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Saint Jerome: Priest and Doctor, Father of Biblical Science, Teacher of Obedience

St. Jerome is one of the four great Latin Doctors of the Church

St. Jerome is one of the four great Latin Doctors of the Church and is perhaps best known for his translation of the Hebrew books of the Bible into Latin, termed as the Vulgate. He teaches us the wisdom of obedience to the Church's magisterial authority, and, certainly, to the supreme earthly authority of the Roman Pontiff, the Vicar of Christ. For St. Jerome frequently showed his reliance on the authority of the pope, as well as the extreme importance of the Magisterium (teaching office of the Church) for guidance on doctrinal matters. 

St. Jerome is one of the four great Latin Doctors of the Church

St. Jerome is one of the four great Latin Doctors of the Church

GLADE PARK, CO (Catholic Online) -- St. Jerome is one of the four great Latin Doctors of the Church and is perhaps best known for his translation of the Hebrew books of the Bible into Latin, termed as the Vulgate. During the turn of the century (391-406), St. Jerome brought this most productive work to fruition, and, as a result, Latin became the language of the Church. Up until 1979, when Pope John Paul II issued the Nova Vulgata, the Vulgate was the official Latin Bible of the Catholic Church. 

St. Jerome was born into a Christian family, most likely in 342. At a young age, he was sent to Rome for his education and studied the classical authors, from which he developed a love for literature; at about the age of thirty, he spent five years as a monk in the desert of Calcis. He was ordained a priest in the East by Bishop Paulinus, and became the secretary of Pope Damasus. St. Jerome did not actively exercise his priestly office, however, instead preferring to remain a monk and scholar. As the Holy Spirit led him into deeper love for Christ, he directed his love for literature toward an intense study of Scripture. It was his intense love for the Inspired Word and his knowledge of its origin that led him to utter these famous words: "Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ."

While he is most frequently remembered for his Vulgate, St. Jerome was a prolific writer, and wrote many commentaries on Scripture. His whole life became focused on the Word, seeking truth, and defending that truth. Through his life of prayer, St. Jerome grew wise and insightful, gifts which he shared in his writings. Further, St. Jerome was an ardent defender of the Church and her teaching. For instance, he opposed the objections of Helvidius concerning the perpetual virginity of Mary. Among such false objections, as are common even today, were those based on scriptural references to "the brothers" of the Lord, the "carpenter's son," and Mary's "firstborn son" (see Mt 13:55; 1:24-25). 

St. Jerome responded: "Every only-begotten son is a firstborn son, but not every firstborn is an only-begotten. By firstborn we understand not only one who is succeeded by others, but one who has had no predecessors." In reference to the Lord's "brothers," St. Jerome tells us: "In Holy Scripture there are four kinds of brethren - by nature, race, kindred, love." Certainly we still associate the word "brother" with those same "kinds of brethren" today. St. Jerome explained that, as our holy Church teaches presently, the brothers of Jesus were his cousins and the nephews of the Virgin Mary. Showing both his usual yet wonderful bluntness, which often surfaced due to his love of truth, St. Jerome admonished Helvidius: "You neglected the whole range of Scripture and employed your madness in outraging the Virgin." 

Saint Jerome And Obedience To The Fullness Of Truth

If we learn nothing else from St. Jerome, let us learn the wise art of obedience to the Church's magisterial authority, and, certainly, to the supreme earthly authority of the Roman Pontiff, the Vicar of Christ. For St. Jerome frequently showed his reliance on the authority of the pope, as well as the extreme importance of the Magisterium (teaching office of the Church) for guidance on doctrinal matters. 

In an appeal to Pope St. Damasus in order to decide a dispute, St. Jerome wrote: "My words are spoken to the successor of the Fisherman, to the disciple of the Cross. As I follow no leader save Christ, so I communicate with none but Your Blessedness, that is, with the Chair of Peter. For this I know is the rock on which the Church is built. This is the house where alone the Paschal Lamb can be rightly eaten. . . ."

St. Jerome, of course, understood that it is within the Catholic Church alone that we receive the true body, blood, soul and divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ in Eucharist under the signs of consecrated bread and wine. Yet St. Jerome's understanding of how the "Paschal Lamb can be rightly eaten" was not based on Scripture alone, which, as he knew very well, can lead to error through a misguided subjective interpretation which is uninformed by Sacred Tradition and the Magisterium.

St. Jerome's understanding of the nature of the Eucharist descended from On-High; that is, the truth of the Eucharist, which is God's revelation to his people, was transmitted from Christ to the apostles under the guidance of the Holy Spirit and deposited in the Church. That same truth -- the sacred deposit of faith -- is contained in both Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture, which is then transmitted to future generations through the apostles and their successors under the guidance of the Holy Spirit and the protection of the Magisterium. Therefore St. Jerome arrived at the truth of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist through not only his intense study of Scripture, but also ...

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1 - 7 of 7 Comments

  1. Patrick
    1 year ago

    Rebecca,

    If women are the gateway to the devil, that contradicts our Lady of Fatima. Little Francisco had already built up time in purgatory and if I am not mistaken, he was under ten years old. When asked, Jacinta related the most important message of Fatima that Mary gave us: "My son wishes his heart to be venerated alongside mine." This sort of thing will not make sense to someone who has not grown up in a traditional catholic household which includes integral mystical theology as part of our formation,

  2. Patrick
    1 year ago

    One thing I like about Saint Jerome is that he was a Saint of Scripture as well as the eucharist. Since 1958, it is rare to find adherence to scripture as well as to our mystical roots. He is a good saint to emulate in this corrupt time.

  3. Rebecca
    2 years ago

    I a lecture about sexism my professor mentioned that St. Jerome said that "women were the gateway to the devil" - is this true? And if so has the Church ever released an official statement regarding what he said? It really upset me to hear that.

  4. egere theophilus
    2 years ago

    am glad to read about jerome. God bless him

  5. mikem
    2 years ago

    where's Jerome's pet lion? He had a pet lion, must've been working in a rough neighborhood....usually pictures of Jerome show the lion at this feet....

  6. Andy Holland
    2 years ago

    St. Jerome himself, as the article made clear, saw his communication from the chair of Peter through the Holy Eucharist. The gates of hell, the open Sepulcre are located south of the nose, north of the chin. In the ancient Church and Orthodox Church, the carcass is received with the hands folded on the breast for "wherever the carcass is, there the eagles shall be gathered together." The everlasting gates are opened, death, and the Word Himself is received in our graves, "blessed in his sight is the death of his saints." A bible can be mistranslated, an Icon poorly understood, a sermon from the Pulpit can be misheard, a line of Scripture misinterpreted - the Communication of the Eucharist received in a person washed in Baptism and tears of repentance from confession, is the communication of the infallible Word through whom the Universe was made in the Beginning, infallibly given, infallibly received. The mystical conveyance of wisdom is infallible - for its not what goes into a man that defiles him, but what comes out.

  7. mikem
    2 years ago

    Great article. Great quotes! and to think that for a period of ten years St. Jerome was excommunicated by St. Cyril, Archbishop of Jerusalem. The edict of excommunication read: ..."shall not receive communion in any church of the diocese" - and so Jerome stood outside and received communion through the window of the church!!! (he'd have been a good lawyer!) But what flips me out about Jerome is he took a VOW to never waste time! imagine being so organized as to be able to fulfill such a vow! But that's what it took to get the Bible done. Way to go St. Jerome ! ty.

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