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ST. JEROME
THE LETTERS
LETTERS CXXIV TO CXXIX
LETTER CXXIV.
TO AVITUS.
Avitus
to whom this letter is addressed is probably the same person who induced
Jerome to write to Salvina
(see Letter
LXXIX.,(?) 1, ante). The occasion of
writing is as follows. Ten years previously (that is to say in A.D. 399 or
400) Pammachius had asked Jerome to supply him with a correct version of Origen's
First Principles to enable him to detect the variations introduced by Rufinus
into his rendering. This Jerome willingly did (see Letters LXXXIII. and LXXXIV.)
but when the work in its integrity was perused by Pammachius he thought it
so erroneous in doctrine that he determined not to circulate it. However, "a
certain brother" induced him to lend the MS. to him for a short time;
and then, when he had got it into his hands, had a hasty and incorrect transcript
made, which he forthwith published much to the chagrin of Pammachius. Falling
into the hands of Avitus a copy of this much perplexed him and he seems to
have appealed to Jerome for an explanation. This the latter now gives forwarding
at the same time an authentic edition of his version of the First Principles.
The date of the letter is A.D. 409 or 410.
1. About
ten years ago that saintly man Pammachius sent me a copy of a certain person's
rendering,(6)
or rather
misrendering, of Origen's First Principles;
with a request that in a Latin version I should give the true sense of the
Greek and should set down the writer's words for good or for evil without bias
in either direction.(7) When I did as he wished and sent him the book,(8) he
was shocked to read it and locked it up in his desk lest being circulated it
might wound the souls of many. However, a certain brother, who had "a
zeal for God but not according to knowledge,"(1) asked for a loan of the
manuscript that he might read it; and, as he promised to return it without
delay, Pammachius, thinking no harm could happen in so short a time, unsuspectingly
consented. Hereupon he who had borrowed the book to read, with the aid of scribes
copied the whole of it and gave it back much sooner than he had promised. Then
with the same rashness or--to use a less severe term--thoughtlessness he made
bad worse by confiding to others what he had thus stolen. Moreover, since a
bulky treatise on an abstruse subject is difficult to reproduce with accuracy,
especially if it has to be taken down surreptitiously and in a hurry, order
and sense were sacrificed in several passages. Whence it comes, my dear Avitus,
that you ask me to send you a copy of my version as made for Pammachius and
not for the public, a garbled edition of which has. been published by the aforesaid
brother.
2. Take
then what you have asked for; but know that there are countless things in
the book to be
abhorred,
and that, as the Lord says, you will have to walk
among scorpions and serpents.(2) It begins by saying that Christ was made God's
son not born;(3) that God the Father, as He is by nature invisible, is invisible
even to the Son;(4) that the Son, who is the likeness of the invisible Father,
compared with the Father is not the truth but compared with us who cannot receive
the truth of the almighty Father seems a figure of the truth so that we perceive
the majesty and magnitude of tire greater in the less, the Father's glory limited
in the Son;(5) that God the Father is a light incomprehensible and that Christ
compared with him is but a minute brightness, although by reason of our incapacity
to us he appears a great one.(6) The Father and the Son are compared to two
statues, a larger one and a small; the first filling the world and being somehow
invisible through its size, the second cognisable by the eyes of men.(7) God
the Father omnipotent the writer terms good and of perfect goodness; but of
the Son he says: "He is not good but an emanation and likeness of goodness;
not good absolutely but only with a qualification, as 'the good shepherd' and
the like."(8) The Holy Spirit he places after the Father and the Son as
third in dignity and honour. And while he declares that he does not know whether
the Holy Spirit is created or uncreated,(1) he has later on given his own opinion
that except God the Father alone there is nothing uncreated. "The Son," he
states, "is inferior to the Father, inasmuch as He is second and the Father
first; and the Holy Spirit which dwells in all the saints is inferior to the
Son. In the same way the power of the Father is greater than that of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit. Likewise the power of the Son is greater than that
of the Holy Spirit, and as a consequence the Holy Spirit in its turn has greater
virtue than other things called holy."(2)
3. Then,
when he comes to deal with rational creatures and to describe their lapse
into earthly
bodies as
due to their own negligence, he goes on to say: "Surely
it argues great negligence and sloth for a soul so far to empty itself as to
fall into sin and allow itself to be tied to the material body of an unreasoning
brute;" and in a subsequent passage: "These reasonings induce me
to suppose that it is by their own free act that some are numbered with God's
saints and servants, and that it was through their own fault that others fell
from holiness into such negligence that they were changed into forces of an
opposite kind."(3) He maintains that after every end a fresh beginning
springs forth and an end from each beginning, and that wholesale variation
is possible; so that one who is now a human being may in another world become
a demon, while one who by reason of his negligence is now a demon may hereafter
be placed in a more material body and thus become a human being.(4) So far
does he carry this transforming process that on his theory an archangel may
become the devil and the devil in turn be changed back into an archangel. "Such
as have wavered or faltered but have not altogether fallen shall be made subject,
for rule and government and guidance, to better things--to principalities and
powers, to thrones and dominations; and of these perhaps another human race
will be formed, when in the words of Isaiah there shall be 'new heavens and
a new earth.'(5) But such as have not deserved to return through humanity to
their former estate shall become the devil and his angels, demons of the worst
sort; and according to what they have done shall have special duties assigned
to them in particular worlds." Moreover, the very demons and rulers of
darkness in any world or worlds, if they are willing to turn to better things,
may become human beings and so come back to their first beginning. That is
to say, after they have borne the discipline of punishment and torture for
a longer or a shorter time in human bodies, they may again reach the angelic
pinnacles from which they have fallen. Hence it may be shewn that we men may
change into any other reasonable beings, and that not once only or on emergency
but time after time; we and angels shall become demons if we neglect our duty;
and demons, if they will take to themselves virtues, may attain to the rank
of angels.
4. Bodily
substances too are to pass away utterly or else at the end of all things
will become highly
rarified
like the sky and rather and other subtle
bodies. It is clear that these principles must affect the writer's view of
the resurrection. The sun also and the moon and the rest of the constellations
are alive. Nay more; as we men by reason of our sins are enveloped in bodies
material and sluggish; so the lights of heaven have for like reasons received
bodies more or less luminous, and demons have been for more serious faults
clothed with starry frames. This, he argues, is the view of the apostle who
writes:--"the creation has been subjected to vanity and shall be delivered
for the revealing of the sons of God."(1) That it may not be supposed
that I am imputing to him ideas of my own I shall give his actual words. "At
the end and consummation of the world," he writes, "when souls and
beings endowed with reason shall be released from prison by the Lord, they
will move slowly or fly quickly according as they have previously been slothful
or energetic. And as all of them have free will and are free to choose virtue
or vice, those who choose the latter will be much worse off than they now are.
But those who choose the former will improve their condition. Their movements
and decisions in this direction or in that will determine their various futures;
whether, that is, angels are to become men or demons, and whether demons are
to become men or angels." Then after adducing various arguments in support
of his thesis and maintaining that while not incapable of virtue the devil
has yet not chosen to be virtuous, he has Finally reasoned with much diffuseness
that an angel, a human soul, and a demon--all according to him of one nature
but of different wills--may in punishment for great negligence or folly be
transformed into brutes. Moreover, to avoid the agony of punishment and the
burning flame the more sensitive may choose to become low organisms, to dwell
in water, to assume the shape of this or that animal; so that we have reason
to fear a metamorphosis not only into four-footed things but even into fishes.
Then, lest he should be held guilty of maintaining with Pythagoras the transmigration
of souls, he winds up the wicked reasoning with which he has wounded his reader
by saying: "I must not be taken to make dogmas of these things; they are
only thrown out as conjectures to shew that they are not altogether overlooked."
5. In
his second book he maintains a plurality of worlds; not, however, as Epicurus
taught, many
like ones existing
at once, but a new one beginning each
time that the old comes to an end. There was a world before this world of ours,
and after it there will be first one and then another and so on in regular
succession. He is in doubt whether one world shall be so completely similar
to another as to leave no room for any difference between them, or whether
one world shall never wholly be indistinguishable from another. And again a
little farther on he writes: "if, as the course of the discussion makes
necessary, all things can live without body, all bodily existence shall be
swallowed up and that which once has been made out of nothing shall again be
reduced to nothing. And yet a time will come when its use will be once more
necessary." And in the same context: "but if, as reason and the authority
of scripture shew, this corruptible shall put on incorruption and this mortal
shall put on immortality, death shall be swallowed up in victory and corruption
in incorruption.(1) And it may be that all bodily existence shall be removed,
for it is only in this that death can operate." And a little farther on: "if
these things are not contrary to the faith, it may be that we shall some day
live in a disembodied state. Moreover, if only he is fully subject to Christ
who is disembodied, and if all must be made subject to Him, we too shall lose
our bodies when we become fully subject to Him." And in the same passage: "if
all are to be made subject to God, all shall lay aside their bodies; and then
all bodily existence shall be brought to Bought. But if through the fall of
reasonable beings it is a second time required it will reappear. For God has
left souls to strive and struggle, to teach them that full and complete victory
is to be attained not by their own efforts but by His grace. And so to my mind
worlds vary with the sins which cause them, and those are exploded theories
which maintain that all worlds are alike." And again: "three conjectures
occur to me with regard to the end; it is for the reader to determine which
is nearest to the truth. For either we shall be bodiless when being made subject
to Christ we shall be made subject to God and He shall be all in all; or as
things made subject to Christ shall be with Christ Himself made subject to
God and brought under one law, so all substance shall be refined into its most
perfect form and rarified into aether which is a pure and uncompounded essence;
or else the sphere which I have called motionless and all that it contains
will be dissolved into nothing, and the sphere in which the antizone(1) itself
is contained shall be called 'good ground,'(2) and that other sphere which
in its revolution surrounds the earth and goes by the name of heaven shall
be reserved for the abode of the saints."
6. In
speaking thus does he not most clearly follow the error of the heathen and
foist upon the simple
faith
of Christians the ravings of philosophy? In
the same book he writes: "it remains that God is invisible. But if He
is by nature invisible, He must be so even to the Saviour." And lower
down: "no soul which has descended into a human body has borne upon it
so true an impress of its previous character as Christ's soul of which He says:
'no man taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself.'"(3) And in another
place: "we must carefully consider whether souls, when they have won salvation
and have attained to the blessed life, may not cease to be souls. For as the
Lord and Saviour came to seek and to save that which was lost(4) that it might
cease to be lost; so the lost soul which the Lord came to save, when saved,
will cease to be a soul. We must ask ourselves whether, as the lost was not
lost once and again will not be, the soul likewise may have been and again
may be not a soul."(5) And after a good many remarks upon the soul he
brings in the following, "<greek>nous</greek> or" intelligence
by falling becomes a soul; and by acquiring virtue this will become intelligence
again. This at least is a fair inference from the case of Esau who for his
old sins is condemned to lead a lower life. And concerning the heavenly bodies
we must make a similar acknowledgment. The soul of the sun--or whatever else
you like to call it--does not date its existence from the creation of the world;
it already existed before it entered its shining and glowing body. So also
with the moon and stars. From antecedent causes they have been made subject
to vanity not willingly but for future reward,(6) and are forced to do not
their own will but the creator's who has assigned to them their several spheres."
7. Hellfire,
moreover, and the torments with which holy scripture threatens sinners he
explains
not as external
punishments but as the pangs of guilty
consciences when by God's power the memory of our transgressions is set before
our eyes. "The whole crop of our sins grows up afresh from seeds which
remain in the soul, and all our dishonourable and undutiful acts are again
pictured before our gaze. Thus it is the fire of conscience and the stings
of remorse which torture the mind as it looks back on former self-indulgence." And
again: "but perhaps this coarse and earthly body ought to be described
as mist and darkness; for at the end of this world and when it becomes necessary
to pass into another, the like darkness will lead to the like physical birth." In
speaking thus he clearly pleads for the transmigration of souls as taught by
Pythagoras and Plato.(1) And at the end of the second book in dealing with
our perfection he has said: "when we shall have made such progress as
not only to cease to be flesh or body but perhaps also to cease to be souls
our perfect intelligence and perception, undimmed with any mist of passion,
will discern reasonable and intelligible substances face to face.
8. In
the third book the following faulty statements are contained. "If
we once admit that, when one vessel is made to honour and another to dishonour,(2)
this is due to antecedent causes; why may we not revert to the mystery of the
soul and allow that it is loved in one and hated in another because of its
past actions, before in Jacob it becomes a supplanter and before in Esau it
is supplanted?"(3) And again: "the fact that souls are made some
to honour and some to dishonour is to be explained by their previous history." And
in the same place: "on this hypothesis of mine a vessel made to honour
which fails to fulfil its object will in another world become a vessel made
to dishonour; and contrariwise a vessel which has from a previous fault been
condemned to dishonour will, if it accepts correction in this present life,
become in the new creation a vessel 'sanctified and meet for the Master's use
and prepared unto every good work."(4) And he immediately goes on to say: "I
believe that men who begin with small faults may become so hardened in wickedness
that, if they do not repent and turn to better things, they must become inhuman
energies;(5) and contrariwise that hostile and demonic beings may in course
of time so far heal their wounds and cheek the current of their former sins
that they may attain to the abode of the perfect. As I have often said, in
those countless and unceasing worlds in which the soul lives and has its being
some grow worse and worse until they reach the lowest depths of degradation;
while others in those lowest depths grow better and better until they reach
the perfection of virtue." Thus he tries to shew that men, or rather their
souls, may become demons; and that demons in turn may be restored to the rank
of angels. In the same book he writes: "this too must be considered; why
the human soul is diversely acted upon now by influences of one kind and now
by influences of another." And he surmises that this is due to conduct
which has preceded birth. It is for this, he argues, that John leaps in his
mother's womb when at Mary's salutation Elizabeth declares herself unworthy
of her notice.(1) And he immediately subjoins: "on the other hand infants
that are hardly weaned are possessed with evil spirits and become diviners
and soothsayers;(2) indeed, some are indwelt from their earliest years with
the spirit of a python. Now as they have done nothing to bring upon themselves
these visitations, one who holds that nothing happens without God's permission,
and that all things are governed by His justice, cannot suppose that God's
providence has abandoned them without good reason.
9. Again,
of the world he writes thus: "The belief commends itself to
me that there was a world before this world and that after it there will be
another. Do you wish to know that after the decay of this world there will
be a new one? Hear the words of Isaiah: 'the new heavens and the new earth
which I will make shall remain before me.'(3) Do you wish to know that before
the making of this world there have previously been others? Listen to the Preacher
who says: 'the thing which hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which
is done is that which shall be done: and there is no new thing under the sun.
Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new? it hath been already
of old time, which was before us.'(4) A passage which proves not only that
other worlds have been but that other worlds shall be; not, however, simultaneously
and side by side but one after another." And he immediately adds: "I
hold that heaven is the abode of the deity, the true place of rest; and that
it was there that reasonable creatures enjoyed their ancient bliss, before
coming down to a lower plane and exchanging the invisible for the visible,
they fell to the earth and came to need material bodies. Now that they have
fallen, God the creator has made for them bodies suitable to their surroundings;
and has fashioned this visible world, and has sent into it ministers to ensure
the salvation and correction of the fallen. Of these ministers some have held
assigned positions and have been subject to the world's necessary laws; while
others have intelligently performed duties laid upon them in times and seasons
determined by God's plan. To the former class belong the sun, moon, and stars
called by the apostle 'the creation;' and these have had allotted to them the
heights of heaven. Now the creation is subjected to vanity(1) because it is
encased in material bodies and visible to the eye. And yet it is 'made subject
to vanity not willingly but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in
hope.' Others again of the second class, at particular places and times known
to their Maker only, we believe to be His angels sent to steer the world." A
little farther on he says: "the affairs of the world are so ordered by
Providence that while some angels fall from heaven others freely glide down
to earth. The former are hurled down against their will; the latter descend
from choice alone. The former are forced to continue in a distasteful service
for a fixed period; the latter spontaneously embrace the task of lending a
hand to those who fall." Again he writes: "whence it follows that
these different movements result in the creation of different worlds; and that
this world of ours will be succeeded by one quite unlike it. Now, as regards
this falling and rising, this rewarding of virtue and punishment of vice, whether
they take place in the past, present, or future, God, the creator, can alone
apportion desert and make all things converge to one end. For He only knows
why He allows some to follow their own inclination and to descend from the
higher planes to the lowest; and why He visits others and giving them His hand
draws them back to their former state and places them once more in heaven."
10. In
discussing the end of the world he has made use of the following language. "Since,
as I have often said, a new beginning springs from the end, it may be asked
whether bodies will then continue to exist, or whether, when they have been
annihilated, we shall live without bodies and be incorporeal as we know God
to be. Now there can be no doubt but that, if bodies or, as the apostle calls
them, visible things, belong only to our sensible world, the life of the disembodied
will be incorporeal." And a little farther on: "when the apostle
writes, 'the creation shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into
the liberty of the glory of the children of God,'(2) I explain his words thus.
Reasonable and incorporeal beings are the highest of God's creatures, for not
being clothed with bodies they are not the slaves of corruption. Since where
there are bodies, there corruption is sure to be found. But hereafter 'the
creation shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption,' and then men shall
receive the glory of the children of God and God shah be all in all." And
in the same passage he writes: "that the final state will be an incorporeal
one is rendered credible by the words of our Saviour's prayer: 'as thou, Father,
art in me and I in thee, that they also may be one in us.'(1) For we ought
to realize what God is and what the Saviour will finally be, and how the likeness
to the Father and the Son here promised to the Saints consists in this that
as They are one in Themselves so we shall be one in Them. For if in the end
the life of the Saints is to be assimilated to the life of God, we must either
admit that the Lord of the universe is clothed with a body and that he is enveloped
in matter as we are in flesh; or, if it is unbecoming to suppose this, especially
in persons who have but small clues from which to infer God's majesty and to
guess at the glory of His innate and transcendent nature, we are reduced to
the following dilemma. Either we shall always have bodies and in that case
must despair of ever being like God; or, if the blessedness of the life of
God is really promised to us, the conditions of His life must be the conditions
of ours."
11. These
passages prove what his view is regarding the resurrection. For he evidently
maintains that
all bodies
will perish and that we shall be incorporeal
as according to him we were before we received our present bodies. Again when
he comes to argue for a variety of worlds and to maintain that angels will
become demons, demons either angels or men, and men in their turn demons; in
a word that everything will be turned into something else, he thus sums up
his own opinion: "no doubt, after an interval matter will exist afresh
and bodies will be formed and a different world will be created to meet the
varying wills of reasonable beings who, having forfeited the perfect bliss
which continues to the end, have gradually fallen into so great wickedness
as to change their nature and refuse to keep their first estate of unalloyed
blessedness. Many reasonable beings, it is right to say, keep it until a second,
a third, and a fourth world, and give God no ground for changing their condition.
Others deteriorate so little that they seem to have lost hardly anything, and
others again have to be hurled headlong into the abyss. God who orders all
things alone knows how to use each class according to its deserts in a suitable
sphere; for He only understands opportunities and motives and the course in
which the world must be steered. Thus one who has borne away the palm for wickedness
and has sunk into the lowest degradation will in the world which is hereafter
to be fashioned be made a devil, a kind of first fruits of the Lord's handiwork,
to be a laughing stock to the angels who have lost their first virtue." What
is this but to argue that the sinful men of this world may become a devil and
demons in another; and contrariwise that those who are now demons may hereafter
become either men or angels? And after a lengthy discussion in which he maintains
that all corporeal creatures must exchange their material for subtle and spiritual
bodies and that all substance must become one pure and inconceivably bright
body, of which the human mind can at present form no conception, he winds up
thus:--"'God shall be all in all;' that is to say, all bodily existence
shall be made as perfect as possible; it shall be brought into the divine essence,
than which there is none better."
12. In
the fourth and last book of his work the following passages deserve the church's
condemnation. "It may be that as, when men die in this world
by the separation of soul and body, they are allotted different positions in
hell according to the difference in their works; so when angels die, out of
the system of the heavenly Jerusalem, they come down to this world as a hell
and are placed on earth according to their deserts." And again: "as
we have compared the souls which pass from this world to hell with those which
as they come from heaven to us are in a manner dead; so we must carefully inquire
whether this is true of all souls without exception. For in that case souls
born on earth when they desire better things rise out of hell and assume human
bodies or when they desire worse things come down to us from better worlds;
and in the firmament above us likewise there are souls on their way from our
world to higher ones, and others who, while they have fallen from heaven, have
not sinned so grievously as to be thrust down to earth." He thus tries
to prove that the firmament, that is the sky, is hell compared with heaven;
and that this earth is hell compared with the firmament; and again that our
world is heaven to hell. Or in other words what is hell to some is heaven to
others. And not content with saying this he goes on: "at the end of all
things when we shall return to the heavenly Jerusalem the hostile powers shall
declare war(1) against the people of God to breathe and exercise their valour
and strengthen their resolve. For this they cannot have until they have faced
and foiled their foes; of whom we read in the book of Numbers(1) that they
are overcome by reason, discipline, and tactical skill."
13. After
saying that according to the apocalypse of John "the everlasting
gospel" which shall be revealed in heaven(2) as much surpasses our gospel
as Christ's preaching does the sacraments(3) of the ancient law, he has asserted
what it is sacrilegious even to think; that Christ will once more suffer in
the sky for the salvation of demons. And although he has not expressly said
it, it is yet implied in his words that as for men God became man to set men
free, so for the salvation of demons when He comes to deliver them He will
become a demon. To shew that this is no gloss of mine, I must give his own
words: "As Christ," he writes, "has fulfilled the shadow of
the law by the shadow of the gospel, and as all law is a pattern and shadow
of things done in heaven, we must inquire whether we are justified in supposing
that even the heavenly law and the rites of the celestial worship are still
incomplete and need the true gospel which in the apocalypse of John is called
everlasting to distinguish it from ours which is only temporal, set forth in
a world that shall pass away. Now if we extend our inquiry to the passion of
our Lord and Saviour, it may indeed be overbold to suppose that He will suffer
in heaven; yet if there is spiritual wickedness in heavenly places(4) and if
we confess without a blush that the Lord has once been crucified to destroy
those thing's which He has destroyed by His passion; why need we fear to imagine
a like occurrence in the upper world m the fulness of time, so that the nations
of all realms shall be saved by a passion of Christ?"
14. Here
is another blasphemy which he has spoken of the Son. "Assuming
that the Son knows the Father, it would seem that by this knowledge He can
comprehend Him as much as a craftsman can comprehend the rules of his art.
And, doubtless, if the Father is in the Son, He is also comprehended by Him
in whom He is. But if we mean by comprehension not merely that the knower takes
a thing in by perception and insight but that he contains it within himself
by virtue of a special faculty; in this sense we cannot say that the Son comprehends
the Father. For the Father comprehends all things, and of these the Son is
one; therefore, He comprehends the Son." And to shew us reasons why, while
the Father comprehends the Son, the Son cannot comprehend the Father, he adds: "the
curious reader may inquire whether the Father knows Himself in the same way
that the Son knows Him. But if he recalls the words: 'the Father who sent me
is greater than I,'(1) he will allow that they must be universally true and
will admit that, in knowledge as in everything else, the Father is greater
than the Son, and knows Himself more perfectly and immediately than the Son
can do."
15. The
following passage is a convincing proof that he holds the transmigration
of souls and annihilation
of bodies. "If it can be shewn that an incorporeal
and reasonable being has life in itself independently of the body and that
it is worse off in the body than out of it; then beyond a doubt bodies are
only of secondary importance and arise from time to time to meet the varying
conditions of reasonable creatures. Those who require bodies are clothed with
them, and contrariwise, when fallen souls have lifted themselves up to better
things, their bodies are once more annihilated. They are thus ever vanishing
and ever reappearing." And to prevent us from minimizing the impiety of
his previous utterances he ends his work by maintaining that all reasonable
beings, that is, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, angels, powers, dominations,
and virtues, and even man by right of his soul's dignity, are of one and the
same essence. "God," he writes, "and His only-begotten Son and
the Holy Spirit are conscious of an intellectual and reasonable nature. But
so also are the angels, the powers, and the virtues, as well as the inward
man who is created in the image and after the likeness of God.(2) From which
I conclude that God and they are in some sort of one essence." He adds "in
some sort" to escape the charge of blasphemy; and while in another place
he will not allow the Son and the Holy Spirit to be of one substance with the
Father lest by so doing he should appear to make the divine essence divisible,
he here bestows the nature of God almighty upon angels and men.
16. This being the nature of Origen's book. is it anything short of madness
to change a few blasphemous passages regarding the Son and the Holy Spirit
and then to publish the rest unchanged with an unprincipled eulogy when the
parts unaltered as well as the parts altered flow from the same fountain head
of gross impiety? This is not the time to confute all the statements made in
detail; and indeed those who have written against Arius, Eunomius, Manichaeus,
and various other heretics must be supposed to have answered these blasphemies
as well. If anyone, therefore, wishes to read the work let him walk with his
feet shod towards the land of promise; let him guard against the jaws of the
serpent and the crooked jaws of the scorpion; let him read this treatise first
and before he enters upon the path let him know the dangers which he wilt have
to avoid.
LETTER CXXV.
TO RUSTICS.
Rustics, a young monk of Tailless, (to be carefully distinguished from the
recipient of Letter CS.) is advised by Jerome not to become an anchorite but
to continue in a community. Rules are suggested for the monastic life and a
vivid picture is drawn of the difference between a good monk and a bad. Incidentally
Jerome indulges his spleen against his dead opponent Rufinus ( 18). The date
of the letter is 411 A.D.
1. No
man is happier than the Christian, for to him is promised the kingdom of
heaven. No man struggles
harder than
he, for he goes daily in danger of
his life. No man is stronger, for he overcomes the Devil. No man is weaker,
for he is overcome by the flesh. Both pairs of statements can be proved by
many examples. For instance, the robber believes upon the cross and immediately
hears the assuring words: "verily I say unto thee, To-day shall thou be
with me in paradise :"(1) while Judas falls from the pinnacle of the apostolate
into the abyss of perdition. Neither the close intercourse of the banquet nor
the dipping of the sop(2) nor the Lord's gracious kiss(3) can save him from
betraying as man Him whom he had known as the Son of God. Could any one have
been viler than the woman of Samaria? Yet not only did she herself believe,
and after her six husbands find one Lord, not only did she recognize that Messiah
by the well, whom the Jews failed to recognize in the temple; she brought salvation
to many and, while the apostles were away buying food, refreshed the Saviour's
hunger and relieved His weariness.(4) Was ever man wiser than Solomon? Yet
love for women made even him foolish. Salt is good, and every offering must
be sprinkled with it.(5) Wherefore also the apostle has given commandment: "let
your speech be alway with grace, seasoned with salt."(6) But "if
the salt have lost his savour," it is cast out.(7) And so utterly does
it lose its value that it is not even fit for the dunghill,(8) whence believers
fetch manure to enrich the barren soil of their souls. I begin thus, Rustics
my son, to teach you the greatness of your enterprise and the loftiness of
your ideal; and to shew you that only by trampling under foot youthful lusts
can you hope to climb the heights of true maturity. For the path along which
you walk is a slippery one and the glory of success is less than the shame
of failure.
2. I need
not now conduct the stream of my discourse through the meadows of virtue,
nor exert myself
to shew to
you the beauty of its several flowers.
I need not dilate on the purity of the lily, the modest blush of the rose the
royal purple of the violet, or the promise of glowing gems which their various
colours hold out. For through the mercy of God you have already put your hand
to the plough;(1) you have already gone up upon the housetop like the apostle
Peter.(2) Who when he became hungry among the Jews had his hunger satisfied
by the faith of Cornelius, and stilled the craving caused by their unbelief
through the conversion of the centurion and other Gentiles. By the vessel let
down from heaven to earth, the four corners of which typified the four gospels,
he was taught that all men can be saved. Once more, this fair white sheet which
in his vision was taken up again was a symbol of the church which carries believers
from earth to heaven, an assurance that the Lord's promise should be fulfilled: "blessed
are the pure in heart, for they shall see God."(3)
All this
means that I take you by the hand and do my best to impress certain facts
upon your mind;
that,
like a skilled sailor who has been through many
shipwrecks, I am anxious to caution an inexperienced passenger of the risks
before him. For on one side is the Charybdis of covetousness, "the root
of all evil ;"(4) and on the other lurks the Scylla of detraction girt
with the railing hounds of which the apostle says: "if ye bite and devour
one another, take heed that ye be not consumed one of another."(5) Sometimes,
you must know, the quicksands of vice(6) suck us down as we sail at ease through
the calm water; and the desert of this world is not untenanted by venomous
reptiles.
3. Those
who navigate the Red Sea--where we must pray that the true Pharaoh may be
drowned with
all his host--have
to encounter many difficulties and dangers
before they reach the city of Auxuma.(7) Nomad savages and ferocious wild beasts
haunt the shores on either side. Thus travellers must be always armed and on
the alert, and they must carry with them a whole year's provisions. Moreover,
so full are the waters of hidden reefs and impassable shoals that a look-out
has constantly to be kept from the masthead to direct the helmsman how to shape
his course. They may count themselves fortunate if after six months they make
the port of the above-mentioned city. At this point the ocean begins, to cross
which a whole year hardly suffices. Then India is reached and the river Ganges--called
in holy scripture Pison--"which compasseth the whole land of Havilah"(1)
and is said to carry down with it--from its source in paradise--various dyes
and pigments. Here are found rubies and emeralds, glowing pearls and gems of
the first water, such as high born ladies passionately desire. There are also
mountains of gold which however men cannot approach by reason of the griffins,
dragons, and huge monsters which haunt them; for such are the guardians which
avarice needs for its treasures.
4. What,
you ask, is the drift of all this? Surely it is clear enough. For if the
merchants of the
world
undergo such hardships to win a doubtful and
passing gain, and if after seeking it through many dangers they only keep it
at risk of their lives; what should Christ's merchant do who "selleth
all that he hath" that he may acquire the "one pearl of great price;" who
with his whole substance buys a field that he may find therein a treasure which
neither thief can dig up nor robber carry away?(2)
5. I know that I must offend large numbers who will be angry with my criticisms
as aimed at their own deficiencies. Yet such anger does but shew an uneasy
conscience and they will pass a far severer sentence on themselves than on
me. For I shall not mention names; or copy the licence of the old comedy(3)
which criticized individuals. Wise men and wise women will try to hide or rather
to correct whatever they perceive to be amiss in them; they will be more angry
with themselves than with me, and will not be disposed to heap curses upon
the head of their monitor. For he, although he is liable to the same charges,
is certainly superior in this that he is discontented with his own faults.
6. I am told that your mother is a religious woman, a widow of many years'
standing; and that when you were a child she reared and taught you herself.
Afterwards when you had spent some time in the flourishing schools of Gaul
she sent you to Rome, sparing no expense and consoling herself for your absence
by the thought of the future that lay before you. She hoped to see the exuberance
and glitter of your Gallic eloquence toned down by Roman sobriety, for she
saw that you required the rein more than the spur. So we are told of the greatest
orators of Greece that they seasoned the bombast of Asia with the salt of Athens
and pruned their vines when they grew too fast. For they wished to fill the
wine-press of eloquence not with the tendrils of mere words but with the rich
grape-juice of good sense. Your mother has done the same thing for you; you
should, therefore, look up to her as a parent, love her as a tender nurse,
and venerate her as a saint. You must not imitate those who leave their own
relations and pay court to strange women. Their infamy is apparent to all,
for what they aim at under the pretence of pure affection(1) is simply illicit
intercourse. I know some women of riper years, indeed a good many, who, finding
pleasure in their young freedmen, make them their spiritual children and thus,
pretending to be mothers to them, gradually overcome their own sense of shame
and allow themselves in the licence of marriage. Other women desert their maiden
sisters and unite themselves to strange widows. There are some who hate their
parents and have no affection for their kin. Their state of mind is indicated
by a restlessness which disdains excuses; they rend the veil of chastity and
put it aside like a cobweb. Such are the ways of women; not, indeed, that men
are any better. For there are persons to be seen who (for all their girded
loins, sombre garb, and long beards) are inseparable from women, live under
one roof with them, dine in their company, have young girls to wait upon them,
and, save that they do not claim to be called husbands, are as good as married.
Still it is no fault of Christianity that a hypocrite falls into sin; rather,
it is the confusion of the Gentiles that the churches condemn what is condemned
by all good men.
7. But if for your part you desire to be a monk and not merely to seem one,
be more careful of your soul than of your property; for in adopting a religious
profession you have renounced this once for all. Let your garments be squalid
to shew that your mind is white; and your tunic coarse to prove that you despise
the world. But give not way to pride lest your dress and language be found
at variance. Baths stimulate the senses and must, therefore, be avoided; for
to quench natural heat is the aim of chilling fasts. Yet even these must be
moderate, for, if they are carried to excess, they weaken the stomach and by
making more food necessary to it promote indigestion, that fruitful parent
of unclean desires. A frugal and temperate diet is good for both body and soul.
See your mother as often as you please but not with other women, for their
faces may dwell in your thoughts and so
A secret wound may fester in your breast.(1)
The maidservants
who attend upon her you must regard as so many snares laid to entrap you;
for the lower
their
condition is the more easy is it for you
to effect their ruin. John the Baptist had a religious mother and his father
was a priest.(2) Yet neither his mother's affection nor his father's wealth
could induce him to live in his parents' house at the risk of his chastity.
He lived in the desert, and seeking Christ with his eyes refused to look at
anything else. His rough garb, his girdle made of skins, his diet of locusts
and wild honey(3) were all alike designed to encourage virtue and continence.
The sons of the prophets, who were the monks of the Old Testament, built for
themselves huts by the waters of Jordan and forsaking the crowded cities lived
in these on pottage and wild herbs.(4) As long as you are at home make your
cell your paradise,(5) gather there the varied fruits of scripture, let this
be your favourite companion, and take its precepts to your heart. If your eye
offend you or your foot or your hand, cast them from you.(6) To spare your
soul spare nothing else. The Lord says: "whosoever looketh on a woman
to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart."(7) "Who
can My," writes the wise man, "I have made my heart clean?"(8)
The stars are not pure in the Lord's sight; how much less men whose whole life
is one long temptation.(9) Woe be to us who commit fornication every time that
we cherish lust. "My sword," God says, "hath drunk its fill
in heaven;" (10) much more then upon the earth with its crop of thorns
and thistles.(11) The chosen vessel(12) who had Christ's name ever on his lips
kept under his body and brought it into subjection.(13) Yet even he was hindered
by carnal desire and had to do what he would not. As one suffering violence
he cries: "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body
of this death?"(14) Is it likely then that you can pass without fall or
wound, unless you keep your heart with all diligence,(15) and say with the
Saviour: "my mother and my brethren are these which hear the word of God
and do it."(16) This may seem cruelty, but it is really affection. What
greater proof, indeed, can there be of affection than to guard for a holy mother
a holy son? She too desired your eternal welfare and is content to forego seeing
you for a time that she may see you for ever with Christ. She is like Hannah
who brought forth Samuel not for her own solace but for the service of the
tabernacle.(1) The sons of Jonadab, we are told, drank neither wine nor strong
drink and dwelt in tents pitched wherever night overtook them.(2) l According
to the psalter they were the first to undergo captivity; for, when the Chaldaeans
began to ravage Judah they were compelled to take refuge in cities.(3)
8. Others
may think what they like and follow each his own bent. But to me a town is
a prison and
solitude paradise.
Why do we long for the bustle of
cities, we whose very name speaks of loneliness?(4) To fit him for the leadership
of the Jewish people Moses was trained for forty years in the wilderness;(5)
and it was not till after these that the shepherd of sheep became a shepherd
of men. The apostles were fishers on lake Gennesaret before they became "fishers
of men."(6) But at the Lord's call they forsook all that they had, father,
net, and ship, and bore their cross daily without so much as a rod in their
hands.
I say these things that, in case you desire to enter the ranks of the clergy,
you may learn what you must afterwards teach, that you may offer a reasonable
sacrifice(7) to Christ, that you may not think yourself a finished soldier
while still a raw recruit, or suppose yourself a master while you are as yet
only a learner. It does not become one of my humble abilities to pass judgment
upon the clergy or to speak to the discredit of those who are ministers in
the churches. They have their own rank and station and must keep it. If ever
you become one of them my published letter to Nepotian(8) will teach you the
mode of life suitable to you
in that vocation. At present I am dealing with the forming and training of
a monk; of one too who has put the yoke of Christ upon his neck after receiving
a liberal education in his younger days.
9. The first point to be considered is whether you ought to live by yourself
or in a monastery with others.(9) For my part I should like you to have the
society of holy men so as not to be thrown altogether on your resources. For
if you set out upon a road that is new to you without a guide, you are sure
to turn aside immediately either to the right or to the left, to lay yourself
open to the assaults of error, to go too far or else not far enough, to weary
yourself with running too fast or to loiter by the way and to fall asleep.
In loneliness pride quickly creeps upon a man: if he has fasted for a little
while and has seen no one, he fancies himself a person of some note; forgetting
who he is, whence he comes, and whither he goes, he lets his thoughts riot
within and outwardly indulges in rash speech. Contrary to the apostle's wish
he judges another man's servants,(1) puts forth his hand to grasp whatever
his appetite desires, sleeps as long he pleases, fears nobody, does what he
likes, fancies everyone inferior to himself, spends more of his time in cities
than in his cell, and, while with the brothers he affects to be retiring, rubs
shoulders with the crowd in the streets. What then, you will say? Do I condemn
a solitary life? By no means: in fact I have often commended it. But I wish
to see the monastic schools turn out soldiers who have no fear of the rough
training of the desert, who have exhibited the spectacle of a holy life for
a considerable time, who have made themselves last that they might be first,
who have not been overcome by hunger or satiety, whose joy is in poverty, who
teach virtue by their garb and mien, and who are too conscientious to invent--as
some silly men do--monstrous stories of struggles with demons, designed to
magnify their heroes in the eyes of the crowd and before all to extort money
from it.
10. Quite
recently we have seen to our sorrow a fortune worthy of Croesus brought to
light by a
monk's death,
and a city's alms, collected for the poor,
left by will to his sons and successors. After sinking to the bottom the iron
has once more floated upon the surface,"(2) and men have again seen among
the palm-trees the bitter waters of Marah.(3) In this there is, however, nothing
strange, for the man had for his companion and teacher one who turned the hunger
of the needy into a source of wealth for himself and kept back sums left to
the miserable to his own subsequent misery. Yet their cry came up to heaven
and entering God's ears overcame His patience. Wherefore, He sent an angel
of woe to say to this new Carmelite, this second Nabal,(4) "Thou fool,
this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those things
be which thou hast provided?"(5)
11. If I wish you then not to live with your mother, it is for the reasons
given above, and above all for the two following. If she offers you delicacies
to eat, you will grieve her by refusing them; and if you take them, you will
add fuel to the flame that already burns within you. Again in a house where
there are so many girls you will see in the daytime sights that will tempt
you at night. Never take your hand or your eyes off your book; learn the psalms
word for word, pray without ceasing,(1) be always on the alert, and let no
vain thoughts lay hold upon you. Direct both body and mind to the Lord, overcome
wrath by patience, love the knowledge of scripture, and you will no longer
love the sins of the flesh. Do not let your mind become a prey to excitement,
for if this effects a lodgment in your breast it will have dominion over you
and will lead you into the great transgression.(2) Always have some work on
hand, that the devil may find you busy. If apostles who had the right to live
of the Gospel(3) laboured with their own hands that they might be chargeable
to no man,(4) and bestowed relief upon others whose carnal things they had
a claim to reap as having sown unto them spiritual things;(5) why do you not
provide a supply to meet your needs? Make creels of reeds or weave baskets
out of pliant osiers. Hoe your ground; mark out your garden into even plots;
and when you have sown your cabbages or set your plants convey water to them
in conduits that you may see with your own eyes the lovely vision of the poet:
Art draws fresh water from the hilltop near
Till the stream plashing down among the rocks
Cools the parched meadows and allays their thirst.(6)
Graft
unfruitful stocks with buds and slips that you may shortly be rewarded for
your toil by plucking
sweet
apples from them. Construct also hives for
bees, for to these the proverbs of Solomon send you,(7) and you may learn from
the tiny creatures how to order a monastery and to discipline a kingdom. Twist
lines too for catching fish, and copy books; that your hand may earn your food
and your mind may be satisfied with reading. For "every one that is idle
is a prey to vain desires."(8) In Egypt the monasteries make it a rule
to receive none who are not willing to work; for they regard labour as necessary
not only for the support of the body but also for the salvation of the soul.
Do not let your mind stray into harmful thoughts, or, like Jerusalem in her
whoredoms, open its feet to every chance comer.(9)
12. In my youth when the desert walled me in with its solitude I was still
unable to endure the promptings of sin and the natural heat of my blood; and,
although I tried by frequent fasts to break the force of both, my mind still
surged with [evil] thoughts.(10) To subdue its turbulence I betook myself to
a brother(1) who before his conversion had been a Jew and asked him to teach
me Hebrew. Thus, after having familiarised myself with the pointedness of Quintilian,
the fluency of Cicero, the seriousness of Fronto and the gentleness of Pliny,
I began to learn my letters anew and to study to pronounce words both harsh
and guttural. What labour I spent upon this task, what difficulties I went
through, how often I despaired, how often I gave over and then in my eagerness
to learn commenced again, can be attested both by myself the subject of this
misery and by those who then lived with me. But I thank the Lord that from
this seed of learning sown in bitterness I now cull sweet fruits.
13. I
will recount also another thing that i saw in Egypt. There was in a community
a young Greek
the flame
of whose desire neither continual fasting
nor the severest labour could avail to quench. He was in great danger of falling,
when the father of the monastery saved him by the following device. He gave
orders to one of the older brothers to pursue him with objurgations and reproaches,
and then after having thus wronged him to be beforehand with him in laying
a complaint against him. When witnesses were called they spoke always on behalf
of the aggressor. On hearing such falsehoods he used to weep that no one gave
credit to the truth; the father alone used cleverly to put in a word for him
that he might not be "swallowed up with overmuch sorrow."(2) To make
the story short, a year passed in this way and at the expiration of it the
young man was asked concerning his former evil thoughts and whether they still
troubled him. "Good gracious," he replied, "how can I find pleasure
in fornication when I am not allowed so much as to live?" Had he been
a solitary hermit, by whose aid could he have overcome the temptations that
assailed him?
14. The
world's philosophers drive out an old passion by instilling a new one; they
hammer out one nail
by hammering
in another.(3) It was on this principle
that the seven princes of Persia acted towards king Ahasuerus, for they subdued
his regret for queen Vashti by inducing him to love other maidens.(4) But whereas
they cured one fault by another fault and one sin by another sin, we must overcome
our faults by learning to love the opposite virtues. "Depart from evil," says
the psalmist, "and do good; seek peace and pursue it."(5) For if
we do not hate evil we cannot love good. Nay more, we must do good if we are
to depart from evil. We must seek peace if we are to avoid war. And it is not
enough merely to seek it; when we have found it and when it flees before us
we must pursue it with all our energies. For "it passeth all understanding;"(1)
it is the habitation of God. As the psalmist says, "in peace also is his
habitation."(2) The pursuing of peace is a fine metaphor and may be compared
with the apostle's words, "pursuing hospitality."(3) It is not enough,
he means, for us to invite guests with our lips; we should be as eager to detain
them as though they were robbers carrying off our savings.
15. No
art is ever learned without a master. Even dumb animals and wild herds follow
leaders of their
own. Bees
have princes, and cranes fly after one of
their number in the shape of a Y.(4) There is but one emperor and each province
has but one judge. Rome was rounded by two brothers,(5) but, as it could not
have two kings at once, was inaugurated by an act of fratricide. So too Esau
and Jacob strove in Rebekah's womb.(6) Each church has a single bishop, a single
archpresbyter, a single archdeacon;(7) and every ecclesiastical order is subjected
to its own rulers. A ship has but one pilot, a house but one master, and the
largest army moves at the command of one man. That I may not tire you by heaping
up instances, my drift is simply this. Do not rely on your own discretion,
but live in a monastery. For there, while you will be under the control of
one father, you will have many companions; and these will teach you, one humility,
another patience, a third silence, and a fourth meekness. You will do as others
wish; you will eat what you are told to eat; you will wear what clothes are
given you; you will perform the task allotted to you; you will obey one whom
you do not like, you will come to bed tired out; you will go to sleep on your
feet and you will be forced to rise before you have had sufficient rest. When
your turn comes, you will recite the psalms, a task which requires not a well
modulated voice but genuine emotion. The apostle says: "I will pray with
the spirit and I will pray with the understanding also,"(8) and to the
Ephesians, "make melody in your hearts to the Lord."(9) For he had
read the precept of the psalmist: "Sing ye praises with understanding."(10)
You will serve the brothers, you will wash the guests' feet; if you suffer
wrong you will bear it in silence; the superior of the community you will fear
as a master and love as a father. Whatever he may order you to do you will
believe to be wholesome for you. You will not pass judgment upon those who
are placed over you, for your duty will be to obey them and to do what you
are told, according to the words spoken by Moses: "keep silence and hearken,
O Israel."(1) You will have so many tasks to occupy you that you will
have no time for [evil] thoughts; and while you pass from one thing to another
and fresh work follows work done, you will only be able to think of what you
have it in charge at the moment to do.
16. But
I myself have seen monks of quite a different stamp from this, men whose
renunciation of
the world
has consisted in a change of clothes and a
verbal profession, while their real life and their former habits have remained
unchanged. Their property has increased rather than diminished. They still
have the same servants and keep the same table. Out of cheap glasses and common
earthenware they swallow gold. With servants about them in swarms they claim
for themselves the name of hermits. Others who though poor think themselves
discerning, walk as solemnly as pageants(2) through the streets and do nothing
but snarl(3) at every one whom they meet. Others shrug their shoulders and
croak out what is best known to themselves. While they keep their eyes fixed
upon the earth, they balance swelling words upon their tongues.(4) Only a crier
is wanted to persuade you that it is his excellency the prefect who is coming
along. Some too there are who from the dampness of their cells and from the
severity of their fasts, from their weariness of solitude and from excessive
study have a singing in their ears day and night and turn melancholy mad so
as to need the poultices of Hippocrates(5) more than exhortations from me.
Great numbers are unable to break free from the crafts and trades they have
previously practised. They no longer call themselves dealers but they carry
on the same traffic as before; seeking for themselves not "food and raiment"(6)
as the apostle directs, but money-profits and these greater than are looked
for by men of the world. In former days the greed of sellers was kept within
bounds by the action of the Ædiles or as the Greeks call them market-inspectors,(7)
and men could not then cheat with impunity. But now persons who profess religion
are not ashamed to seek unjust profits and the good name of Christianity is
more often a cloak for fraud than a victim to it. I am ashamed to say it, yet
it must be said--we are at least bound to blush for our infamy--while in public
we hold out our hands for alms we conceal gold beneath our rags; and to the
amazement of every one after living as poor men we die rich and with our purses
well-filled.
But you, since you will not be alone but one of a community, will have no
temptation to act thus. Things at first compulsory will become habitual. You
will set to work unbidden and will find pleasure in your toil. You will forget
things which are behind and will reach forth to those which are before.(1)
You will think less of the evil that others do than of the good you ought to
do.
17. Be
not led by the multitude of those who sin, neither let the host of those
who perish tempt
you to say
secretly: "What? must all be lost who
live in cities? Behold, they continue to enjoy their property, they serve churches,
they frequent baths, they do not disdain cosmetics, and yet they are universally
well-spoken of." To this kind of remark I have before replied and now
shortly reply again that the object of this little work is not to discuss the
clergy but to lay down rules for a monk. The clergy are holy men and their
lives are always worthy of praise. Rouse yourself then and so live in your
monastery that you may deserve to be a clergyman, that you may preserve your
youth from defilement, that you may go to Christ's altar as a virgin out of
her chamber. See that you are well-reported of without and that women are familiar
with your reputation but not with your appearance. When you come to mature
years, if, that is, you live so long, and when you have been chosen into the
ranks of the clergy either by the people of the city or by its bishop, act
in a way that befits a clergyman, and choose for your models the best of your
brothers. For in every rank and condition of life the bad are mingled with
the good.
18. Do not be carried away by some mad caprice and rush into authorship. Learn
long and carefully what you propose to teach. Do not credit all that flatterers
say to you, or, I should rather say, do not lend too ready an ear to those
who mean to mock you. They will fawn upon you with fulsome praise and do their
best to blind your judgment; yet if you suddenly look behind you, you will
find that they are making gestures of derision with their hands, either a stork's
neck or the flapping ears of a donkey or a thirsty dog's protruding tongue.(2)
Never speak evil of anyone or suppose that you make yourself better by assailing
the reputations of others. The charges we bring against them often come home
to ourselves; we inveigh against faults which are as much ours as theirs; and
so our eloquence ends by telling against ourselves. It is as though dumb persons
were to criticize orators. When the grunter(1) wished to speak he used to come
forward at a snail's pace(2) and to utter a word now and again with such long
pauses between that he seemed less making a speech than gasping for breath.
Then, when he had placed his table and arranged on it his pile of books, he
used to knit his brow, to draw in his nostrils, to wrinkle his forehead and
to snap his fingers, signs meant to engage the attention of his pupils. Then
he would pour forth a torrent of nonsense and declaim so vehemently against
every one that you would take him for a critic like Longinus(3) or fancy him
a second Cato the Censor(4) passing judgment on Roman eloquence and excluding
whom he pleased from the senate of the learned. As he had plenty of money he
made himself still more popular by giving entertainments. Numbers of persons
shared in his hospitality; and thus it was not surprising that when he went
out he was surrounded always by a buzzing throng. At home he was a monster
like Nero, abroad a paragon like Cato. Made up of different and opposing natures,
as a whole he baffled description. You would say that he was formed of jarring
elements like that unnatural and unheard of monster of which the poet tells
us that it was 'in front a lion, behind a dragon, in the middle the goat whose
name it bears.'(5)
19. Men
such as these you must never look at or associate with. Nor must you turn
aside your heart
unto
words of evil(6) lest the psalmist say to you: "Thou
sittest and speakest against thy brother; thou slanderest thine own mother's
son,"(7) and lest you become as "the sons of men whose teeth are
spears and arrows,"(8) and as the man whose "words were softer than
oil yet were they drawn swords."(9) The Preacher expresses this more clearly
still when he says: "Surely the serpent will bite where there is no enchantment,
and the slanderer is no better."(1) But you will say, 'I am not given
to detraction, but how can check others who are?' If we put forward such a
plea as this it can only be that we may "practise wicked works with men
that work iniquity."(2) Yet Christ is not deceived by this device. It
is not I but an apostle who says: "Be not deceived; God is not mocked."(3) "Man
looketh upon the outward appearance but the Lord looketh upon the heart."(4)
And in the proverbs Solomon tells us that as "the north wind driveth away
rain, so doth an angry countenance a backbiting tongue."(5) It sometimes
happens that an arrow when it is aimed at a hard object rebounds upon the bowman,
wounding the would-be wounder, and thus, the words are fulfilled, "they
were turned aside like a deceitful bow,"(6) and in another passage: "whoso
casteth a stone on high casteth it on his own head."(7) So when a slanderer
sees anger in the countenance of his hearer who will not hear him but stops
his ears that he may not hear of blood,(8) he becomes silent on the moment,
his face turns pale, his lips stick fast, his mouth becomes parched. Wherefore
the same wise man says: "meddle not with them that are given to detraction:
for their calamity shall rise suddenly; and who knoweth the ruin of them both?"(9)
of him who speaks, that is, and of him who hears. Truth does not love corners
or seek whisperers. To Timothy it is said, "Against an elder receive not
an accusation suddenly; but him that sinneth rebuke before all, that others
also may fear."(10) When a man is advanced in years you must not be too
ready to believe evil of him; his past life is itself a defence, and so also
is his rank as an eider. Still, since we are but human and sometimes in spite
of the ripeness of our years fall into the sins of youth, if I do wrong and
you wish to correct me, accuse me openly of my fault: do not backbite me secretly. "Let
the righteous smite me, it shall be a kindness, and let him reprove me; but
let not the oil of the sinner enrich my head."(11) For what says the apostle? "Whom
the Lord loveth, he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth."(12)
By the mouth of Isaiah the Lord speaks thus: "O my people, they who call
you happy cause you to err and destroy the way of your paths."(13) How
do you help me by telling my misdeeds to others? You may, without my knowing
of it, wound some one else by the narration of my sins or rather of those which
you slanderously attribute to me; and while you are eager to spread the news
in I all quarters, you may pretend to confide in each individual as though
you had spoken to no one else. Such a course has for its object not my correction
but the indulgence of your own failing. The Lord gives commandment that those
who sin against us are to be arraigned privately or else in the presence of
a witness, and that if they refuse to hear reason, the matter is to be laid
before the church, and those who persist in their wickedness are to be regarded
as heathen men and publicans.(1)
20. I
lay great emphasis on these points that I may deliver a young man who is
dear to me from the
itching
both of the tongue and of the ears: that, since
he has been born again in Christ, I may present him without spot or wrinkle(2)
as a chaste virgin,(3) chaste in mind as well as in body; that the virginity
of which he boasts may be more than nominal and that he may not be shut out
by the bridegroom because being unprovided with the oil of good works his lamp
has gone out.(4) In Proculus you have a reverend and most learned pre-late,(5)
able by the sound of his voice to do more for you than I with my written sheets
and sure to direct you on your path by daily homilies. He will not suffer you
to turn to the right hand or to the left or to leave the king's highway; for
to this Israel pledges itself to keep in its hasty passage to the land of promise.(6)
May God hear the voice of the church's supplication. "Lord, ordain peace
for us, for thou hast also wrought all our works for us."(7) May our renunciation
of the world be made freely and not under compulsion! May we seek poverty gladly
to win its glory and not suffer anguish because others lay it upon us! For
the rest amid our present miseries with the sword making havoc around us, he
is rich enough who has bread sufficient for his need, and he is abundantly
powerful who is not reduced to be a slave. Exuperius(8)' the reverend bishop
of Toulouse, imitating the widow of Zarephath,(9) feeds others though hungry
himself. His face is pale with fasting, yet it is the cravings of others that
torment him most. In fact he has bestowed his whole substance to meet the needs
of Christ's poor. Yet none is richer than he, for his wicker basket contains
the body of the Lord, and his plain glass-cup the precious blood. Like his
Master he has banished greed out of the temple; and without either scourge
of cords or words of chiding he has overthrown the chairs of them that sell
doves, that is, the gifts of the Holy Spirit. He has upset the tables of Mammon
and has scattered the money of the money-changers; zealous that the house of
God may be called a house of prayer and not a den of robbers.(1) In his steps
follow closely and in those of others like him in virtue, whom the priesthood
makes poor men and more than ever humble. Or if you will be perfect, go out
with Abraham from your country and from your kindred, and go whither you know
not.(2) If you have substance, sell it and give to the poor. If you have none,
then are yon free from a great burthen. Destitute yourself, follow a destitute
Christ. The task is a hard one, it is great and difficult; but the reward is
also great.
LETTER CXXVI.
TO MARCELLINUS AND ANAPSYCHIA.
Marcellinus, a Roman official of high rank, and Anapsychia his wife had written
to Jerome from Africa to ask him his opinion on the vexed question of the origin
of the soul. Jerome in his reply briefly enumerates the several views that
have been held on the subject. For fuller information he refers his questioners:
to his treatise against Rufinus and also to their bishop Augustin who will,
he says, explain the matter to them by word of mouth. Although it hardly appears
in this letter Jerome is a decided creationist (see his Comm. on Eccles. xii.
7). But, though he vehemently condemns Rufinus (Ap. ii. 10) for professing
ignorance on the subject, he assents (Letter CXXXIV.) to Augustin (Letter CXXXI.)
who similarly professes ignorance but seems to lean to traducianism. The date
of writing is A. D. 412.
To his truly holy lord and lady, his children worthy of the highest respect
and affection, Marcellinus and Anapsychia, Jerome sends greeting.
1. I have
at last received from Africa your joint letter and no longer regret the effrontery
which led
me,
in spite of your silence to ply you both with
so many missives. I hoped, indeed, by so doing to gain a reply and to learn
of your welfare not indirectly from others but directly from yourselves. I
well remember your little problem about the nature of the soul; although I
ought not to call it little, seeing that it is one of the greatest with which
the church has to deal. You ask whether it has fallen from heaven, as Pythagoras,
all Platonists, and Origen suppose; or whether it is part of God's essence
as the Stoics, Manes, and the Spanish Priscillianists hint. Whether souls created
long since are kept in God's storehouse as some ecclesiastical writers(3) foolishly
imagine; or whether they are formed by God and introduced into bodies day by
day according to that saying in the Gospel: "my Father worketh hitherto
and I work;"(4) or whether, lastly, they are transmitted by propagation.
This is the view of Tertullian, Apollinaris, and most western writers who hold
that soul is derived from soul as body is from body and that the conditions
of life are the same for men and brutes. I have given my opinion on the matter
in my reply to the treatise which Rufinus presented to Anastasius, bishop of
Rome, of holy memory. He strives in this by an evasive and crafty but sufficiently
foolish confession to play with the simplicity of his hearers, but only succeeds
in playing with his own faith or rather want of it. My book,(1) which has been
published a good while, contains an answer to the calumnies which in his various
writings Rufinus has directed against me. Your reverend father Oceanus(2) has,
I think, a copy of it. But if you cannot procure it your bishop Augustine is
both learned and holy. He will teach you by word of mouth and will give you
his opinion, or rather mine, in his own words.
2. I have
long wished to attack the prophecies of Ezekiel and to make good the promises
which I
have so often
given to curious readers. When, however,
I began to dictate I was so confounded By the havoc wrought in the West and
above all by the sack of Rome that, as the common saying has it, I forgot even
my own name. Long did I remain silent knowing that it was a time to weep.(3)
This year I began again and had written three books of commentary when a sudden
incursion of those barbarians of whom your Virgil speaks(4) as the "far-wandering
men of Barce" (and to whom may be applied what holy scripture says of
Ishmael: "he shall dwell over against all his brethren"(5)) overran
the borders of Egypt, Palestine, Phenicia, and Syria, and like a raging torrent
carried everything before them. It was with difficulty and only through Christ's
mercy that we were able to escape from their hands. But if, as the great orator
says, "amid the clash of arms law ceases to he heard;"(6) how much
more truly may it be said that war puts an end to the study of holy scripture.
For this requires plenty of books and silence and careful copyists anti above
all freedom from alarm and a sense of security. I have accordingly only been
able to complete two books and these I have sent to my daughter, Fabiola,(7)
from whom you can if you like borrow them. For want of time I have not been
able as yet to transcribe the rest. But when you have read these you will have
seen the ante-chamber and will easily form from this a notion of the whole
edifice. I trust in God's mercy and believe that, as he has helped me in the
difficult opening chapters of the prophecy, so he will help me in the chapters
towards the close. These describe the wars of Gog and Magog, and set forth
the mode of building, the plan, and the dimensions of the holy and mysterious
temple.
3. Our reverend brother Oceanus to whom you desire an introduction is a great
and good man and so learned in the law of the Lord that no words of mine are
needed to make him able and willing to instruct you both and to explain to
you in conformity with the rules which govern our common studies, my opinion
and his on all questions arising out of the scriptures. In conclusion, my truly
holy lord and lady, may Christ our God by his almighty power have you in his
safekeeping and cause you to live long and happily.
LETTER CXXVII.
TO PRINCIPIA.
This letter is really a memoir of Marcella (for whom see note on Letter XXIII.)
addressed to her greatest friend. After describing her history, character,
and favourite studies, Jerome goes on to recount her eminent services in the
cause of orthodoxy at a time when, through the efforts of Rufinus, it seemed
likely that Origenism would prevail at Rome ( 9, 10). He briefly relates the
fall of the city and the horrors consequent upon it ( 12, 13) which appear
to have been the immediate cause of Marcella's death ( 14). The date of the
letter is 412 A.D.
1. You have besought me often and earnestly, Principia,(1) virgin of Christ,
to dedicate a letter to the memory of that holy woman Marcella,(2) and to set
forth the goodness long enjoyed by us for others to know and to imitate. I
am so anxious myself to do justice to her merits that it grieves me that you
should spur me on and fancy that your entreaties are needed when I do not yield
even to you in love of her. In putting upon record her signal virtues I shall
receive far more benefit myself than I can possibly confer upon others. If
I have hitherto remained silent and have allowed two years to go over without
making any sign, this has not been owing to a wish to ignore her as you wrongly
suppose, but to an incredible sorrow which so overcame my mind that I judged
it better to remain silent for a while than to praise her virtues in inadequate
language. Neither will I now follow the rules of rhetoric in eulogizing one
so dear to both of us and to all the saints, Mar-cella the glory of her native
Rome. I will not set forth her illustrious family and lofty lineage, nor will
I trace her pedigree through a line of consuls and praetorian prefects. I will
praise her for nothing but the virtue which is her own and which is the more
noble, because forsaking both wealth and rank she has sought the true nobility
of poverty and lowliness.
2. Her
father's death left her an orphan, and she had been married less than seven
months when
her husband
was taken from her. Then as she was young, and
highborn, as well as distinguished for her beauty--always an attraction to
men--and her self-control, an illustrious consular named Cerealis paid court
to her with great assiduity. Being an old man he offered to make over to her
his fortune so that she might consider herself less his wife than his daughter.
Her mother Albina went out of her way to secure for the young widow so exalted
a protector. But Marcella answered: "had I a wish to marry and not rather
to dedicate myself to perpetual chastity, I should look for a husband and not
for an inheritance;" and when her suitor argued that sometimes old men
live long while young men die early, she cleverly retorted: "a young man
may indeed die early, but an old man cannot live long." This decided rejection
of Cerealis convinced others that they had no hope of winning her hand.
In the
gospel according to Luke we read the following passage: "there
was one Anna, a prophetess, the daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Aser:
she was of great age, and had lived with an husband seven years from her virginity;
and she was a widow of about fourscore and four years, which departed not from
the temple but served God with fastings and prayers night and day."(1)
It was no marvel that she won the vision of the Saviour, whom she sought so
earnestly. Let us then compare her case with that of Marcella and we shall
see that the latter has every way the advantage. Anna lived with her husband
seven years; Marcella seven months. Anna only hoped for Christ; Marcella held
Him fast. Anna confessed him at His birth; Marcella believed in Him crucified.
Anna did not deny the Child; Marcella rejoiced in the Man as king. I do not
wish to draw distinctions between holy women on the score of their merits,
as some persons have made it a custom to do as regards holy men and leaders
of churches; the conclusion at which I aim is that, as both have one task,
so both have one reward.
3. In
a slander-loving community such as Rome, filled as it formerly was with people
from all parts
and bearing
the palm for wickedness of all kinds, detraction
assailed the upright and strove to defile even the pure and the clean. In such
an atmosphere it is hard to escape from the breath of calumny. A stainless
reputation is difficult nay almost impossible to attain; the prophet yearns
for it but hardly hopes to win it: "Blessed," he says, "are
the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord."(1) The undefiled
in the way of this world are those whose fair fame no breath of scandal has
ever sullied, and who have earned no reproach at the hands of their neighbours.
It is this which makes the Saviour say in the gospel: "agree with," or
be complaisant to, "thine adversary whilst thou art in the way with him."(2)
Who ever heard a slander of Marcella that deserved the least credit? Or who
ever credited such without making himself guilty of malice and defamation?
No; she put the Gentiles to confusion by shewing them the nature of that Christian
widowhood which her conscience and mien alike set forth. For women of the world
are wont to paint their faces with rouge and white-lead, to wear robes of shining
silk, to adorn themselves with jewels, to put gold chains round their necks,
to pierce their ears and hang in them the costliest pearls of the Red Sea,(3)
and to scent themselves with musk. While they mourn for the husbands they have
lost they rejoice at their own deliverance and freedom to choose fresh partners--not,
as God wills, to obey these(4) but to rule over them.
With this object in view they select for their partners poor men who contented
with the mere name of husbands are the more ready to put up with rivals as
they know that, if they so much as murmur, they will be cast off at once. Our
widow's clothing was meant to keep out the cold and not to shew her figure.
Of gold she would not wear so much as a seal-ring, choosing to store her money
in the stomachs of the poor rather than to keep it at her own disposal. She
went nowhere without her mother, and would never see without witnesses such
monks and clergy as the needs of a large house required her to interview. Her
train was always composed of virgins and widows, and these women serious and
staid; for, as she well knew, the levity of the maids speaks ill for the mistress
and a woman's character is shewn by her choice of companions.(5)
4. Her
delight in the divine scriptures was incredible. She was for ever singing, "Thy
words have I hid in mine heart that I might not sin against thee,"(1)
as well as the words which describe the perfect man, "his delight is in
the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate day and night."(2)
This meditation in the law she understood not of a review of the written words
as among the Jews the Pharisees think, but of action according to that saying
of the apostle, "whether, therefore, ye eat or drink or what soever ye
do, do all to the glory of God."(3) She remembered also the prophet's
words, "through thy precepts I get understanding,"(4) and felt sure
that only when she had fulfilled these would she be permitted to understand
the scriptures. In this sense we read elsewhere that "Jesus began both
to do and teach."(5) For teaching is put to the blush when a man's conscience
rebukes him; and it is in vain that his tongue preaches poverty or teaches
alms-giving if he is rolling in the riches of Croesus and if, in spite of his
threadbare cloak, he has silken robes at home to save from the moth.
Marcella practised fasting, but in moderation. She abstained from eating flesh,
and she knew rather the scent of wine than its taste; touching it only for
her stomach's sake and for her often infirmities.(6) She seldom appeared in
public and took care to avoid the houses of great ladies, that she might not
be forced to look upon what she had once for all renounced. She frequented
the basilicas of apostles and martyrs that she might escape from the throng
and give herself to private prayer. So obedient was she to her mother that
for her sake she did things of which she herself disapproved. For example,
when her mother, careless of her own offspring, was for transferring all her
property from her children and grandchildren to her brother's family, Marcella
wished the money to be given to the poor instead, and yet could not bring herself
to thwart her parent. Therefore she made over her ornaments and other effects
to persons already rich, content to throw away her money rather than to sadden
her mother's heart.
5. In those days no highborn lady at Rome had made profession of the monastic
life, or had ventured--so strange and ignominious and degrading did it then
seem--publicly to call herself a nun. It was from some priests of Alexandria,
and from pope Athanasius, and subsequently from Peter,(7) who, to escape the
persecution of the Arian heretics, had all fled for refuge to Rome as the safest
haven in which they could find communion--it was from these that Marcella heard
of the life of the blessed Antony, then still alive, and of the monasteries
in the Thebaid founded by Pachomius, and of the discipline laid down for virgins
and for widows. Nor was she ashamed to profess a life which she had thus learned
to be pleasing to Christ. Many years after her example was followed first by
Sophronia and then by others, of whom it may be well said in the words of Ennius:(1)
Would that ne'er in Pelion's woods
Had the axe these pinetrees felled.
My revered friend Paula was blessed with Marcella's friendship, and it was
in Marcella's cell that Eustochium, that paragon of virgins, was gradually
trained. Thus it is easy to see of what type the mistress was who found such
pupils.
The unbelieving reader may perhaps laugh at me for dwelling so long on the
praises of mere women; yet if he will but remember how holy women followed
our Lord and Saviour and ministered to Him of their substance, and how the
three Marys stood before the cross and especially how Mary Magdalen--called
the tower(2) from the earnestness and glow of her faith--was privileged to
see the rising Christ first of all before the very apostles, he will convict
himself of pride sooner than me of folly. For we judge of people's virtue not
by their sex but by their character, and hold those to be worthy of the highest
glory who have renounced both rank and wealth. It was for this reason that
Jesus loved the evangelist John more than the other disciples. For John was
of noble birth(3) and known to the high priest, yet was so little appalled
by the plottings of the Jews that he introduced Peter into his court,(4) and
was the only one of the apostles bold enough to take his stand before the cross.
For it was he who took the Saviour's parent to his own home;(5) it was the
virgin son(6) who received the virgin mother as a legacy from the Lord.
6. Marcella
then lived the ascetic life for many years, and found herself old before
she bethought
herself that
she had once been young. She often quoted
with approval Plato's saying that philosophy consists in meditating on death.(7)
A truth which our own apostle indorses when he says: "for your salvation
I die daily."(8) Indeed according to the old copies our Lord himself says: "whosoever
doth not bear His cross daily and come after me cannot be my disciple."(1)
Ages before, the Holy Spirit had said by the prophet: "for thy sake are
we killed all the day long: we are counted as sheep for the slaughter.(2) Many
generations afterwards the words were spoken: "remember the end and thou
shalt never do amiss,(3) as well as that precept of the eloquent satirist: "live
with death in your mind; time flies; this say of mine is so much taken from
it.(4) Well then, as I was saying, she passed her days and lived always in
the thought that she must die. Her very clothing was such as to remind her
of the tomb, and she presented herself as a living sacrifice, reasonable and
acceptable, unto God.(5)
7. When
the needs of the Church at length brought me to Rome(6) in company with the
reverend pontiffs,
Paulinus
and Epiphanius--the first of whom ruled
the church of the Syrian Antioch while the second presided over that of Salamis
in Cyprus,--I in my modesty was for avoiding the eyes of highborn ladies, yet
she pleaded so earnestly, "both in season and out of season"(7) as
the apostle says, that at last her perseverance overcame my reluctance. And,
as in those days my name was held in some renown as that of a student of the
scriptures, she never came to see me that she did not ask me some question
concerning them, nor would she at once acquiesce in my explanations but on
the contrary would dispute them; not, however, for argument's sake but to learn
the answers to those objections which might, as she saw, be made to my statements.
How much virtue and ability, how much holiness and purity I found in her I
am afraid to say; both lest I may exceed the bounds of men's belief and lest
I may increase your sorrow by reminding you of the blessings that you have
lost. This much only will I say, that whatever in me was the fruit of long
study and as such made by constant meditation a part of my nature, this she
tasted, this she learned and made her own. Consequently after my departure
from Rome, in case of a dispute arising as to the testimony of scripture on
any subject, recourse was had to her to settle it. And so wise was she and
so well did she understand what phi-losphers call <greek>to</greek> <greek>prepon</greek>,
that is, the becoming, in what she did, that when she answered questions she
gave her own opinion not as her own but as from me or some one else, thus admitting
that what she taught she had herself learned from others. For she knew that
the apostle had said: "I suffer not a woman to teach,"(1) and she
would not seem to inflict a wrong upon the male sex many of whom (including
sometimes priests) questioned her concerning obscure and doubtful points.
8. I am told that my place with her was immediately taken by you, that you
attached yourself to her, and that, as the saying goes, you never let even
a hair's-breadth(2) come between her and you. You both lived in the same house
and occupied the same room so that every one in the city knew for certain that
you had found a mother in her and she a daughter in you. In the suburbs you
found for yourselves a monastic seclusion, and chose the country instead of
the town because of its loneliness. For a long time you lived together, and
as many ladies shaped their conduct by your examples, I had the joy of seeing
Rome transformed into another Jerusalem. Monastic establishments for virgins
became numerous, and of hermits there were countless numbers. In fact so many
were the servants of God that monasticism which had before been a term of reproach
became subsequently one of honour. Meantime we consoled each other for our
separation by words of mutual encouragement, and discharged in the spirit the
debt which in the flesh we could not pay. We always went to meet each other's
letters, tried to outdo each other in attentions, and anticipated each other
in courteous inquiries. Not much was lost by a separation thus effectually
bridged by a constant correspondence.
9. While Marcella was thus serving the Lord in holy tranquillity, there arose
in these provinces a tornado of heresy which threw everything into confusion;
indeed so great was the fury into which it lashed itself that it spared neither
itself nor anything that was good. And as if it were too little to have disturbed
everything here, it introduced a ship(3) freighted with blasphemies into the
port of Rome itself. The dish soon found itself a cover;(4) and the muddy feet
of heretics fouled the clear waters(5) of the faith of Rome. No wonder that
in the streets and in the market places a soothsayer can strike fools on the
back or, Catching up his cudgel, shatter the teeth of such as carp at him;
when such venomous and filthy teaching as this has found at Rome dupes whom
it can lead astray. Next came the scandalous version(6) of Origen's book On
First Principles, and that 'fortunate' disciple(7) who would have been indeed
fortunate had he never fallen in with such a master. Next followed the confutation
set forth by my supporters, which destroyed the case of the Pharisees(1) and
threw them into confusion. It was then that the holy Marcella, who had long
held back lest she should be thought to act from party motives, threw herself
into the breach. Conscious that the faith of Rome--once praised by an apostle(2)--was
now in danger, and that this new heresy was drawing to itself not only i priests
and monks but also many of the laity besides imposing on the bishop(3) who
fancied others as guileless as he was himself, she publicly withstood its teachers
choosing to please God rather than men.
10. In
the gospel the Saviour commends the unjust steward because, although he defrauded
his master,
he acted wisely
for his own interests.(4) The heretics
in this instance pursued the same course; for, seeing how great a matter a
little fire had kindled,(5) and that the flames applied by them to the foundations
had by this time reached the housetops, and that the deception practised on
many could no longer be hid, they asked for and obtained letters of commendation
from the church,(6) so that it might appear that till the day of their departure
they had continued in full communion with it. Shortly afterwards(7) the distinguished
Anastasius succeeded to the pontificate; but he was soon taken away, for it
was not fitting that the head of the world should be struck off(8) during the
episcopate of one so great. He was removed, no doubt, that he might not seek
to turn away by his prayers the sentence of God passed once for all. For the
words of the Lord to Jeremiah concerning Israel applied equally to Rome: "pray
not for this people for their good. When they fast I will not hear their cry;
and when they offer burnt-offering and oblation, I will not accept them; but
I will consume them by the sword and by the famine and by the pestilence."(9)
You will say, what has this to do with the praises of Marcella? I reply, She
it was who originated the condemnation of the heretics. She it was who furnished
witnesses first taught by them and then carried away by their heretical teaching.
She it was who showed how large a number they had deceived and who brought
up against them the impious books On First Principles, books which were passing
from hand to hand after being 'improved' by the hand of the scorpion.(10) She
it was lastly who called on the heretics in letter after letter to appear in
their own defence. They did not indeed venture to come, for they were so conscience-stricken
that they let the case go against them by default rather than face their accusers
and be convicted by them. This glorious victory originated with Marcella, she
was the source and cause of this great blessing. You who shared the honour
with her know that I speak the truth. You know too that out of many incidents
I only mention a few, not to tire out the reader by a wearisome recapitulation.
Were I to say more, ill natured persons might fancy me, under pretext of commending
a woman's virtues, to be giving vent to my own rancour. I will pass now to
the remainder of my story.
11. The
whirlwind(1) passed from the West into the East and threatened in its passage
to shipwreck many
a
noble craft. Then were the words of Jesus fulfilled: "when
the son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?"(2) The love
of many waxed cold.(3) Yet the few who still loved the true faith rallied to
my side. Men openly sought to take their lives and every expedient was employed
against them. So hotly indeed did the persecution rage that "Barnabas
also was carried away with their dissimulation;"(4) nay more he committed
murder, if not in actual violence at least in will. Then behold God blew and
the tempest passed away; so that the prediction of the prophet was fulfilled, "thou
takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust.(5) In that very
day his thoughts perish,"(6) as also the gospel-saying, "Thou fool,
this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those things
be, which thou hast provided?"(7)
12. Whilst
these things were happening in Jebus(8) a dreadful rumour came from the West.
Rome had
been besieged(9)
and its citizens had been forced to
buy their lives with gold. Then thus despoiled they had been besieged again
so as to lose not their substance only but their lives. My voice sticks in
my throat; and, as I dictate, sobs choke my utterance. The City which had taken
the whole world was itself taken;(10) nay more famine was beforehand with the
sword and but few citizens were left to be made captives. In their frenzy the
starving people had recourse to hideous food; and tore each other limb from
limb that they might have flesh to eat. Even the mother did not spare the babe
at her breast. In the night was Moab taken, in the night did her wall fall
down.(1) "O God, the heathen have come into thine inheritance; thy holy
temple have they defiled; they have made Jerusalem an orchard.(2) The dead
bodies of thy servants have they given to be meat unto the fowls of the heaven,
the flesh of thy saints unto the beasts of the earth. Their blood have they
shed like water round about Jerusalem; and there was none to bury them."(3)
Who can set forth the carnage of that night?
What tears are equal to its agony?
Of ancient date a sovran city falls;
And lifeless in its streets and houses lie
Unnumbered bodies of its citizens.
In many a ghastly shape doth death appear.(4)
13. Meantime,
as was natural in a scene of such confusion, one of the bloodstained victors
found his way
into Marcella's house. Now be it mine to say what I have
heard,(6) to relate what holy men have seen; for there were some such present
and they say that you too were with her in the hour of danger. When the soldiers
entered she is said to have received them without any look of alarm; and when
they asked her for gold she pointed to her coarse dress to shew them that she
had no buried treasure. However they would not believe in her self-chosen poverty,
but scourged her and beat her with cudgels. She is said to have felt no pain
but to have thrown herself at their feet and to have pleaded with tears for
you, that you might not be taken from her, or owing to your youth have to endure
what she as an old woman had no occasion to fear. Christ softened their hard
hearts and even among bloodstained swords natural affection asserted its rights.
The barbarians conveyed both you and her to the basilica of the apostle Paul,
that you might find there either a place of safety or, if not that, at least
a tomb. Hereupon Marcella is said to have burst into great joy and to have
thanked God for having kept you unharmed in answer to her prayer. She said
she was thankful too that the taking of the city had found her poor, not made
her so, that she was now in want of daily bread, that Christ satisfied her
needs so that she no longer felt hunger, that she was able to say in word and
in deed: "naked came I out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return
thither: the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of
the Lord."(5)
14. After a few days she fell asleep in the Lord; but to the last her powers
remained unimpaired. You she made the heir of her poverty, or rather the poor
through you. When she closed her eyes, it was in your arms; when she breathed
her last breath, your lips received it; you shed tears but she smiled conscious
of having led a good life and hoping for her reward hereafter.
In one short night I have dictated this letter in honour of you, revered Marcella,
and of you, my daughter Principia; not to shew off my own eloquence but to
express my heartfelt gratitude to you both; my one desire has been to please
both God and my readers.
LETTER CXXVIII.
TO GAUDENTIUS.
Gaudentius had written from Rome to ask Jerome's advice as to the bringing
up of his infant daughter whom after the religious fashion of the day he had
dedicated to a life of virginity. Jerome's reply may be compared with his advice
to Laeta (Letter CVII.) which it closely resembles. It is noticeable also for
the vivid account which it gives of the sack of Rome by Alaric in A.D. 410.
The date of the letter is A.D. 413.
1. It
is hard to write to a little girl who cannot understand what you say, of
whose mind you know
nothing,
and of whose inclinations it would be rash
to prophesy. In the words of a famous orator "she is to be praised more
for what she will be than for what she is."(1) For how can you speak of
self-control to a child who is eager for cakes, who babbles on her mother's
knee, and to whom honey is sweeter than any words? Will she hear the deep things
of