Commemorated on June 15
Saint Jerome of Stridon was born into a Christian family in the city
of Stridon located on the border between Dalmatia and Pannonia. His full
name is Eusebius Hieronymos Sophronius. His parents sent him to Rome,
where he studied the secular sciences. At the beginning of his life in
the capital, the youth was captivated by worldly vanities and fell into
temptation. At the end of his time in Rome, Jerome resolved to change
his life and to live in goodness and purity. When the youth was about 20
years old, he accepted holy Baptism. After this he visited in Gaul
(France). Then St Jerome decided to dedicate himself totally to God, and
to become a monk.
In about the year 372 St Jerome returned to
his native city, but his parents had already departed this life. On him
fell the responsibility of raising his younger sisters and his brother
Paulinian. These cares forced him to
put aside his plans to enter a
monastery, at least for a time.
Having made arrangements for the
care of his siblings, he journeyed to the East with several of his
friends. In 374, he decided to dwell in the desert of Chalcis southeast
of Antioch. There he remained for about 5 years, combining work on the
Holy Scriptures with austere ascetic deeds. Besides this, St Jerome
mastered the Hebrew and Chaldean languages. During this period he began
his correspondence with numerous persons upon a variety of questions.
About 120 letters, considered as authentically written by St Jerome,
have been preserved.
At the beginning of the 360s there arose a
controversy between the proponents of bishops Meletius, Paulinos and
Vitalis. The controversy also reached the monastery where St Jerome
toiled. In consequence, the disputes caused him to leave the monastery
and go to Antioch. Here Bishop Paulinos ordained him to the priesthood.
Afterwards, St Jerome visited Constantinople and conversed with the holy
hierarchs Gregory the Theologian and Gregory of Nyssa. In the year 381
he set off for Rome. At Rome he continued his studies. The holy Pope
Damasus I (366-384), who also devoted much of his time to the study of
Holy Scripture, made Jerome his secretary.
But because the saint
denounced the morals of the contemporary Christian society, a whole
party of those bearing malice towards the saint came forward to spread
slanders about him. After a three year stay at Rome, St Jerome felt
compelled to abandon this city for good. Together with his brother
Paulinian and friends, St Jerome visited the Holy Land, and also the
monks of the Nitria wilderness monastery. In the year 386 he settled
into a cave at Bethlehem near the cave where Christ was born, and there
he began a life of austere asceticism.
This was the period of
blossoming of his creative activity. Attending to the studies of his
time, St Jerome left to the Church a rich written legacy: collections of
dogmatic-polemic works, moral-ascetic works, commentaries on Scripture,
and historical works. But the most important of his works was a new
translation the books of the Old and New Testaments into the Latin
language. This Latin translation is called the “Vulgate,” and it passed
into general use throughout the Western Church.
St Jerome lived
through the fall of his beloved city Rome, which was sacked by the Goths
in the year 410. In the year 411 a new ordeal beset the saint,
Bethlehem was invaded by wild Bedouin Arabs. Only through the mercy of
God was the community of the aged ascetic saved from complete
destruction. He finished his life at the cave in Bethlehem. St Jerome is
believed to have reposed in 420. His relics were transferred from
Bethlehem to Rome in 642, but their present location is unknown. His
hand is enshrined in a church near Rome’s Piazza Farnese.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2014(with 2013's link here also and further:, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, and even 2008!):
My Substack
-
I have a home on Substack where I publish thought pieces, poetry and other
creative work. Clifton’s Newsletter
3 hours ago
No comments:
Post a Comment