Letters LVI. Translation absent
Letter LVII. Translation absent
Letter CVI. Translation absent
Letter CVII. Translation absent
Letter CVIII. Translation absent
Letter CXXIII.
(a.d. 410.)
[From Jerome to Augustin.]
There are many who go halting upon both feet, and refuse to bend their heads even when their necks are broken, persisting in adherence to their former errors, even though they have not their former liberty of proclaiming them.
Respectful salutations are sent to you by the holy brethren who are with your humble servant, and especially by your pious and venerable daughters.975 Paula, Eustochium, and other recluses of Bethlehem. I beg your Excellency to salute in my name your brethren my lord Alypius and my lord Evodius. Jerusalem is held captive by Nebuchadnezzar, and refuses to listen to the counsels of Jeremiah, preferring to look wistfully towards Egypt, that it may die in Tahpanhes, and perish there in eternal bondage.976 Two opinions have been advanced as to the signification of this enigmatical allusion to the events recorded in Jeremiah, chap. xliii. Some think that Jerome refers to Rome, then occupied by the Goths. Others find here a reference to the state of the Church at Jerusalem at the time; perhaps under the name of Nebuchadnezzar some heretical bishop is designed.
EPISTOLA CXXIII . Hieronymus Augustino quaedam per aenigma renuntians.
Multi utroque claudicant pede , et ne fractis quidem cervicibus inclinantur, habentes affectum erroris pristini, cum praedicandi eamdem non habeant libertatem. Sancti fratres qui cum nostra sunt parvitate, praecipue sanctae ac venerabiles filiae tuae suppliciter te salutant. Fratres tuos, dominum meum Alypium, et dominum meum Evodium, ut meo nomine salutes, precor coronam tuam. Capta Jerusalem tenetur a Nabuchodonosor , nec Jeremiae vult audire consilia; quin potius Aegyptum desiderat, ut moriatur in Taphnes, et ibi servitute pereat sempiterna.
CLASSIS TERTIA. Epistolae quas ab anno habitae collationis cum Donatistis Pelagianaeque haereseos in Africa deprehensae, scripsit Augustinus deinceps reliquo tempore vitae suae, id est ab anno 411 ad 430.
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