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Œuvres Jérôme de Stridon (347-420) Epistolaes (CCEL) The Letters of St. Jerome
Letter LX. To Heliodorus.

17.

Nepotian is happy who neither sees these things nor hears them. We are unhappy, for either we suffer ourselves or we see our brethren suffer. Yet we desire to live, and regard those beyond the reach of these evils as miserable rather than blessed. We have long felt that God is angry, yet we do not try to appease Him. It is our sins which make the barbarians strong, it is our vices which vanquish Rome’s soldiers: and, as if there were here too little material for carnage, civil wars have made almost greater havoc among us than the swords of foreign foes. Miserable must those Israelites have been compared with whom Nebuchadnezzar was called God’s servant. 1 Unhappy too are we who are so displeasing to God that He uses the fury of the barbarians to execute His wrath against us. Still when Hezekiah repented, one hundred and eighty-five thousand Assyrians were destroyed in one night by a single angel. 2 When Jehosaphat sang the praises of the Lord, the Lord gave His worshipper the victory. 3 Again when Moses fought against Amalek, it was not with the sword but with prayer that he prevailed. 4 Therefore, if we wish to be lifted up, we must first prostrate ourselves. Alas! for our shame and folly reaching even to unbelief! Rome’s army, once victor and lord of the world, now trembles with terror at the sight of the foe and accepts defeat from men who cannot walk afoot and fancy themselves dead if once they are unhorsed. 5 We do not understand the prophet’s words: “One thousand shall flee at the rebuke of one.” 6 We do not cut away the causes of the disease, as we must do to remove the disease itself. Else we should soon see the enemies’ arrows give way to our javelins, their caps to our helmets, their palfreys to our chargers.


  1. Jer. xxvii. 6 .  ↩

  2. 2 Kings xix. 35 .  ↩

  3. 2 Chr. xx. 5–25 .  ↩

  4. Ex. xvii. 11 .  ↩

  5. Jornandes corroborates the account of the Huns here given by Jerome.  ↩

  6. Isa. xxx. 17 .  ↩

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The Letters of St. Jerome

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