Letter 49: Jerome encloses the preceding letter, thanks Pammachius for his efforts to suppress his treatise against Jovinian, but declares these to be useless, and exhorts him, if he still has any hesitation in his mind, to turn to the Scriptures and the commentaries made upon them by Origen and others. Written at the same time as the preceding letter. 1.

JeromePammachius|c. 386 AD|jerome
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Travel & mobility; Military conflict; Personal friendship

Letter 49: To Pammachius (393 AD)

[Jerome encloses his previous letter (Letter 48, the treatise Against Jovinian) and thanks Pammachius for his efforts to suppress Jerome's intemperate polemic — but declares those efforts useless, since the work is already in circulation. He then urges Pammachius to study the Scripture commentaries of Origen and others if he still has doubts. Pammachius was a Roman senator who had married one of Paula's daughters; he was one of Jerome's most powerful lay supporters.]

1. Christian modesty sometimes requires us to be silent even to our friends and to nurse our humility in peace, where the renewal of an old friendship would expose us to charges of self-seeking...

[Jerome thanks Pammachius for trying to suppress the controversial work but insists it's too late to contain the damage.]

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

Related Letters

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1. The good works which spring from the grace of Christ in you have given you a claim to be esteemed by us His members, and have made you as truly known and as much beloved by us as you could be. For even were I daily seeing your face, this could add nothing to the completeness of the acquaintance with you which I now have, when in the shining l...

Augustine of HippoPammachiusc. 405 · augustine hippo #58
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When at a subsequent period Rufinus gave to the world what was in Jerome's opinion a misleading version of Origen's First Principles, he appealed to this letter as giving him ample warranty for what he had done. See Letters LXXX, and LXXXI, and Rufinus' Preface to the περί ᾿Αεχῶν in Vol. iii.

JeromePammachiusc. 392 · jerome #66

Pammachius a Roman senator, had lost his wife Paulina one of Paula's daughters, while she was still in the flower of her youth. It was not till two years had elapsed that Jerome ventured to write to him; and when he did so he dwelt but little on the life and virtues of Paulina. Probably there was but little to tell.

JeromePammachiusc. 386 · jerome #48

An apology for the two books against Jovinian which Jerome had written a short time previously, and of which he had sent copies to Rome. These Pammachius and his other friends had withheld from publication, thinking that Jerome had unduly exalted virginity at the expense of marriage. He now writes to make good his position, and to do this makes ...