Letter 130: Jerome writes to Demetrias, a highborn lady of Rome who had recently embraced the vocation of a virgin. After narrating her life's history first at Rome and then in Africa, he goes on to lay down rules and principles to guide her in her new life. These which cover the whole field of ascetic practice and include the duties of study, of prayer, of...

JeromeDemetrias|c. 413 AD|jerome
barbarian invasiondiplomaticeducation booksfamine plaguegrief deathhumorillnessimperial politicsmonasticismpapal authoritypelagianismproperty economicsslavery captivitytravel mobilitywomen
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Imperial politics

Jerome to the virgin Demetrias and to her grandmother and mother — greetings.

Of all the subjects I have written about in forty years of work — and there have been many, some of them frankly unfit for respectable company — none has presented greater difficulties than this one. I am to write about Demetrias, a virgin of Christ, a young woman whose family wealth and social position make her one of the most prominent people in the Roman world. If I say too much in her praise, I will seem to flatter her. If I say too little, I will seem to diminish virtues that are real. There is no comfortable middle ground.

I will try to be useful rather than elegant.

The essentials of the consecrated life are these. First, Scripture. Not the kind of Scripture-reading in which you turn pages until something catches your eye and then close the book feeling you have done your duty. I mean systematic, daily, disciplined reading with the aim of understanding, not merely of exposure. The Psalter read daily in its entirety. The Epistles memorized. The Gospels treated not as texts to be admired but as instructions to be followed. Jerome's own commentaries, I add with appropriate modesty, may be of some use in the harder passages.

Second, prayer. Fixed hours of prayer, not prayer when the mood strikes. The monasteries of Egypt and Palestine have learned, through long experience, that prayer cannot be treated as an optional supplement to the day's real business; it must be the day's real business, with everything else fitted around it. This is not because God is offended by irregular prayer — I suspect He accepts it gratefully — but because the human soul, left to its own rhythms, will always find other things more pressing.

Third, fasting. I want to be careful here, because I have seen what happens when fasting becomes competitive. The young woman who fasts more severely than her companions is not necessarily holier; she may be considerably vainer. Fast enough to keep the body subordinate to the soul. Do not fast so much that the body becomes a preoccupation in its own right, which is the paradox of excessive asceticism — it produces a person who thinks about food constantly.

Fourth, and perhaps most important: the company you keep. You are young, you are beautiful by any account, and you are extremely rich. These are not qualities that simplify the practice of virtue. Every fortune-hunter in the Western Empire will present himself as a potential spiritual director. You will be asked to admire your own virtue in the mirror of other people's flattery. The single most important thing I can tell you is this: choose your companions by their souls, not their social position, and do not mistake the praise of the crowd for evidence that you are doing well.

Your grandmother Juliana and your mother Proba have both conducted themselves with extraordinary dignity in the years since the fall of Rome. The family's wealth largely disappeared with the city; they arrived in Africa with far less than they had started with. They still gave. They gave when they had almost nothing to give. This is worth more than all the eloquent epistolary advice I can produce.

Watch them. Do what they do. The letter is supplementary; their lives are the lesson.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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