Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
ST. JEROME
THE LETTERS
LETTERS CXLIV TO CL
LETTER CXLIV.
FROM AUGUSTINE TO OPTATUS.
Augustine writes to Optatus, bishop of Milevis, to say that he cannot send
him a copy of his letter to Jerome on the origin of the soul (Letter CXXXI.)
as it is incomplete without Jerome's reply which he has not yet received. He
then criticises the arguments with which Optatus combats traducianism and points
out that his reasoning is inconclusive. The date of the letter is A. D. 420.
The letter has been somewhat compressed in translation: the involved sentences
of the original have been simplified and its redundancies curtailed.
To the blessed lord and brother, sincerely loved and longed-for, his fellow-bishop
Optatus, Augustine [sends] greeting in the Lord.
1. By the hand of the reverend presbyter Saturninus I have received a letter
from you, venerable sir, in which you earnestly ask me for what I have not
yet got. You thus shew clearly your belief that I have already had a reply
to my question on the subject. Would that I had! Knowing the eagerness of your
expectation, I should never have dreamed of keeping back from you your share
in the gift; but if you will believe me, dear brother, it is not so. Although
five years have elapsed since I despatched to the East my letter (which was
one of inquiry, not of assertion), I have so far received no reply, and am
consequently unable to untie the knot as you wish me to do. Had I had both[1]
letters, I should gladly have sent you both; but I think it better not to circulate
mine[2] by itself lest he to whom it is addressed and who may still answer
me as I desire should prove displeased. If I were to publish so elaborate a
treatise as mine without his reply to it, he might be justly indignant, and
suppose me more intent on displaying my talents than on promoting some useful
end. It would look as if I were bent on starting problems too hard for him
to solve. It is better to wait for the answer which he probably means to send.
For I am well aware that he has other subjects to occupy him which are more
serious and urgent than this question of mine. Your holiness will readily understand
this if you read what he wrote to me a year later when my messenger was returning.
The following is an extract from his letter:[3]
"A most trying time has come upon us[4] in which I have found it better
to hold my peace than to speak. Consequently my studies have ceased, that I
may not give occasion to what Appius calls 'the eloquence of dogs." For
this reason I have not been able to send any answer to your two learned and
brilliant letters. Not, indeed, that I think anything in them needs correction,
but that I recall the Apostle's words: 'One judges in this way, another in
that; let every man give full expression to his own opinion."[2] All that
a lofty intellect can draw from the well of holy scripture has been drawn by
you. So much your reverence must allow me to say in praise of your ability.
But though in any discussion between us our joint object is the advancement
of learning, our rivals and especially the heretics will ascribe any difference
of opinion between us to mutual jealousy. For my part, however, I am resolved
to love you, to look up to you, to reverence and admire you, and to defend
your opinions as my own. I have also in a dialogue which I have recently brought
out made allusion to your holiness in suitable terms. Let us, rather, then,
strain every nerve to banish from the churches that most pernicious heresy,[3]
which feigns repentance that it may have liberty to teach in our churches.
For were it to come out into the light of day, it would be expelled and die."
2. You can see, worshipful brother, from this reply that my friend does not
refuse to answer my inquiry; he postpones it because he is condemned to give
his time to more urgent matters. Moreover, that he is well disposed towards
me is clear from his friendly warning that a controversy between us begun in
all charity and in the interests of learning may be misconstrued by jealous
and heretical persons as due to mutual illfeeling. No; it will be better for
the public to have both together, his explanation as well as my inquiry. For,
as I shall have to thank him for instructing me if he is able to explain the
matter, the discussion will be of no small advantage when it comes to the knowledge
of the world. Those who come after us will not only know what view they ought
to take of a subject thus fully argued but will also learn how under the divine
mercy brothers in affection may dispute a difficult question and yet preserve
each other's esteem.
3. On
the other hand, if I were to publish the letter in which I raise this obscure
point without
the reply
in which it may be set at rest, it might circulate
widely and reach men who "comparing themselves," as the Apostle says, "with
themselves,"[4] would misconstrue a motive which they could not understand,
and would explain my feeling towards one whom I love and esteem for his immense
services not as it would appear to them (for it would be invisible to them)
but as their own fancy and malice would dictate. Now this is a danger which,
so far as in me lies, I am bound to guard against. But if a document which
I am unwilling to publish is published without my consent and placed in hands
from which I would withhold it, then I shall have to resign myself to the will
of God. Indeed, had I wished to keep my words permanently undivulged I should
never have sent them to any one. For if (though I hope it may not be so) chance
or necessity shall prevent any reply being ever given me, my letter of inquiry
is still bound sooner or later to come to light. Nor will it be useless to
those who read it; for, although they will nor find what they seek, they will
learn how much better it is, when one is uninformed, to put questions than
to make assertions; and in the meantime those whom they consult[1] will work
out the points raised by me, laying aside contention and in the interests of
learning and charity trying to obtain sound opinions about them. Thus they
will either arrive at the solutions they desire, or their faculties will be
quickened and they will learn from the investigation that farther inquiry is
useless. At present, however, as I have no reason to despair of an answer from
my friend I have decided not to publish the letter I have sent him, and I trust,
my dear comrade, that this decision may commend itself to you. It should do
so, for you have not asked for my letter so much as for the answer to it; and
this I would gladly send you if I had it to send. It is true that in your epistle
you speak of" the lucid demonstration of my wisdom which in virtue of
my life the Giver of light has bestowed upon me "; and if by this you
mean not the way in which I have stated the problem but a solution which I
have obtained of the point in question, I should like to gratify your wish.
But I must admit that I have so far failed to discover how the soul can derive
its sin from Adam (a truth which it is unlawful to question) and yet not itself
be derived from Adam. At present I think it better to sift the matter farther
than to dogmatize rashly.
4. Your
letter speaks of "many old men and persons educated by learned
priests whom you have failed to recall to your modest way of thinking, and
to a statement of the case which is truth itself." You do not, however,
explain what this mode of expression is. If your old men hold fast what they
have received from learned priests, how comes it that you are troubled by a
boorish mob of unlettered clerics? On the other hand, if the old men and the
unlettered clerics have wickedly departed from the priests' teachings, surely
these latter are the persons to correct them and restrain them from controversial
excesses. Again when you say that "you as a new-fledged and inexperienced
teacher have been afraid to tamper with the doctrines handed down by great
and famous bishops, and that you have been loth to draw men into a better path
lest you should cast discredit on the dead," do you not imply that in
refusing to agree with you the objects of your solicitude are but preferring
the tradition of great and famous bishops to the views of a new-fledged and
inexperienced teacher? Of their conduct in the matter I say nothing, but I
am most anxious to learn that "mode of expression which is truth itself," not
the thing expressed, but the mode of expression.
5. For
you have made it sufficiently plain to me that you disapprove of those who
assert that men's
souls are
derived from that of the protoplast[1] and
propagated from one generation to another; but as your letter does not inform
me, I have no means of knowing on what grounds and from what passages of scripture
you have shewn this view to be false. What does commend itself to you is not
clear either from your letter to the brothers at Caesarea or from that which
you have lately addressed to me. Only I see that you believe and write that "God
has been, is, and will be the maker of men, and that there is nothing either
in heaven or on earth which does not owe its existence wholly to Him." This
is of course a truism which nobody can call in question. But as you affirm
that souls are not propagated, you ought to explain out of what God makes them.
Is it out of some pre-existing material, or is it out of nothing? For it is
impossible that you should hold the opinion of Origen, Priscillian, and other
heretics that it is for deeds done in a former life that souls are confined
in earthly and mortal bodies. This opinion is, indeed, flatly contradicted
by the apostle who says of Jacob and Esau that before they were born they had
done neither good nor evil.[2] Your view of the matter, then, is known to me
though only partially, but of your reasons for supposing it to be true I know
nothing. This was why in a former letter I asked you to send me your confession
of faith, the one which you were vexed to find that one of your presbyters
had signed dishonestly. I now again ask you for this, as well as for any passages
of scripture which you have brought to bear on the question. For you say in
your letter to the brothers at Caesarea that you "have resolved to have
all definitions of dogma reviewed by lay judges, sitting by general invitation,
and investigating all points touching the faith." And you continue: "the
divine mercy has made it possible for them to put forward their views in a
positive and definite form, which your modest ability has reinforced with a
great weight of evidence." Now it is this "great weight of evidence" which
I am so anxious to obtain. For, so far as I can see, your one aim has been
to refute your opponents when they deny that our souls are the handiwork of
God. If they hold such a view, you are right in thinking that it should be
condemned. Were they to say the same thing of our bodies, they would be forced
to retract it, or else be held up to execration. For what Christian can deny
that every single human body is the work of God? Yet when we admit that they
are of divine origin we do not mean to deny that they are humanly engendered.
When therefore it is asserted that our souls are procreated from a kind of
immaterial seed, and that they, like our bodies, come to us from our parents,
yet are made souls by the working of God, it is not by human guesses that the
assertion is to be refuted, but by the witness of divine scripture. Numbers
of passages may indeed be quoted from the sacred books which have canonical
authority, to prove that our souls are God's handiwork. But such passages only
refute those who deny that each several human soul is made by God; not at all
those who while they admit this contend that, like our bodies, they are formed
by divine agency through the instrumentality of parents. To refute these you
must look for unmistakable texts; or, if you have already discovered such,
shew your affection by communicating them to me. For though I seek them most
diligently I fail to find them.
As stated
shortly by yourself (at the end of your letter to the brothers at Caesarea)
your dilemma is as
follows: "inasmuch
as I am your son and disciple and have but recently by God's help come to
consider these mysteries, I beg
you with your priestly wisdom to teach me which of two opposite views I ought
to hold. Am I to maintain that souls are transmitted by generation, and that
they are derived in some mysterious way from Adam our first-formed father?[1]
Or am I with your brothers and the priests who are here to hold that God has
been, is, and will be the author and maker of all things and all men?"
6. Of
the two alternatives which you thus put forward you wish to be urged to choose
one or other; and
this
would be the course of wisdom if your alternatives
were so contrary that the choice of one would involve the rejection of the
other. But as it is, instead of selecting one of them a man may say that they
are both true. He may maintain that the souls of all mankind are derived from
Adam our first-formed father, and yet believe and assert that God has been,
is, and will be the author and maker of all things and all men. How on your
principles is such a man to be confuted? Shall we say: "If they are transmitted
by generation God is not their author, for He does not make them?" In
that case he will reply: "Bodies too are engendered and not made by God;
on your shewing, then He is not their author." Will any one maintain that
God is the maker of no bodies but Adam's which He made out of the dust and
Eve's which He formed out of Adam's side; and that other bodies are not made
by Him because they are engendered by human parents?
7. If
your opponents go so far in maintaining the derivation of souls as to deny
that they are made
and
formed by God, you may use this argument as a weapon
to confute them so far as God's help enables you. But if, while they assert
that the soul's beginnings come from Adam first and then from a man's parents,
they at the same time hold that the soul in every man is created and formed
by God the author of all things, they can only be confuted out of scripture.
Search therefore till you find a passage that is neither obscure nor capable
of a double meaning; or if you have already found one, hand it on to me as
I have begged you to do. But if, like myself, you have so far failed to discover
any such passage, you must still strain every nerve to confute those who say
that souls are in no sense God's handiwork. This seems to be your opponents'
position, for in your first letter you write that "they have secretly
whispered scandalous doctrines and have forsaken your communion and the obedience
of the church on account of this foolish, nay impious opinion." Against
such men defend and uphold by every possible expedient the doctrine you have
laid down in the same letter, that God has been, is, and will be the maker
of souls; and that everything in heaven and on earth owes its existence wholly
to Him. For this is true of every creature; and as such is to be believed,
asserted, defended, and proved. God has been, is, and will be the author and
maker of all things and all men as you have told your fellow-bishops of the
province of Caesarea, exhorting them to adopt the doctrine by the example of
your brothers and fellow-priests. But there are two quite distinct dilemmas:(1)
Is God the author and maker of all souls and bodies (the true view), or is
there something in nature which He has not made (a view which is wholly erroneous)?(2)
If souls are undoubtedly God's handiwork, does He make them directly, or indirectly
by propagation? It is in dealing with this second dilemma that I would have
you to be sober and vigilant. Else in refuting the propagation-theory you may
fall incautiously into the heresy of Pelagius. Everybody knows that human bodies
are propagated by generation; yet if we are right in saying that all human
souls--and not only those of Adam and Eve--are created by God, it is clear
that to assert their transmission by generation is not to deny their divine
origin. For in this view God makes the soul as He makes the body, indirectly
by a process of generation. If the truth condemns this as an error, some fresh
argument must be sought to confute it. No persons could better advise you on
the point (if only they were within reach) than those dead worthies whom you
feared to discredit by drawing men away from them into a better path. They
were, you said, great and famous bishops while you were a new-fledged and inexperienced
teacher; thus you were loth to tamper with their doctrines. Would that I could
know on what passages these great men rested their opinion that souls are transmitted!
For in your letter to the brothers at Caesarea, you speak of their view with
a total disregard of their authority, as a new invention, an unheard-of doctrine;
though we all know that, error as it may be, it is no novelty but old and of
ancient date.
8. Now
when we have reason to be doubtful about a point, we need not doubt that
we are right in doubting.
There is no doubt but that we ought to doubt
things that are doubtful. For instance, the Apostle has no doubt about doubting
whether he was in the body or out of the body when he was carried up into the
third heaven.[1] Whether it was thus or thus, he says, I know not; God knows.
Why may not I, then, so long as I have no light, doubt whether my soul comes
to me by generation or unengendered? Why may I not be doubtful about this,
so long as I do not doubt that in either case it is the work of God most high?
Why may I not say; "I know that my soul owes its existence to God and
is altogether His handiwork; but whether it comes by generation, as the body
does, or unengendered, as was Adam's soul, I know not; God knows." You
wish me to assert positively one view or the other. I might do so if I knew
which was right. You may have some light on the point, and if so you will find
me keener to learn what I know not than to teach what I know. But if, like
myself, you are in the dark, you should pray, as I do, that either through
one of His servants, or with His own lips, He would teach us who said to His
disciples: "Be not ye called masters; for one is your master, even Christ."[1]
Yet such knowledge is only expedient for us when He knows it to be expedient
who knows both what He has to teach and what we ought to learn. Nevertheless,
to you, my dear friend, I confess my eagerness. Still much as I desire to know
this after which you seek, I would sooner know when the desire of all nations
shall come and when the kingdom of the saints will be set up, than how my soul
has come to its earthly abode. But when His disciples (who are our apostles)
put this question to the all-knowing Christ, they were told: "It is not
yours to know the times or the seasons which the Father hath put in His own
power."[2] What if Christ, who knows what is expedient for us, knows this
knowledge not to be expedient? Through Him I know that it is not ours to know
the times which God has placed in His own power; but concerning the origin
of souls, I am ignorant whether it is or is not ours to know. If I could be
sure that such knowledge is not for us, I should cease not only to dogmatize,
but even to inquire. As it is, though the subject is so deep and dark that
my fear of becoming a rash teacher is almost greater than my eagerness to learn
the truth, I still wish to know it if I can do so. It may be that the knowledge
for which the psalmist prays: "Lord, make me to know mine end,"[3]
is much more necessary; yet I would that my beginning also might be revealed
to me.
9. But
even as touching this I must not be ungrateful to my Master. I know that
the human soul is
spiritual
not corporeal, that it is endowed with reason
and intelligence, and that it is not of God's essence but a thing created.
It is both mortal and immortal: the first because it is subject to corruption
and separable from the life of God in which it is alone blessed, the second
because its consciousness must ever continue and form the source of its happiness
or woe. It does not, it is true, owe its immersion in the flesh to acts done
before the flesh; yet in man it is never without sin, not even when "its
life has been but for one day."[4] Of those engendered of the seed of
Adam no man is born without sin, and it is necessary even for babes to be born
anew in Christ by the grace of regeneration. All this I know concerning the
soul and it is much; the greater part of it, indeed is not only knowledge but
matter of faith as well. I rejoice to have learned it all and I can truly say
that I know it. If there are things of which I am still ignorant (as whether
God creates souls by generation or apart from it--for that He does create them
I have no doubt) I would sooner know the truth than: be ignorant of it. But
so long as I cannot know it I had rather suspend my judgment than assert what
is plainly contrary to an indisputable truth.
10. You, my brother, ask me to decide for you whether men's souls as made
by the Creator come like their bodies by generation from Adam, or whether like
his soul they are made without generation and separately for each individual.
For in one way or the other we both admit that they are God's handiwork. Suffer
me then in turn to ask you a question. Can a soul derive original sin from
a source from which it is not itself derived? For unless we are to fall into
the detestable heresy of Pelagius, we must both of us allow that all souls
do derive original sin from Adam. And if you cannot answer my question, pray
give me leave to confess my ignorance alike of your question and of my own.
But if you already know what I ask, teach me and then I will teach you what
you wish to know. Pray do not be displeased with me for taking this line, for
though I have given you no positive answer to your question, I have shewn you
how you ought to put it. When once you are clear about that, you may be quite
positive where you have been doubtful.[1]
This much I have thought it right to write to your holiness seeing that you
are so sure that the transmission of souls is a doctrine to be rejected. Had
I been writing to maintainers of the doctrine I might perhaps have shewn how
ignorant they are of what they fancy they know and how cautious they should
be not to make rash assertions.
It may perhaps perplex you that in my friend's answer as I have quoted it
in this letter he mentions two letters of mine to which he has no time to reply.
Only one of these deals with the problem of the soul;[2] in the other I have
asked light on another difficulty.[3] Again when he urges me to take more pains
for the removal from the church of a most pernicious heresy, he alludes to
the error of the Pelagians which I earnestly beg you, my brother, at all hazards
to avoid. In speculating or arguing on the origin of the soul you must never
give place to this heresy with its insidious suggestions. For there is no soul,
save that of the one Mediator, which does not derive original sin from Adam.
Original sin is that which is fastened on the soul at its birth and from which
it can only be freed by being born again.
LETTER CXLV.
TO EXUPERANTIUS.
Jerome advises Exuperantius, a Korean soldier, to come to Bethlehem and with
his brother Quintilian to become a monk. According to Palladius (H. L. c. lxxx.)
Exuperantius came to Jerome but went away again unable to endure his violence
and ill-will.' The date of the letter is unknown.
Among all the favours that my friendship with the reverend brother Quintilian
has conferred upon me the greatest is this that he has introduced me in the
spirit to you whom I do not know personally. Who can fail to love a man who,
while he wears the cloak and uniform of a soldier does the work of a prophet,
and while his outer man gives promise of quite a different character, overcomes
this by the inner man which is formed after the image of the creator. I come
forward therefore to challenge you to an interchange of letters and beg that
you will often give me occasion to reply to you that I may for the future feel
less constraint in writing.
For the
present I will content myself by suggesting to your discretion that you should
bear in mind
the
apostle's words: "Art thou bound unto a wife?
Seek not to be loosed. Art thou loosed from a wife? Seek not a wife;"[1]
that is, seek not that binding which is contrary to loosing. He who has contracted
the obligations of marriage, is bound, and he who is bound is a slave; on the
other hand he who is loosed is free. Since therefore you rejoice in the freedom
of Christ, since your life is better than your profession, since you are all
but on the housetop of which the Saviour speaks; you ought not to come down
to take your clothes,[2] you ought not to look behind you, you ought not having
put your hand to the plough, then to let it go.[3] Rather, if you can, imitate
Joseph and leave your garment in the hand of your Egyptian mistress,[4] that
naked you may follow your Lord and Saviour. For in the gospel He says: "Whosoever
doth not leave all that he hath and bear his cross and come after me cannot
be my disciple."[5] Cast from you the burthen of the things of this world,
and seek not those riches which in the gospel are compared to the humps[1]
of camels. Naked and unencumbered fly up to heaven; masses of gold will but
impede the wings of your virtue. I do not speak thus because I know you to
be covetous, but because I have a notion that your object in remaining so long
in the army is to fill that purse which the Lord has commanded you to empty.
For they who have possessions and riches are bidden to sell all that they have
and to give to the poor and then to follow the Saviour.[2] Thus if your worship
is rich already you ought to fulfil the command and sell your riches; or if
you are still poor you ought not to amass what you will have to pay away. Christ
accepts the sacrifices made for him[3] according as he who makes them has a
willing mind. Never were any men poorer than the apostles; yet never any left
more for the Lord than they. The poor widow in the gospel who cast but two
mites into the treasury was set before all the men of wealth because she gave
all that she had.[4] So it should be with you. Seek not for wealth which you
will have to pay away; but rather give up that which you have already acquired
that Christ may know his new recruit to be brave and resolute, and then when
you are a great way off His Father will run with joy to meet you. He will give
you a robe, will put a ring upon your finger. and will kill for you the fatted
calf.[3] Then when you are freed from all encumbrances God will soon make a
way for you to cross the sea to me with your reverend brother Quintilian. I
have now knocked at the door of friendship: if you open it to me you will find
me a frequent visitor.
LETTER CXLVI.
TO EVANGELUS.
Jerome refutes the opinion of those who make deacons equal to presbyters,
but in doing so himself makes presbyters equal to bishops.
The date of the letter is unknown.
1. We
read in Isaiah the words, "the fool will speak folly,"[6]
and I am told that some one has been mad enough to put deacons before presbyters,
that is, before bishops. For when the apostle clearly teaches that presbyters
are the same as bishops, must not a i mere server of tables and of widows[7]
be insane to set himself up arrogantly over men through whose prayers the body
and blood of Christ are produced?[8] Do you ask for proof of what I say? Listen
to this passage: "Paul and Timotheus, the servants of Jesus Christ, to
all the saints in Christ Jesus which are at Philippi with the bishops and deacons."[1]
Do you wish for another instance? In the Acts of the Apostles Paul thus speaks
to the priests[2] of a single church: "Take heed unto yourselves and to
all the flock, in the which the Holy Ghost hath made you bishops, to feed the
church of God which He purchased with His own blood."[3] And lest any
should in a spirit of contention argue that there must then have been more
bishops than one in a single church, there is the following passage which clearly
proves a bishop and a presbyter to be the same. Writing to Titus the apostle
says: "For this cause left I thee in Crete, that thou shouldest set in
order the things that are wanting, and ordain presbyters[4] in every city,
as I had appointed thee: if any be blameless, the husband of one wife, having
faithful children not accused of riot or unruly. For a bishop must be blameless
as the steward of God."[6] And to Timothy he says: "Neglect not the
gift that is in thee, which was given thee by prophecy, with the laying on
of the hands of the presbytery."[6] Peter also says in his first epistle: "The
presbyters which are among you I exhort, who am your fellow-presbyter and a
witness of the sufferings of Christ and also a partaker of the glory that shall
be revealed: feed the flock of Christ' ... taking the oversight thereof not
by constraint but willingly, according unto God."[3] In the Greek the
meaning is still plainer, for the word used is <greek>episkopountes</greek>,
that is to say, overseeing, and this is the origin of the name overseer or
bishop.[9] But perhaps the testimony of these great men seems to you insufficient.
If so, then listen to the blast of the gospel trumpet, that son of thunder,[10]
the disciple whom Jesus loved[11] and who reclining on the Saviour's breast
drank in the waters of sound doctrine. One of his letters begins thus: "The
presbyter unto the elect lady and her children whom I love in the truth; "[12]
and another thus: "The presbyter unto the well-beloved Gains whom I love
in the truth."[13] When subsequently one presbyter was chosen to preside
over the rest, this was done to remedy schism and to prevent each individual
from rending the church of Christ by drawing t to himself. For even at Alexandria
from the time of Mark the Evangelist until the episcopates of Heraclas and
Dionysius the presbyters always named as bishop one of their own number chosen
by themselves and set in a more exalted position, just as an army elects a
general, or as deacons appoint one of themselves whom they know to be diligent
and call him archdeacon. For what function excepting ordination, belongs to
a bishop that does not also belong to a presbyter? It is not the case that
there is one church at Rome and another in all the world beside. Gaul and Britain,
Africa and Persia, India and the East worship one Christ and observe one rule
of truth. If you ask for authority, the world outweighs its capital.[1] Wherever
there is a bishop, whether it be at Rome or at Engubium, whether it be at Constantinople
or at Rhegium, whether it be at Alexandria or at Zoan, his dignity is one and
his priesthood is one. Neither the command of wealth nor the lowliness of poverty
makes him more a bishop or less a bishop. All alike are successors of the apostles.[2]
2. But
you will say, how comes it then that at Rome a presbyter is only ordained
on the recommendation
of
a deacon? To which I reply as follows. Why do you
bring forward a custom which exists in one city only? Why do you oppose to
the laws of the Church a paltry exception which has given rise to arrogance
and pride? The rarer anything is the more it is sought after. In India pennyroyal
is more costly than pepper. Their fewness makes deacons persons of consequence[3]
while presbyters are less thought of owing to their great numbers. But even
in the church of Rome the deacons stand while the presbyters seat themselves,
although bad habits have by degrees so far crept in that I have seen a deacon,
in the absence of the bishop, seat himself among the presbyters and at social
gatherings give his blessing to them? Those who act thus must learn that they
are wrong and must give heed to the apostles' words: "it is not reason
that we should leave the word of God and serve tables."[5] They must consider
the reasons which led to the appointment of deacons at the beginning. They
must read the Acts of the Apostles and bear in mind their true position.
Of the names presbyter and bishop the first denotes age, the second rank.
In writing both to Titus and to Timothy the apostle speaks of the ordination
of bishops and of deacons, but says not a word of the ordination of presbyters;
for the fact is that the word bishops includes presbyters also. Again when
a man is promoted it is from a lower place to a higher. Either then a presbyter
should be ordained a deacon, from the lesser office, that is, to the more important,
to prove that a presbyter is inferior to a deacon; or if on the other hand
it is the deacon that is ordained presbyter, this latter should recognize that,
although he may be less highly paid than a deacon, he is superior to him in
virtue of his priesthood. In fact as if to tell us that the traditions handed
down by the apostles were taken by them from the old testament, bishops, presbyters
and deacons occupy in the church the same positions as those which were occupied
by Aaron, his sons, and the Levites in the temple.[1]
LETTER CXLVII.
TO SABINIANUS.
Jerome writes in severe but moderate language to Sabinianus, a deacon, calling
on him to repent of his sins. Of these he recounts at length the two most serious,
an act of adultery at Rome and an attempt to seduce a nun at Bethlehem. The
date of the letter is uncertain.
1. Of
old, when it had repented the Lord that he had anointed Saul to be king over
Israel,[2] we
are told
that Samuel mourned for him; and again, when Paul
heard that there was fornication among the Corinthians and such fornication
as was not so much as named among the gentiles,[3] he besought them to repent
with these tearful words: "lest, when I come again, my God will humble
me among you and that I shall bewail many which have sinned already and have
not repented of the uncleanness and fornication and lasciviousness which they
have committed.''[4] If an apostle or a prophet, themselves immaculate, could
speak thus with a clemency embracing all, how much more earnestly should a
sinner like me plead with a sinner like you. You have fallen and refuse to
rise; you do not so much as lift your eyes to heaven; having wasted your father's
substance you take pleasure in rite husks that the swine eat;[5] and climbing
the precipice of pride you fall headlong into the deep. You make your belly
your God instead of Christ; you are a slave to lust; your glory is in your
shame;[6] you fatten yourself like a victim for the slaughter, and imitate
the lives of the wicked, careless of their doom. "Thou knowest not that
the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance. But after thy hardness and
impenitent heart thou treasurest up unto thyself wrath against the day of wrath."[7]
Or is it that your heart is hardened, as Pharaoh's was, because your punishment
is deferred and you are not smitten at the moment? The ten plagues were sent
upon Pharaoh not as by an angry God but as by a warning father, and his day
of grace was prolonged until he repented of his repentance. Yet doom overtook
him when he pursued through the wilderness the people whom he had previously
let go and presumed to enter the very sea in the eagerness of his pursuit.
For only in this one way could he learn the lesson that He is to be dreaded
whom even the elements obey. He had said: "I know not the Lord, neither
will I let Israel go;"[1] and you imitate him when you say: "The
vision that he seeth is for many days to come, and he prophesieth of the times
that are far off."[2] Yet the same prophet confutes you with these words: "Thus
saith the Lord God, There shall none of my words be prolonged any more, but
the word which I have spoken shall be done." David too says of the godless
(and of godlessness you have proved yourself not a slight but an eminent example),
that in this world they rejoice in good fortune and say: "How doth God
know? And is there knowledge in the Most High? Behold these are the ungodly
who prosper in the world; they increase in riches."[3] Then almost losing
his footing and staggering where he stands he complains, saying "Verily
I have cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hands in innocency."[4]
For he had previously said: "I was envious at the foolish, when I saw
the prosperity of the wicked. For they have no regard for death,[1] but their
strength is firm. They are not in trouble as other men are; neither are they
plagued like other men. Therefore pride compasseth them about as a chain; violence
covereth them as a garment. Their eyes stand out with fatness: they have more
than heart could wish. They are corrupt, and speak wickedly concerning oppression:
they speak loftily. They set their mouth against the heavens, and their tongue
walketh through the earth."[5]
2. Does
not this whole psalm seem to you to be written of yourself? Certainly you
are hale and strong;
and
like a new apostle of Antichrist, when you are
found out in one city, you pass to another.[6] You are in no need of money,
no crushing blow strikes you down, neither are you plagued as other men who
are not like you mere brute beasts. Therefore you are lifted up into pride,
and lust covers you as a garment. Out of your fat and bloated carcass you breathe
out words fraught with death. You never consider that you must some day die,
nor feel the slightest repentance when you have satisfied your lust. You have
more than heart can wish; and, not to be alone in your wrongdoing, you invent
scandals concerning those who are God's servants. Though you know it not, it
is against the most High that you are speaking iniquity and against the heavens
that you are setting your mouth. It is no wonder that God's servants small
and great are blasphemed by you, when your fathers did not scruple to call
even the master of the house Beelzebub. "The disciple is not above his
master nor the servant above his lord."[1] If they did this with the green
tree, what will you do with me, the dry?[2] Much in the same way also the offended
believers in the book of Malachi gave expression to feelings like yours; for
they said, "It is vain to serve God: and what profit is it that we have
kept his ordinance, and that we have walked mournfully before the Lord of Hosts?
And now we call the proud happy; yea, they that work wickedness are set up;
yea, they that tempt God are even delivered." Yet the Lord afterwards
threatens them with a day of judgment; and announcing beforehand the distinction
that shall then be made between the righteous and the unrighteous, speaks to
them thus: "Return ye,[3] and discern between the righteous and the wicked,
between him that serveth God and him that serveth him not."[4]
3. All
this may perhaps seem to you matter for jesting, seeing that you take so
much pleasure in
comedies
and lyrics and mimes like those of Lentulus;[5]
although so blunted is your wit that I am not disposed to allow that you can
understand even language so simple. You may treat the words of prophets with
contempt, but Amos will still make answer to you: "Thus saith the Lord,
For three transgressions and for four shall I not turn away from him? "[6]
For inasmuch as Damascus, Gaza, Tyre, Edom, the Ammonites and the Moabites,
the Jews also and the children of Israel, although God had often prophesied
to them to turn and to repent, had refused to hear His voice, the Lord wishing
to shew that He had most just cause for the wrath that he was going to bring
upon them used the words already quoted, "For three transgressions and
for four shall I not turn away from them?" It is wicked, God says, to
harbour evil thoughts; yet I have allowed them to do so. It is still more wicked
to carry them out; yet in My mercy and kindness I have permitted even this.
But should the sinful thought have become the sinful deed? Should men in their
pride have trampled thus on my tenderness? Nevertheless "I have no pleasure
in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live; "[1]
and as it is not they that are whole who need a physician but they that are
sick,[2] even after his sin I hold out a hand to the prostrate sinner and exhort
him, polluted as he is in his own blood,[3] to wash away his stains with tears
of penitence. But if even then he shews himself unwilling to repent, and if,
after he has suffered shipwreck, he refuses to clutch the plank which alone
can save him, I am compelled at last to say: "Thus saith the Lord, For
three transgressions and for four shall I not turn away from him?" For
this "turning away" God accounts a punishment, inasmuch as the sinner
is left to his own devices. It is thus that he visits the sins of the fathers
upon the children unto the third and fourth generation;[4] not punishing those
who sin immediately but pardoning their first offences and only passing sentence
on them for their last. For if it were otherwise and if God were to stand forth
on the moment as the avenger of iniquity, the church would lose many of its
saints; and certainly would be deprived of the apostle Paul. The prophet Ezekiel,
from whom we have quoted above, repeating God's words spoken to himself speaks
thus: "Open thy mouth and eat what I shall give thee. And behold," he
says, "an hand was sent unto me; and, lo, a roll of a book was therein;
and he spread it before me; and it was written within and without: and there
was written therein lamentations, and a song, and woe."[5] The first of
these three belongs to you if you prove willing, as a sinner, to repent of
your sins. The second belongs to those who are holy, who are called upon to
sing praises to God; for praise does not become a sinner's mouth. And the third
belongs to persons like you who in despair have given themselves over to uncleanness,
to fornication, to the belly, and to the lowest lusts; men who suppose that
death ends all and that there is nothing beyond it; who say: "When the
overflowing scourge shall pass through it shall not come unto us.''[6] The
book which the prophet eats is the whole series of the Scriptures, which in
turn bewail the penitent, celebrate the righteous, and curse the desperate.
For nothing is so displeasing to God as an impenitent heart. Impenitence is
the one sin for which there is no forgiveness. For if one who ceases to sin
is pardoned even after he has sinned, and if prayer has power to bend the judge;
it follows that every impenitent sinner must provoke his judge to wrath. Thus
despair is the one sin for which there is no remedy. By obstinate rejection
of God's grace men turn His mercy into sternness and severity. Yet, that you
may know that God does every day call sinners to repentance, hear Isaiah's
Words: "In that day," he says, "did the Lord God of Hosts call
to weeping and to mourning and to baldness and to girding with sackcloth: and
behold joy and gladness, slaying oxen, and killing sheep, eating flesh, and
drinking wine; let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we shall die." After
these words filled with the recklessness of despair the Scripture goes on to
say: "And it was revealed in my ears by the Lord of Hosts, Surely this
iniquity shall not be purged from you till ye die."[1] Only when they
become dead to sin, will their sin be forgiven them. For, so long as they live
in sin, it cannot be put away.
4. Have mercy I beseech you upon your soul. Consider that God's judgment will
one day overtake you. Remember by what a bishop you were ordained. The holy
man was mistaken in his choice; but this he might well be. For even God repented
that he had anointed Saul to be king.[2] Even among the twelve apostles Judas
was found a traitor. And Nicolas of Antioch--a deacon like yourself[3] --disseminated
the Nicolaitan heresy and all manner of uncleanness.[4] I do not now bring
up to you the many virgins whom you are said to have seduced, or the noble
matrons who have suffered death[5] because violated by you, or the greedy profligacy
with which you have hied through dens of sin. For grave and serious as such
sins are in themselves, they are trivial indeed when compared with those which
I have now to narrate. How great must be the sin beside which seduction and
adultery are insignificant? Miserable wretch that you are! when you enter the
cave wherein the Son of God was born, where truth sprang out of the earth and
the land did yield her increase,[6] it is to make an assignation. Have you
no fear that the babe will cry from the manger, that the newly delivered virgin
will see you, that the mother of the Lord will behold you? The angels cry aloud,
the shepherds run, the star shines down from heaven, the wise men worship,
Herod is terrified, Jerusalem is in confusion, and meantime you creep into
a virgin's cell to seduce the virgin to whom it belongs. I am filled with consternation
and a shiver runs through me, soul and body, when I try to set before your
eyes the deed that you have done. The whole church was keeping vigil by night
and proclaiming Christ as its Lord; m one spirit though in different tongues
the praises of God were being sung. Yet you were squeezing your love-notes
into the openings of what is now the altar, as it was once the manger, of the
Lord, choosing this place in order that your unhappy victim might find and
read them when she came to kneel and worship there. Then you took your place
among the singers, and with impudent nods communicated your passion to her.
5. Oh! crying shame! I can go no farther. For sobs anticipate my words, and
indignation and grief choke me in the act of utterance. Oh! for the sea of
Tully's eloquence! Oh! for the impetuous current of the invective of Demosthenes!
Yet in this case I am sure you would both be dumb; your eloquence would fail
you. A deed has been disclosed which no rhetoric can explain; a crime has been
discovered which no mime can represent, nor jester play, nor comedian describe.[1]
It is usual in the monasteries of Egypt and Syria for virgins and widows who
have vowed themselves to God and have renounced the world and have trodden
under foot its pleasures, to ask the mothers of their communities to cut their
hair; not that afterwards they go about with heads uncovered in defiance of
the apostle's command,[2] for they wear a close-fitting cap and a veil. No
one knows of this in any single case except the shearers and the shorn, but
as the practice is universal, it is almost universally known. The custom has
in fact become a second nature. It is designed to save those who take no baths
and whose heads and faces are strangers to all unguents, from accumulated dirt
and from the tiny creatures which are sometimes generated about the roots of
the hair.
6. Let us see then, my good friend, how you acted in these surroundings. You
promised to marry your unhappy victim; and then in that venerable cave you
took from her, either as securities for her fidelity or as a pledge of the
engagement, some locks of hair, some handkerchiefs, and a girdle, swearing
at the same time that you would never love another as you loved her. Then you
ran to the place where the shepherds were watching their flocks when they heard
the angels singing over head, and there again you plighted your troth. I say
no more; I do not accuse you of kissing her or of embracing her. Although I
believe that there is nothing of which you are not capable, still the sacred
character of stable and field forbids me to suppose you guilty except in will
and determination. Unhappy man! When you first stood beside the virgin in the
cave, surely a mist must have dimmed your eyes, your tongue must have been
paralysed, your arms must have fallen to your sides, your chest must have heaved,
your gait must have become unsteady. She had assumed the bridal-veil of Christ
in the basilica of the apostle Peter and had vowed to live henceforth in the
monastery, in the spots consecrated by the Lord's Cross, His Resurrection,
and His Ascension; and yet after all this you dared to accept that hair, which
at Christ's command she had cut off in the cave of His birth, as a token of
her readiness to sleep with you. Again you used to sit beneath her window from
the evening till the morning; and because owing to its height you could not
come to close quarters with her, you conveyed things to her and she in her
turn to you by the aid of a cord. How careful the lady superior must have been
is shewn by the fact that you never saw the virgin except in church; and that,
although both of you had the same inclination, you could find no means of conversing
with each other except at a window under cover of night. As I was afterwards
told you used to be quite sorry when the sun rose. Your face looked bloodless,
shrunken, and pale; and to remove all suspicion, you used to be for ever reading
Christ's gospel as if you were a deacon indeed.[1] I and others used to attribute
your paleness to fasting, and to admire your bloodless lips--so unlike the
brilliant colour which they generally shewed--in the belief that they were
caused by frequent vigils. You were already preparing ladders to fetch the
unhappy virgin from her cell; you had already arranged your route, ordered
vessels, settled a day, and thought out the details of your flight, when, behold,
the angel who kept the door of Mary's chamber, who watched over the cradle
of the Lord and who bore in his arms the infant Christ, in whose presence you
had committed these great sins, himself and none other, betrayed you.
7. Oh! my unlucky eyes! Oh! day worthy of the most solemn curse, on which
with utter consternation I read your letters, the contents of which I am forced
to remember still! What obscenities they contained! What blandishments! What
exultant triumph in the prospect of the virgin's dishonour. A deacon should
not have even known such things, much less should he have spoken of them. Unhappy
man! where can you have learned them, you who used to boast that you had been
reared in the church. It is true, however, that in these letters you swear
that you have never led a chaste life and that you are not really a deacon.
If you try to disown them your own handwriting will convict you, and the very
letters will cry out against you. But meantime you may make what you can of
your sin, for what you have written is so foul that I cannot bring it up as
evidence against you.
8. You
threw yourself down at my knees, you prostrated yourself, you begged me--I
use your own
words--to spare "your half-pint of blood." Oh!
miserable wretch! you thought nothing of God's judgment, and feared no vengeance
but mine. I forgave you, I admit; what else being a Christian could I do? I
urged you to repent, to wear sackcloth, to roll in ashes, to seek seclusion,
to live in a monastery, to implore God's mercy with constant tears. You however
showed yourself a pillar of confidence, and excited as you were by the viper's
sting you became to me a deceitful bow; you shot at me arrows of reviling.
I am become your enemy because I tell you the truth.[1] I do not complain of
your calumnies; everyone knows that you only praise men as infamous as yourself.
What I lament is that you do not lament yourself, that you do not realize that
you are dead, that, like a gladiator ready for Libitina,[2] you deck yourself
out for your own funeral. You wear not sackcloth but linen, you load your fingers
with rings, you use toothpowder for your teeth, you arrange the stray hairs
on your brown skull to the best advantage. Your bull's neck bulges out with
fat and droops no whit because it has given way to lust. Moreover you are redolent
of perfume, you go from one bath to another, you wage war[3] against the hair
that grows in spite of you, you walk through the forum and the streets a spruce
and smooth-faced rake. Your face has become the face of a harlot: you know
not how to blush.[4] Return, unhappy man, to the Lord, and He will return to
you.[5] Repent, and He will repent of the evil that He has purposed to bring
upon you.
9. Why
is it that you disregard your own scars and try to defame others? Why is
it that when I
give you the
best advice you attack me like a madman? It
may be that I am as infamous as you publicly proclaim; in that case you can
at least repent as heartily as I do. It may be that I am as great a sinner
as you make me out; if so, you can at least imitate a sinner's tears. Are my
sins your virtues? Or does it alleviate your misery that many are in the same
plight as yourself? Let a few tears fall on the silk and fine linen which make
you so resplendent. Realize that you: are naked, torn, unclean, a beggar.[1]
It is never too late to repent.[2] You may have gone down from Jerusalem and
may have been wounded on the way; yet the Samaritan will set you upon his beast,
and will bring you to the inn and will take care of you.[3] Even if you are
lying in your grave, the Lord will raise you though your flesh may stink.[4]
At least imitate those blind men for whose sake the Saviour left His home and
heritage and came to Jericho. They were sitting in darkness and in the shadow
of death when the light shone upon them."[5] For when they learned that
it was the Lord who was passing by they began to cry out saying: "Thou
Son of David, have mercy on us."[6] You too will have your sight restored;
if you cry to Him, and cast away your filthy garments at His call.[7] "When
thou shalt turn and bewail thyself then shalt thou be saved, and then shalt
thou know where thou hast hitherto been."[8] Let Him but touch your scars
and pass his hands over your eyeballs; and although you may have been born
blind from the womb and although your mother may have conceived you in sin,
he will purge you with hyssop and you shall be clean, he will wash you and
you shall be whiter than snow.[9] Why is it that you are bowed together and
bent down to the ground, why is it that you are still prostrate in the mire?
She whom Satan had bound for eighteen years came to the Saviour; and being
cured by Him was made straight so that she could once more look up towards
heaven.[10] God says to you what He said to Cain: "Thou hast sinned: hold
thy peace."[11] Why do you flee from the face of God and dwell in the
land of Nod? Why do you struggle in the waves[12] when you can plant your feet
upon the rock? See to it that Phinehas does not thrust you through with his
spear while you are committing fornication with the Midianitish woman.[13]
Amnon did not spare Tamar,[14] and you her brother and kinsman in the faith
have had no mercy upon this virgin. But why is it that when you have defiled
her you change into an Absalom and desire to kill a David who mourns over your
rebellion and spiritual death? The blood of Naboth[15] cries out against you.
The vineyard also of Jezreel, that is, of God's seed, demands due vengeance
upon you, seeing that you have turned it into a garden of pleasures and made
it a seed-bed of lust. God sends you an Elijah to tell you of torment and of
death. Bow yourself down therefore and put on sackcloth for a little while;
then perhaps the Lord will say of you what He said of Ahab: "Seest thou
how Ahab humbleth himself before me? Because he humbleth himself before me,[1]
I will not bring the evil in his days."
10. But
possibly you flatter yourself that since the bishop who has made you a deacon
is a holy man, his
merits
will atone for your transgressions. I have
already told you that the father is not punished for the son nor the son for
the father. "The soul that sinneth it shall die."[2] Samuel too had
sons who forsook the fear of the Lord and "turned aside after lucre" and
iniquity.[3] Eli also was a holy priest, but he had sons of whom we read in
the Hebrew that they lay with the women that assembled at the door of the tabernacle
of God, and that like you they shamelessly claimed for themselves the right
to minister in His sanctuary.[4] Wherefore the tabernacle itself was overthrown
and the holy place made desolate by reason of the sins of those who were God's
priests. And even Eli himself offended God by shewing too great leniency to
his sons; therefore, so far from the righteousness of your bishop being able
to deliver you, it is rather to be feared that your wickedness may hurl him
from his seat and that falling on his back like Eli he may perish irretrievably.[5]
If the Levite Uzzah was smitten merely because he tried to hold up from falling
the ark which it was his special province to carry;[6] what punishment, think
you, will be inflicted upon you who have tried to overthrow the Lord's ark
when standing firm? The more estimable the bishop is who ordained you, the
more detestable are you who have disappointed the expectations of so good a
man. His long ignorance of your misdoings is indeed easy to account for; as
it generally happens that we are the last to know the scandals which affect
our homes, and are ignorant of the sins of our children and wives even when
our neighbors talk of nothing else. At all events all Italy was aware of your
evil life; and it was everywhere a subject of lamentation that you should still
stand before the altar of Christ. For you had neither the cunning nor the forethought
to conceal your vices. So hot were you, so lecherous, and so wanton, so entirely
under the sway of this and that caprice of self-indulgence, that, not content
with satisfying your passions, you gloried in each intrigue as a triumph and
emerged from it bearing palms of victory.
11. Once more the fire of unchastity seized you, this time among savage swords
and in the quarters of a married barbarian of great influence and power. You
were not afraid to commit adultery in a house where the injured husband might
have punished you without calling in a judge's aid. You found yourself attracted
and drawn to suburban parks and gardens; and, in the husband's absence behaved
as boldly and madly as if you supposed your companion to be not your paramour
but your wife. She was at last captured, but you escaped through an underground
passage and secretly made your way to Rome. There you hid yourself among some
Samnite robbers; and on the first hint that the aggrieved husband was coming
down from the Alps like a new Hannibal in search of you, you did not think
yourself safe till you had taken refuge on shipboard. So hasty indeed was your
flight that you chose to face a tempest at sea rather than take the consequences
of remaining on shore. Somehow or other you reached Syria, and on arriving
there professed a wish to go on to Jerusalem and there to serve the Lord. Who
could refuse to welcome one who declared himself to be a monk; especially if
he were ignorant of your tragical career and had read the letters of commendation
which your bishop had addressed to other prelates?[1] Unhappy man! you transformed
yourself into an angel of light;[2] and while you were in reality a minister
of Satan, you pretended to be a minister of righteousness. You were only a
wolf in sheep's clothing;[3] and having played the adulterer once towards the
wife of a man, you desired now to play the adulterer to the spouse of Christ.[4]
12. My
design in recounting these events has been to sketch for you the picture
of your evil life and
to set
your misdeeds plainly before your eyes. I have
wished to prevent you from making God's mercy and His abundant tenderness an
excuse for committing new sins and to save you from crucifying to yourself
the son of God afresh and putting Him to an open shame. For you may do these
things if you do not read the words which follow the passage to which I have
alluded. They are these: "The earth which drinketh in the rain that cometh
oft upon it, and bringeth forth herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed,
receiveth blessings from God: but that which beareth thorns and briers is rejected
and is nigh unto cursing; whose end is to be burned."[1]
LETTER CXLVIII.
TO THE MATRON CELANTIA.
This is an interesting letter addressed to a lady of rank, on the principles
and methods of a holy life. It is not, however, the work of Jerome, of whose
style it shews few traces. It has been ascribed in turn to Paulinus of Nola
and Sulpicius Severus.
LETTER CXLIX.
ON THE JEWISH FESTIVALS.
The theme of this letter is the abrogation of the Jewish festivals by the
evangelical law.It has no claim to be considered a work of Jerome.
LETTER CL.
FROM PROCOPIUS TO JEROME.
This letter is extant also among those of Procopius of Gaza, to whose works
it properly belongs. As this Procopius flourished a century later than Jerome,
the letter cannot be addressed to him.
Return to Volume 29 Index