St. Jerome
Doctor of the Church
St. Jerome, who was born Eusebius Hieronymous Sophronius, was the most learned of the
Fathers of the Western Church. He was born about the year 342 at Stridonius, a small town
at the head of the Adriatic, near the episcopal city of Aquileia. His father, a Christian,
took care that his son was well instructed at home, then sent him to Rome, where the young
man's teachers were the famous pagan grammarian Donatus and Victorinus, a Christian
rhetorician. Jerome's native tongue was the Illyrian dialect, but at Rome he became fluent
in Latin and Greek, and read the literatures of those languages with great pleasure. His
aptitude for oratory was such that he may have considered law as a career. He acquired
many worldly ideas, made little effort to check his pleasure-loving instincts, and lost
much of the piety that had been instilled in him at home. Yet in spite of the pagan and
hedonistic influences around him, Jerome was baptized by Pope Liberius in 360. He tells us
that "it was my custom on Sundays to visit, with friends of my own age and tastes,
the tombs of the martyrs and Apostles, going down into those subterranean galleries whose
walls on both sides preserve the relics of the dead." Here he enjoyed deciphering the
inscriptions.
After three years at Rome, Jerome's intellectual curiosity led him to explore other parts
of the world. He visited his home and then, accompanied by his boyhood friend Bonosus,
went to Aquileia, where he made friends among the monks of the monastery there, notably
Rufinus. Then, still accompanied by Bonosus, he traveled to Treves, in Gaul. He now
renounced all secular pursuits to dedicate himself wholeheartedly to God. Eager to build
up a religious library, the young scholar copied out St. Hilary's books on and his
Commentaries on the Psalms, and got together other literary and religious treasures. He
returned to Stridonius, and later settled in Aquileia. The bishop had cleared the church
there of the plague of Arianism and had drawn to it many eminent men. Among those with
whom Jerome formed friendships were Chromatius (later canonized), to whom Jerome dedicated
several of his works, Heliodorus (also to become a saint), and his nephew Nepotian. The
famous theologian Rufinus, at first his close friend, afterward became his bitter
opponent. By nature an irascible man with a sharp tongue, Jerome made enemies as well as
friends. He spent some years in scholarly studies in Aquileia, then, in search of more
perfect solitude, he turned towards the East. With his friends, Innocent, Heliodorus, and
Hylas, a freed slave, he started overland for Syria. On the way they visited Athens,
Bithynia, Galatia, Pontus, Cappadocia, and Cilicia.
The party arrived at Antioch about the year 373. There Jerome at first attended the
lectures of the famous Apollinaris, bishop of Laodicea, who had not yet put forward his
heresy1 With his companions he left the city for the desert of Chalcis, about fifty miles
southeast of Antioch. Innocent and Hylas soon died there, and Heliodorus left to return to
the West, but Jerome stayed for four years, which were passed in study and in the practice
of austerity. He had many attacks of illness but suffered still more from temptation.
"In the remotest part of a wild and stony desert," he wrote years afterwards to
his friend Eustochium, "burnt up with the heat of the sun, so scorching that it
frightens even the monks who live there, I seemed to myself to be in the midst of the
delights and crowds of Rome.... In this exile and prison to which through fear of Hell I
had voluntarily condemned myself, with no other company but scorpions and wild beasts, I
many times imagined myself watching the dancing of Roman maidens as if I had been in the
midst of them. My face was pallid with fasting, yet my will felt the assaults of desire.
In my cold body and my parched flesh, which seemed dead before its death, passion was
still able to live. Alone with the enemy, I threw myself in spirit at the feet of Jesus,
watering them with my tears, and tamed my flesh by fasting whole weeks. I am not ashamed
to disclose my temptations, though I grieve that I am not now what I then was."
Jerome added to these trials the study of Hebrew, a discipline which he hoped would help
him in winning a victory over himself. "When my soul was on fire with wicked
thoughts," he wrote in 411, "as a last resort, I became a pupil to a monk who
had been a Jew, in order to learn the Hebrew alphabet. From the judicious precepts of
Quintilian, the rich and fluent eloquence of Cicero, the graver style of Fronto, and the
smoothness of Pliny, I turned to this language of hissing and broken-winded words. What
labor it cost me, what difficulties I went through, how often I despaired and abandoned it
and began again to learn, both I, who felt the burden, and they who lived with me, can
bear witness. I thank our Lord that I now gather such sweet fruit from the bitter sowing
of those studies." He continued to read the pagan classics for pleasure until a vivid
dream turned him from them, at least for a time. In a letter he describes how, during an
illness, he dreamed he was standing before the tribunal of Christ. "Thou a
Christian?" said the judge skeptically. "Thou art a Ciceronian. Where thy
treasure is, there thy heart is also."
The church at Antioch was greatly disturbed at this time by party and doctrinal disputes.
The anchorites in the desert took sides, and called on Jerome, the most learned of them,
to give his opinions on the subjects at issue. He wrote for guidance to Pope Damasus at
Rome. Failing to receive an answer, he wrote again. "On one side, the Arian fury
rages, supported by the secular power; on the other side, the Church (at Antioch) is being
divided into three parts, and each would draw me to itself." No reply from Damasus is
extant; but we know that Jerome acknowledged Paulinus, leader of one party, as bishop of
Antioch, and that when he left the desert of Chalcis, he received from Paulinus' hands his
ordination as priest. Jerome consented to ordination only on condition that he should not
be obliged to serve in any church, knowing that his true vocation was to be a monk and
recluse.
About 380 Jerome went to Constantinople to study the Scriptures under the Greek, Gregory
of Nazianzus, then bishop of that city. Two years later he went back to Rome with Paulinus
of Antioch to attend a council which Pope Damasus was holding to deal with the Antioch
schism. Appointed secretary of the council, Jerome acquitted himself so well that, when it
was over, Damasus kept him there as his own secretary. At the Pope's request he prepared a
revised text, based on the Greek, of the Latin New Testament, the current version of which
had been disfigured by "wrong copying, clumsy correction, and careless
interpolations." He also revised the Latin psalter. That the prestige of Rome and its
power to arbitrate between disputants, East as well as West, was recognized as never
before at this time, was due in some measure at least to Jerome's diligence and ability.
Along with his official duties he was fostering a new movement of Christian asceticism
among a group of noble Roman ladies. Several of them were to be canonized, including
Albina and her daughters Marcella and Asella, Melania the Elder, who was the first of them
to go to the Holy Land, and Paula, with her daughters, Blesilla and Eustochium. The tie
between Jerome and the three last-mentioned women was especially close, and to them he
addressed many of his famous letters.
When Pope Damasus died in 384, he was succeeded by Siricius, who was less friendly to
Jerome. While serving Damasus, Jerome had impressed all by his personal holiness,
learning, and integrity. But he had also managed to get himself widely disliked by pagans
and evil-doers whom he had condemned, and also by people of taste and tolerance, many of
them Christians, who were offended by his biting sarcasm and a certain ruthlessness in
attack. An example of his style is the harsh diatribe against the artifices of worldly
women, who "paint their cheeks with rouge and their eyelids with antimony, whose
plastered faces, too white for human beings, look like idols; and if in a moment of
forgetfulness they shed a tear it makes a furrow where it rolls down the painted cheek;
women to whom years do not bring the gravity of age, who load their heads with other
people's hair, enamel a lost youth upon the wrinkles of age, and affect a maidenly
timidity in the midst of a troop of grand children." In a letter to Eustochium he
writes with scorn of certain members of the Roman clergy. "All their anxiety is about
their clothes.... You would take them for bridegrooms rather than for clerics; all they
think about is knowing the names and houses and doings of rich ladies."
Although Jerome's indignation was usually justified, his manner of expressing it-both
verbally and in letters-aroused resentment. His own reputation was attacked; his
bluntness, his walk, and even his smile were criticized. And neither the virtue of the
ladies under his direction nor his own scrupulous behavior towards them was any protection
from scandalous gossip. Affronted at the calumnies that were circulated, Jerome decided to
return to the East. Taking with him his brother Paulinian and some others, he embarked in
August, 385. At Cyprus, on the way, he was received with joy by Bishop Epiphanius, and at
Antioch also he conferred with leading churchmen. It was here, probably, that he was
joined by the widow Paula and some other ladies who had left Rome with the aim of settling
in the Holy Land.
With what remained of Jerome's own patrimony and with financial help from Paula, a
monastery for men was built near the basilica of the Nativity at Bethlehem, and also
houses for three communities of women. Paula became head of one of these, and after her
death was succeeded by her daughter Eustochium. Jerome himself lived and worked in a large
cave near the Saviour's birthplace. He opened a free school there and also a hospice for
pilgrims, "so that," as Paula said, "should Mary and Joseph visit Bethlehem
again, they would have a place to stay." Now at last Jerome began to enjoy some years
of peaceful activity. He gives us a wonderful description of this fruitful, harmonious,
Palestinian life, and its attraction for all manner of men. "Illustrious Gauls
congregate here, and no sooner has the Briton, so remote from our world, arrived at
religion than he leaves his early-setting sun to seek a land which he knows only by
reputation and from the Scriptures. Then the Armenians, the Persians, the peoples of India
and Ethiopia, of Egypt, and of Pontus, Cappadocia, Syria, and Mesopotamia!... They come in
throngs and set us examples of every virtue. The languages differ but the religion is the
same; as many different choirs chant the psalms as there are nations.... Here bread and
herbs, planted with our own hands, and milk, all country fare, furnish us plain and
healthy food. In summer the trees give us shade. In autumn the air is cool and the falling
leaves restful. In spring our psalmody is sweeter for the singing of the birds. We have
plenty of wood when winter snow and cold are upon us. Let Rome keep its crowds, let its
arenas run with blood, its circuses go mad, its theaters wallow in sensuality...."
But when the Christian faith was threatened Jerome could not be silent. While at Rome in
the time of Pope Damasus, he had composed a book on the perpetual virginity of the Virgin
Mary against one Helvidius, who had maintained that Mary had not remained always a virgin
but had had other children by St. Joseph, after the birth of Christ. This and similar
ideas were now again put forward by a certain Jovinian, who had been a monk. Paula's
son-in-law, Pammachius, sent some of this heretical writing to Jerome, and he, in 393,
wrote two books against Jovinian. In the first he described the excellence of virginity.
The books were written in Jerome's vehement style and there were expressions in them which
seemed lacking in respect for honorable matrimony. Pammachius informed Jerome of the
offense which he and many others at Rome had taken at them. Thereupon Jerome composed his
, sometimes called his third book against Jovinian, in which he showed by quoting from his
own earlier works that he regarded marriage as a good and honorable state and did not
condemn even a second or a third marriage.
A few years later he turned his attention to one Vigilantius, a Gallic priest, who was
denouncing both celibacy and the veneration of saints' relics, calling those who revered
them idolaters and worshipers of ashes. In defending celibacy Jerome said that a monk
should purchase security by flying from temptations and dangers when he distrusted his own
strength. As to the veneration of relics, he declared: "We do not worship the relics
of the martyrs, but honor them in our worship of Him whose martyrs they are. We honor the
servants in order that the respect paid to them may be reflected back to the Lord."
Honoring them, he said, was not idolatry because no Christian had ever adored the martyrs
as gods; on the other hand, they pray for us. "If the Apostles and martyrs, while
still living on earth, could pray for other men, how much more may they do it after their
victories? Have they less power now that they are with Jesus Christ?" He told Paula,
after the death of her daughter Blesilla, "She now prays to the Lord for you, and
obtains for me the pardon of my sins." Jerome was never moderate whether in virtue or
against evil. Though swift to anger, he was also swift to feel remorse and was even more
severe on his own failings than on those of others.
From 395 to 400 Jerome was engaged in a war against Origenism2, which unhappily created a
breach in his long friendship with Rufinus. Finding that some Eastern monks had been led
into error by the authority of Rufinus' name and learning, Jerome attacked him. Rufinus,
then living in a monastery at Jerusalem, had translated many of Origen's works into Latin
and was an enthusiastic upholder of his scholarship, though it does not appear that he
meant to defend the heresies in Origen's writings. Augustine, bishop of Hippo, was one of
the churchmen greatly distressed by the quarrel between Jerome and Rufinus, and became
unwillingly involved in a controversy with Jerome.
Jerome's passionate controversies were the least important part of his activities. What
has made his name so famous was his critical labor on the text of the Scriptures. The
Church regards him as the greatest of all the doctors in clarifying the Divine Word. He
had the best available aids for such an undertaking, living where the remains of Biblical
places, names, and customs all combined to give him a more vivid view than he could have
had at a greater distance. To continue his study of Hebrew he hired a famous Jewish
scholar, Bar Ananias, who came to teach him by night, lest other Jews should learn of it.
As a man of prayer and purity of heart whose life had been mainly spent in study, penance,
and contemplation, Jerome was prepared to be a sensitive interpreter of spiritual things.
We have seen that already while at Rome he had made a revision of the current Latin New
Testament, and of the Psalms. Now he undertook to translate most of the books of the Old
Testament directly from the Hebrew. The friends and scholars who urged him to this task
realized the superiority of a version made directly from the original to any second-hand
version, however venerable. It was needed too for argument with the Jews, who recognized
no other text as authentic but their own. He began with the Books of Kings, and went on
with the rest at different times. When he found that the Book of Tobias and part of Daniel
had been composed in Chaldaic, he set himself to learn that difficult language also. More
than once he was tempted to give up the whole wearisome task, but a certain scholarly
tenacity of purpose kept him at it. The only parts of the Latin Bible, now known as the
Vulgate, which were not either translated or worked over by him are the Books of Wisdom,
Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, and the two Books of the Maccabees.3 He revised the Psalms once
again, with the aid of Origen's ,4 and the Hebrew text. This last is the version included
now in the Vulgate and used generally in the Divine Office; his first revision, known as
the Roman Psalter, is still used for the opening psalm at Matins and throughout the
Missal, and for the Divine Office in the cathedrals of St. Peter at Rome and St. Mark at
Venice, and in the Milanese rite.
In the sixteenth century the great Council of Trent pronounced Jerome's Vulgate the
authentic and authoritative Latin text of the Catholic Church, without, however, thereby
implying a preference for it above the original text or above versions in other languages.
In 1907 Pope Pius X entrusted to the Benedictine Order the office of restoring as far as
possible the correct text of St. Jerome's Vulgate, which during fifteen centuries of use
had naturally become altered in many places. The Bible now ordinarily used by
English-speaking Catholics is a translation of the Vulgate, made at Rheims and Douay
towards the end of the sixteenth century, and revised by Bishop Challoner in the
eighteenth. The Confraternity Edition of the New Testament appearing in 1950 represents a
complete revision.
A heavy blow came to Jerome in 404 when his staunch friend, the saintly Paula, died. Six
years later he was stunned by news of the sacking of Rome by Alaric the Goth. Of the
refugees who fled from Rome to the East at this time he wrote: "Who would have
believed that the daughters of that mighty city would one day be wandering as servants and
slaves on the shores of Egypt and Africa, or that Bethlehem would daily receive noble
Romans, distinguished ladies, brought up in wealth and now reduced to beggary? I cannot
help them all, but I grieve and weep with them, and am completely absorbed in the duties
which charity imposes on me. I have put aside my commentary on Ezekiel and almost all
study. For today we must translate the precepts of the Scriptures into deeds; instead of
speaking saintly words, we must act them." A few years later his work was again
interrupted by raids of barbarians pushing north through Egypt into Palestine, and later
still by a violent onset of Pelagian heretics, who, relying on the protection of Bishop
John of Jerusalem, sent a troop of ruffians to Bethlehem to disperse the monks and nuns
living there under the direction of Jerome, who had been opposing Pelagianism5 with his
customary truculence. Some of the monks were beaten, a deacon was killed, and monasteries
were set on fire. Jerome had to go into hiding for a time.
The following year Paula's daughter Eustochium died. The aged Jerome soon fell ill, and
after lingering for two years succumbed. Worn with penance and excessive labor, his sight
and voice almost gone, his body like a shadow, he died peacefully on September 30, 420,
and was buried under the church of the Nativity at Bethlehem. In the thirteenth century
his body was translated and now lies somewhere in the Sistine Chapel of the basilica of
Santa Maria Maggiore at Rome. The Church owes much to St. Jerome. While his great work was
the Vulgate, his achievements in other fields are valuable; to him we owe the distinction
between canonical and apocryphal writings; he was a pioneer in the field of Biblical
archeology, his commentaries are important; his letters, published in three volumes, are
one of our best sources of knowledge of the times.
St. Jerome has been a popular subject with artists, who have pictured him in the desert,
as a scholar in his study, and sometimes in the robes of a cardinal, because of his
services for Pope Damasus; often too he is shown with a lion, from whose paw, according to
legend, he once drew a thorn. Actually this story was transferred to him from the
tradition of St. Gerasimus, but a lion is not an inappropriate symbol for so fearless a
champion of the faith.
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