee, thee only have I sinned"--as
a king he had no one to fear but Gods--"and done this evil in thy sight;
that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest and be clear when thou judgest."[5]
For "God hath concluded all in unbelief, that he might have mercy upon
all."[6] And such was the progress that David made that he who had once
been a sinner and a penitent afterwards became a master able to say: "I
will teach transgressors thy ways; and sinners shall be converted unto thee."[7]
For as "confession and beauty are before God,"[8] so a sinner who
confesses his sins and says: "my wounds stink and are corrupt because
of my foolishness "[9] loses his foul wounds and is made whole and clean.
But "he that covereth his sins shall not prosper."[10]
The ungodly
king Ahab, who shed the blood of Naboth to gain his vineyard, was with Jezebel,
the
partner less
of his bed than of his cruelty, severely
rebuked by Elijah. "Thus saith the Lord, hast thou killed and also taken
possession?" and again, "in the place where dogs licked the blood
of Naboth, shall dogs lick thy blood, even thine;" and "the dogs
shall eat Jezebel by the wall of Jezreel."[11] "And it came to pass"--the
passage goes on--" when Ahab heard those words that he rent his clothes,
and put sackcloth upon his flesh, and fasted, and lay in sackclothand the word
of the Lord came to Elijah saying, Because Ahab humbleth himself before me,
I will not bring the evil in his days."[12] Ahab's sin and Jezebel's were
the same; yet because Ahab repented, his punishment was postponed so as to
fall upon his sons, while Jezebel persisting in her wickedness met her doom
then and there.
Moreover
the Lord tells us in the gospel, "the men of Nineveh shall rise
in judgment with this generation and shall condemn it: because they repented
at the preaching of Jonas;"[1] and again He says I am not come to call
the righteous but sinners to repentance."[2] The lost piece of silver
is sought for until it is found in the mire.[3] So also the ninety and nine
sheep are left in the wilderness, while the shepherd carries home on his shoulders
the one sheep which has gone astray.[4] Wherefore also "there is joy in
the presence of the angels over one sinner that repenteth."[5] What a
blessed thought it is that heavenly beings rejoice in our salvation! For it
is of us that the words are said: "Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven
is at hand."[6] Death and life are contrary the one to the other; there
is no middle term. Yet penitence can knit death to life. The prodigal son,
we are told, wasted all his substance, and in the far country away from his
father "would fain have filled his belly with the husks that the swine
did eat." Yet, when he comes back to his father, the fatted calf is killed,
a robe and a ring are given to him.[7] That is to say, he receives again Christ's
robe which he had before defiled, and hears to his comfort the injunction: "let
thy garments be always white."[8] He receives the signet of God and cries
to the Lord: "Father, I have sinned against heaven and before thee;" and
receiving the kiss of reconciliation, he says to Him: "Now is the light
of thy countenance sealed upon us, O Lord."[9]
Hear the
words of Ezekiel: "as for the wickedness of the wicked, he shall
not fall thereby in the day that he turneth from his wickedness; neither shall
the righteous be able to live for his righteousness in the day that he sinneth."[10]
The Lord judges every man according as he finds him. It is not the past that
He looks upon but the present. Bygone sins there may be, but renewal and conversion
remove them. "A just man," we read "falleth seven times and
riseth up again."[11] If he falls, how is he just? and if he is just,
how does he fall? The answer is that a sinner does not lose the name of just
if he always repents of his sins and rises again. If a sinner repents, his
sins are forgiven him not only till seven times but till seventy times seven.[12]
To whom much is forgiven, the same loveth much.[13] The harlot washed with
her tears the Saviour's feet and wiped them with her hair; and to her, as a
type of the Church gathered from the nations, was the declaration made: "Thy
sins are forgiven."[1] The self-righteous Pharisee perished in his pride,
white the humble publican was saved by his confession.[2]
God makes
asseveration by the mouth of the prophet Jeremiah: "At what
instant I shall speak concerning a nation and concerning a kingdom, to pluck
up to pull down and to destroy it: if that nation, against whom I have pronounced,
turn from their evil, I will repent of the evil that I thought to do unto them.
And at what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom
to build and to plant it; if it do evil in my sight, that it obey not my voice,
then I will repent of the good wherewith I said I would benefit them." And
immediately he adds: "Behold, I frame evil against you, and devise a device
against you: return ye now every one from his evil way, and make your ways
and your doings good. And they said, there is no hope: but we will walk after
our own devices, and we will every one do the imagination of his evil heart."[3]
The righteous Simeon says in the gospel: "Behold, this child is set for
the fall and rising again of many,"[4] for the fall, that is, of sinners
and for the rising again of the penitent. So the apostle writes to the Corinthians: "it
is reported commonly that there is fornication among you, and such fornication
as is not so much as named among the Gentiles, that one should have his father's
wife. And ye are puffed up and have not rather mourned that he that hath done
this deed might be taken away from among you." [5] And in his second epistle
to the same, "lest such a one should be swallowed up with overmuch sorrow,"[6]
he calls him back, and begs them to confirm their love towards him, so that
he who had been destroyed by incest might be saved by penitence.
"There is no man clean from sin; even though he has lived but for one
day."[7] And the years of man's life are many in number. "The stars
are not pure in his sight,[8] and his angels he charged with folly."[9]
If there is sin in heaven, how much more must there be sin on earth? If they
are stained with guilt who have no bodily temptations, how much more must we
be, enveloped as we are in frail flesh and forced to cry each one of us with
the apostle: "O wretched man that I am ! who shall deliver me from the
body of this death?[10] For in my flesh there dwelleth no good thing."[11]
For we do not what we would but what we would not; the soul desires to do one
thing, the flesh is compelled to do another. If any persons are called righteous
in scripture, and not only righteous but righteous in the sight of God, they
are called righteous according to that righteousness mentioned in the passage
I have quoted: "A just man falleth seven times and riseth up again,"(1)
and on the principle laid down that the wickedness of the wicked shall not
hurt him in the day that he turns to repentance."(2) In fact Zachariah
the father of John who is described as a righteous man sinned in disbelieving
the message sent to him and was at once punished with dumbness.(3) Even Job,
who at the outset of his history is spoken of as perfect and upright and uncomplaining,
is afterwards proved to be a sinner both by God's words and by his own confession.
If Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the prophets also and the apostles were by no
means free from sin and if the finest wheat had chaff mixed with it, what can
be said of us of whom it is written: "What is the chaff to the wheat,
saith the Lord?"(4) Yet the chaff is reserved for future burning; as also
are the tares which at present are mingled with the growing corn. For one shall
come whose fan is in His hand, and shall purge His floor, and shall gather
His wheat into the garner, and shall burn the chaff in the fire of hell.(5)
4. Roaming
thus through the fairest fields of scripture I have culled its loveliest
flowers to weave
for your
brows a garland of penitence; for my aim
is that, flying on the wings of a dove, you may find rest(6) and make your
peace with the Father of mercy. Your former wife, who is now your sister and
fellow-servant, has told me that, acting on the apostolic precept,(7) you and
she lived apart by consent that you might give yourselves to prayer; but that
after a time your feet sank beneath you as if resting on water and indeed--to
speak plainly--gave way altogether. For her part she heard the Lord saying
to her as to Moses: "as for thee stand thou here by me;"(8) and with
the psalmist she said of Him: "He hath set my feet upon a rock."(9)
But your house--she went on--having no sure foundation of faith fell before
a whirlwind of the devil.(10) Hers however still stands in the Lord, and does
not refuse its shelter to you; you can still be joined in spirit to her to
whom you were once joined in body. For, as the apostle says, "he that
is joined unto the Lord is one spirit" with him.(11) Moreover, when the
fury of the barbarians and the risk of captivity separated you again, you promised
with a solemn oath that, if she made her way to the holy places, you would
follow her either immediately or later, and that you would try to save your
soul now that by your carelessness you had seemed to lose it. Perform, now,
the vow which you then made in the presence of God. Human life is uncertain.
Therefore, lest you may be snatched away before you have fulfilled your promise,
imitate her whose teacher you ought to have been. For shame! the weaker vessel
overcomes the world, and yet the stronger is overcome by it!
A woman
leadeth in the high emprise;(1) and yet you will not follow her when her
salvation leads
you to the threshold
of the faith! Perhaps, however, you
desire to save the remnants of your property and to see the last of your friends
and fellow-citizens and of their cities and villas. If so, amid the horrors
of captivity, in the presence of exulting foes. and in the shipwreck of the
province, at least hold fast to the plank of penitence;(2) and remember your
fellow-servant(3) who daily sighs for your salvation and never despairs of
it. While you are wandering about your own country (though, indeed, you no
longer have a country; that which you once had, you have lost) she is interceding
for you in the venerable spots which witnessed the nativity, crucifixion and
resurrection of our Lord and Saviour, and in the first of which He uttered
His infant-cry. She draws you to her by her prayers that you may be saved,
if not by your own exertions, at any rate by her faith. Of old one lay upon
his bed sick of the palsy, so powerless in all his joints that he could neither
move his feet to walk nor his hands to pray; yet when he was carried to our
Lord by others, he was by Him so completely restored to health as to carry
the bed which a little before had carried him.(4) You too--absent in the body
but present to her faith--your fellow-servant offers to her Lord and Saviour;
and with the Canaanite woman she says of you: "my daughter is grievously
vexed with a devil."(5) Souls are of no sex; therefore I may fairly call
your soul the daughter of hers. For as a mother coaxes her unweaned child which
is as yet unable to take solid food; so does she call you to the milk suitable
for babes and offer to you the sustenance that a nursing mother gives. Thus
shall you be able to say with the prophet: "I have gone astray like a
lost sheep; seek thy servant; for I do not forget thy commandments."(6)
LETTER CXXIII.
TO AGERUCHIA.
An appeal to the widow Ageruchia, a highborn lady of Gaul, not to marry again.
It should be compared with the letters to Furia (LIV.) and to Salvina (LXXIX.)
The allusion to Stilicho's treaty with Alaric fixes the date to 409 A.D.
1. I must look for a new track on the old road and devise a natural treatment,
the same yet not the same, for a hackneyed and well-worn theme.(1) It is true
that there is but one road; yet one can often reach one's goal by striking
across country. I have several times written letters to widows(2) in which
for their instruction I have sought out examples from scripture, weaving its
varied flowers into a single garland of chastity. On the present occasion I
address myself to Ageruchia; whose very name(3) (allotted to her by the divine
guidance) has proved a prophecy of her after-life. Around her stand her grandmother,
her mother, and her aunt; a noble band of tried Christian women. Her grandmother,
Metronia, now a widow for forty years, reminds us of Anna the daughter of Phanuel
in the gospel.(4) Her mother, Benigna, now in the fourteenth year of her widowhood,
is surrounded by virgins whose chastity bears fruit a hundredfold.(5) The sister
of Celerinus, Ageruchia's father, has nursed her niece from infancy and indeed
took her into her lap the moment that she was born. Deprived of the solace
of her husband she has for twenty years trained her brother's child, teaching
her the lessons which she has learned from her own mother.
2. I make these brief remarks to shew my young friend that in resolving not
to marry again she does but perform a duty to her family; and that, while she
will deserve no praise for fulfilling it, she will be justly blamed if she
fails to do so. The more so that she has a posthumous son named after his father
Simplicius and thus cannot plead loneliness or the want of an heir. For the
lust of many shelters itself under such excuses as though the promptings of
incontinence were only a desire for offspring. But why do I speak as to one
who wavers when I hear that Ageruchia seeks the church's protection against
the many suitors whom she meets in the palace? For the devil inflames men to
vie with one another in proving the chastity of our beloved widow; and rank
and beauty, youth and riches cause her to be sought after by all. But the greater
the assaults that are made upon her continence, the greater will be the rewards
that will follow her victory.
3. But
no sooner do I clear the harbour than I find my way to the sea barred by
a rock.(1) I am
confronted
with the authority of the apostle Paul who in
writing to Timothy thus speaks concerning widows: "I will therefore that
the younger women marry, bear children, guide the house, give none occasion
to the adversary to speak reproachfully. For some are already turned aside
after Satan." I must accordingly begin by considering the meaning of this
pronouncement and examining the context of the whole passage. I must then plant
my feet in the steps of the apostle and, as the saying goes, not deviate a
hair's breadth from them either to this side or to that. He had previously
described his idea widow as one who had been the wife of one man, who had brought
up children, who was well reported of for good works, who had relieved the
afflicted with her substance,(3) whose trust had been in God, and who had continued
in prayer day and night.(4) With her he contrasted her opposite, saying: "She
that liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth." And that he might warn
his disciple Timothy with all needful admonition, he immediately added these
words: "the younger widows refuse: for when they have begun to wax wanton
against Christ they will marry; having damnation because they have cast off
their first faith."(5) It is then for these who have outraged Christ their
Spouse by committing fornication against Him (for this is the sense of the
Greek word <greek>katasrhniaswsi</greek>)--it is for these that
the apostle wishes a second marriage, thinking digamy preferable to fornication;
but this second marriage is a concession and not a command.
4. We
must also take the passage clause by clause. "I will," he
says, "that the younger women marry." Why, pray? because I would
not have young women commit fornication. "That they bear children;"(6)
for what reason? That they may not be induced by fear of the consequences to
kill children whom they have conceived in adultery. "That they be the
heads of households."(7) Wherefore, pray? Because it is much more tolerable
that a woman should marry again than that she should be a prostitute, and better
that she should have a second husband than several paramours. The first alternative
brings relief in a miserable plight, but the second involves a sin and its
punishment. He continues: "that they give none occasion to the adversary
to speak reproachfully," a brief and comprehensive precept in which many
admonitions are summed up. As for instance these: that a woman must not bring
discredit upon her profession of widowhood by too great attention to her dress,
that she must not draw troops of young men after her by gay smiles or expressive
glances, that she must not profess one thing by her words and another by her
behaviour, that she must give no ground for the application to herself of the
well known line:
She gave a meaning look and slyly smiled.(1)
Lastly,
that Paul may compress into a few words all the reasons for such marriages,
he shews the
motive
of his command by saying: "for some are already turned
aside after Satan." Thus he allows to the incontinent a second marriage,
or in case of need a third, simply that he may rescue them from Satan, preferring
that a woman should be joined to the worst of husbands rather than to the devil.
To the Corinthians he uses somewhat similar language: "I say therefore
to the unmarried and widows, It is good for them if they abide even as I. But
if they cannot contain, let them marry: for it is better to marry than to burn."(2)
Why, O apostle, is it better to marry? He answers immediately: because it is
worse to burn.(3)
5. Apart
from these considerations, that which is absolutely good and not merely relatively
so is to be as the
apostle, that is loose, not bound; free,
not enslaved; caring for the things of God, not for the things of a wife. Immediately
afterwards he adds: "The wife is bound by the law to her husband as long
as her husband liveth, but if her husband be fallen asleep,(4) she is at liberty
to be married to whom she will; only in the Lord. But she is happier if she
so abide, after my judgment: and I think also that I have the spirit of God."(5)
This passage corresponds with the former in meaning, because the spirit of
the two is the same. For though the epistles are different, they are the work
of one author. While her husband lives the woman is bound, and when be is dead,
she is loosed. Marriage then is a bond, and widowhood is the loosing of it.
The wife is bound to the husband and the husband to the wife; and so close
is the tie that they have no power over their own bodies, but each stands indebted
to the other. They who are under the yoke of wedlock have not the option of
choosing continence. When the apostle adds the words "only in the Lord," he
excludes heathen marriages of which he had spoken in another place thus: "be
ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: 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? and what agreement hath the temple of God with idols?"(1)
We must not plough with an ox and an ass together;(2) nor weave our wedding
garment of different colours. He at once takes back the concession he made,
and, as if repenting of his opinion, withdraws it by saying: "She is happier
if she so abide," that is, unmarried; and declares that in his judgment
this course is preferable. And that this may not be made light of as a merely
human utterance, he claims for it the authority of the Holy Spirit, so that
we are listening not to a fellowman making concessions to the weakness of the
flesh but to the Holy Spirit using the apostle for his mouthpiece.
6. Again,
no widow of youthful age must quiet her qualms of conscience by the plea
that he gives
commandment
that no widow is to be taken into the number
under three-score years old.(3) He does not by this arrangement urge unmarried
girls or youthful widows to marry, seeing that even of the married he says: "the
time is short: it remaineth that they that have wives be as though they had
none."(4) No, he is speaking of widows who have relations able to support
them, who have sons and grandsons to be responsible for their maintenance.
The apostle commands these latter to shew piety at home, and to requite their
parents and to relieve them adequately; that the church may not be charged,
but may be free to relieve those that are widows indeed. "Honour widows," he
writes, "that are widows indeed," that is, such as are desolate and
have no relations to help them, who cannot labour with their hands, who are
weakened by poverty and overcome by years, whose trust is in God and their
only work prayer.(5) From which it is easy to infer that the younger widows,
unless they are excused by ill health, are either left to their own exertions
or else are consigned to the care of their children or relations. The word
'honour' in this passage implies either alms or a gift, as also in the verse
immediately following: "Let the elders ... be counted worthy of double
honour, especially they who labour in the word and doctrine."(6) So also
in the gospel when the Lord discusses that commandment of the Law which says: "Hon-our
thy father and thy mother,"(7) He declares that it is to be interpreted
not of mere words which while offering an empty shew of regard may still leave
a parent's wants unrelieved, but of the actual provision of the necessaries
of life. The Lord commanded that poor parents should be supported by their
children and that these should pay them back when old those benefits which
they had themselves received in their childhood. The scribes and pharisees
on the other hand taught the children to answer their parents by saying: "It
is Corban, that is to say, a gift(1) which I have promised to the altar and
engaged to present to the temple: it will relieve you as much there, as if
I were to give it you directly to buy food."(2) So it frequently happened
that while father and mother were destitute their children were offering sacrifices
for the priests and scribes to consume. If then the apostle compels poor widows--yet
only those who are young and not broken down by sickness--to labour with their
hands that the church, not charged with their maintenance, may be able to support
such widows as are old, what plea can be urged by one who has abundance of
this world's goods, both for her own wants and those of others, and who can
make to herself friends of the mammon of unrighteousness able to receive her
into everlasting habitations?(3)
Consider too that no one is to be elected a widow, except she has been the
wife of one husband. We sometimes fancy it to be the distinctive mark of the
priesthood that none but monogamists shall be admitted to the altar. But not
only are the twice-married excluded from the priestly office, they are debarred
from receiving the alms of the church. A woman who has resorted to a second
marriage is held unworthy to be supported by the faithful. And even the layman
is bound by the law of the priest, for his conduct must be such as to admit
of his election to the priesthood. If he has been twice married, he cannot
be so elected. Therefore, as priests are chosen from the ranks of laymen, the
layman also is bound by the commandment, fulfilment of which is indispensable
for the attainment of the priesthood.(4)
7. We
must distinguish between what the apostle himself desires and what he is
compelled to acquiesce
in.
If he allows me to marry again, this is due to
my own incontinence and not to his wish. For he wishes all men to be as he
is, and to think the things of God, and when once they are loosed no more to
seek to be bound. But when he sees unstable men in danger through their incontinence
of falling into the abyss of lust, he extends to them the offer of a second
marriage; that, if they must wallow in the mire, it may be with one and not
with many. The husband of a second wife must not consider this a harsh saying
or one that conflicts with the rule laid down by the apostle. The apostle is
of two minds: first, he proclaims a command," I say therefore to the unmarried
and widows, It is good for them if they abide even as I." Next. he makes
a concession, "But if they cannot contain, let them marry: for it is better
to marry than to burn."(1) He first shews what he himself desires, then
that in which he is forced to acquiesce. He wishes us--after one marriage--to
abide even as he, that is, unmarried, and sets before us in his own apostolic
example an instance of the blessedness of which he speaks. If however he finds
that we are unwilling to do as he wishes, he makes a concession to our incontinence.
Which then of the two alternatives do we choose for ourselves? The one which
he prefers and which is in itself good? Or the one which in comparison with
evil is tolerable, yet as it is only a substitute for evil is not altogether
good? Suppose that we choose that course which the apostle does not wish but
to which he only consents against his will, allowing those who seek lower ends
to have their own way; in this case we carry out not the apostle's wish but
our own. We read in the old testament that the daughters of the priests who
have been married once and have become widows are to eat of the priests' food
and that when they die they are to be buried with the same ceremonies as their
father and mother.(2) If on the other hand they take other husbands they are
to be kept apart both from their father and from the sacrifices and are to
be counted as strangers.(3)
8. These restraints on marriage are observed even among the heathen; and it
is our condemnation if the true faith cannot do for Christ what false ones
do for the devil, who has substituted for the saving chastity of the gospel
a damning chastity of his own.(4) The Athenian hierophant disowns his manhood
and weakens his passions by a perpetual restraint.(5) The holy office of the
flamen is limited to those who have been once married, and the attendants of
the flamens' wives must also have had but one husband.(6) Only monogamists
are allowed to share in the sacred rites connected with the Egyptian bull.(7)
I need say nothing of the vestal virgins and those of Apollo, the Achivan Juno,
Diana, and Minerva, all of whom waste away in the perpetual virginity required
by their vocation. I will just glance at the queen of Carthage(8) who was willing
to burn herself rather than marry king Iarbas; at the wife of Hasdrubal(1)
who taking her two children one in each hand cast, herself into the flames
beneath her rather than surrender her honour; and at Lucretia(2) who having
lost the prize of her chastity refused to survive the defilement of her soul.
I will not lengthen my letter by quoting the many instances of the like virtue
which you can read to your profit in my first book against Jovinian.(3) I will
merely relate one which took place in your own country and which will shew
you that chastity is held in high honour even among wild and barbarous and
cruel peoples. Once the Teutons who came from the remote shores of the German
Ocean overran all parts of Gaul, and it was only when they had cut to pieces
several Roman armies that Marius at last defeated them in an encounter at Aquae
Sextiae.(4) By the conditions of the surrender three hundred of their married
women were to be handed over to the Romans. When the Teuton matrons heard of
this stipulation they first begged the consul that they might be set apart
to minister in the temples of Ceres and Venus;(5) and then when they failed
to obtain their request and were removed by the lictors, they slew their little
children and next morning were all found dead in each other's arms having strangled
themselves in the night.(6)
9. Shall
then a highborn lady do what these barbarian women refused to do even as
prisoners of war?
After
losing a first husband, good or bad as the
case may be, shall she make trial of a second, and thus run counter to the
judgment of God? And in case that she immediately loses this second, shall
she take a third? And if he too is called to his rest, shall she go on to a
fourth and a fifth, and by so doing identify herself with the harlots? No,
a widow must take every precaution not to overstep by an inch the bounds of
chastity. For if she once oversteps them and breaks through the modesty which
becomes a matron, she will soon riot in every kind of excess; so much so that
the prophet's words shall be true of her "Thou hast a whore's forehead,
thou refusest to be ashamed."(7)
What then? do I condemn second marriages? not at all; but I commend first
ones. Do I expel twice-married persons from the church? Far from it; but I
urge those who have been once married to lives of continence. The Ark of Noah
contained unclean animals as well as clean. It contained both creeping things
and human beings, In a great house there are vessels of different kinds, some
to honour and some to dishonour.(1) In the gospel parable the seed sown in
the good ground brings forth fruit, some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some
thirtyfold.(2) The hundredfold which comes first betokens the crown of virginity;
the sixtyfold which comes next refers to the work of widows; while the thirtyfold--indicated
by joining together the points of the thumb and forefinger(3)--denotes the
marriage-tie. What room is left for double marriages? None. They are not counted.
Such weeds do not grow in good ground but among briers and thorns, the favourite
haunts of those foxes to whom the Lord compares the impious Herod.(4) A woman
who marries more than once fancies herself worthy of praise because she is
not so bad as the prostitutes, because she compares favourably with these victims
of indiscriminate lust by surrendering herself to one alone and not to a number.
10. The
story which I am about to relate is an incredible one; yet it is vouched
for by many witnesses.
A great many years ago when I was helping Damasus bishop
of Rome with his ecclesiastical correspondence, and writing his answers to
the questions referred to him by the councils of the east and west, I saw a
married couple, both of whom were sprung from the very dregs of the people.
The man had already buried twenty wives, and the woman had had twenty-two husbands.
Now they were united to each other as each believed for the last time. The
greatest curiosity prevailed both among men and women to see which of these
two veterans would live to bury the other. The husband triumphed and walked
before the bier of his often-married wife, amid a great concourse of people
from all quarters, with garland and palm-branch, scattering spelt as he went
along among an approving crowd. What shall we say to such a woman as that?
Surely just what the Lord said to the woman of Samaria: "Thou hast had
twenty-two husbands, and he by whom you are now buried is not your husband."(5)
11. I
beseech you therefore, my devout daughter in Christ, not to dwell on those
passages which offer
succour
to the incontinent and the unhappy but rather
to read those in which chastity is crowned. It is enough for you that you have
lost the first and highest kind, that of virginity, and that you have passed
through the third to the second; that is to say, having formerly fulfilled
the obligations of a wife, that you now live in continence as a widow. Think
not of the lowest grade, nay of that which does not count at all, I mean, second
marriage; and do not seek for far fetched precedents to justify you in marrying
again. You cannot too closely imitate your grandmother, your mother, and your
aunt; whose teaching and advice as to life will form for you a rule of virtue.
For if many wives in the lifetime of their husbands come to realize the truth
of the apostle's words: "all things are lawful unto me but all things
are not expedient,"(1) and make eunuchs of themselves for the kingdom
of heaven's sake(2) either by consent after their regeneration through the
baptismal laver, or else in the ardour of their faith immediately after their
marriage; why should not a widow, who by God's decree has ceased to have a
husband, joyfully cry again and again with Job: "the Lord gave, and the
Lord hath taken away,"(3) and seize the opportunity offered to her of
having power over her own body instead of again becoming the servant of a man.
Assuredly it is much harder to abstain from enjoying what you have than it
is to regret what you have lost. Virginity is the easier because virgins know
nothing of the promptings of the flesh, and widowhood is the harder because
widows cannot help thinking of the license they have enjoyed in the past. And
it is harder still if they suppose their husbands to be lost and not gone before;
for while the former alternative brings pain, the latter causes joy.
12. The
creation of the first man should teach us to reject more marriages than one.
There was but
one Adam
and but one Eve; in fact the woman was fashioned
from a rib of Adam.(4) Thus divided they were subsequently joined together
in marriage; in the words of scripture "the twain shall be one flesh," not
two or three. "Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother,
and shall cleave unto his wife."(5) Certainly it is not said "to
his wives." Paul in explaining the passage refers it to Christ and the
church;(6) making the first Adam a monogamist in the flesh and the second a
monogamist in the spirit As there is one Eve who is "the mother of all
living,"(7) so is there one church which is the parent of all Christians.
And as the accursed Lamech made of the first Eve two separate wives,(8) so
also the heretics sever the second into several churches which, according to
the apocalypse of John, ought rather to be called synagogues of the devil than
congregations of Christ.(9) In the Book of Songs we read as follows:--"there
are threescore queens, and fourscore concubines, and virgins without number.
My dove, my undefiled is but one; she is the only one of her mother, she is
the choice one of her that bare her."(1) It is to this choice one that
the same John addresses an epistle in these words, "the elder unto the
elect lady and her children."(2) So too in the case of the ark which the
apostle Peter interprets as a type of the church,(3) Noah brings in for his
three sons one wife apiece and not two.(4) Likewise of the unclean animals
pairs only are taken, male and female, to shew that digamy has no place even
among brutes, creeping things, crocodiles and lizards. And if of the clean
animals there are seven taken of each kind,(5) that is, an uneven number; this
points to the palm which awaits virginal chastity. For on leaving the ark Noah
sacrificed victims to God(5) not of course of the animals taken by twos for
these were kept to multiply their species, but of those taken by sevens some
of which had been set apart for sacrifice.
13. It
is true that the patriarchs had each of them more wives than one and that
they had numerous
concubines
besides. And as if their example was not
enough, David had many wives and Solomon a countless number. Judah went in
to Tamar thinking her to be a harlot;(7) and according to the letter that killeth
the prophet Hosea married not only a whore but an adulteress.(8) If these instances
are to justify us let us neigh after every woman that we meet;(9) like the
people of Sodom and Gomorrah let us be found by the last day buying and selling,
marrying and giving in marriage;(10) and let us only end our marrying with
the close of our lives. And if both before and after the deluge the maxim held
good: "be fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth:"(11) what
has that to do with us upon whom the ends of the ages are come,(12) unto whom
it is said, "the time is short,"(13) and "now the axe is laid
unto the root of the trees;"(14) that is to say, the forests of marriage
and of the law must be cut down by the chastity of the gospel. There is "a
time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracin."(15) Owing to the
near approach of the captivity Jeremiah is forbidden to take a wife.(16) In
Babylon Ezekiel says: "my wife is dead and my mouth is opened."(17)
Neither he who wished to marry nor he who had married could in wedlock prophesy
freely. In days gone by men rejoiced to hear it said of them: "thy children
shall be like olive plants round about thy table," and "thou shalt
see thy children's children."(1) But now it is said of those who live
in continence: "he that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit;"(2)
and my soul followeth hard after thee: thy right hand upholdeth me."(3)
Then it was said "an eye for an eye;" now the commandment is "whosoever
shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also."(4) In
those days men said to the warrior: "gird thy sword upon thy thigh, O
most mighty;"(5) now it is said to Peter: "put up again thy sword
into his place: for all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword."(6)
In speaking thus I do not mean to sever the law from the gospel, as Marcion(7)
falsely does. No, I receive one and the same God in both who, as the time and
the object vary, is both the Beginning and the End, who sows that He may reap,
who plants that He may have somewhat to cut down, and who lays the foundation
that in the fulness of time He may crown the edifice. Besides, if we are to
deal with symbols and types of things to come, we must judge of them not by
our own opinions but in the light of the apostle's explanations. Hagar and
Sarah, or Sinai and Zion, are typical of the two testaments.(8) Leah who was
tender-eyed and Rachel whom Jacob loved(9) signify the synagogue and the church.
So likewise do Hannah and Peninnah of whom the former, at first barren, afterwards
exceeded the latter in fruitfulness. In Isaac and Rebekah we see an early example
of monogamy: it was only to Rebekah that the L