Letter 73: 1. Although I suppose that, before this reaches you, you have received through our son the deacon Cyprian, a servant of God, the letter which I sent by him, from which you would be apprised with certainty that I wrote the letter of which you mentioned that a copy had been brought to you; in consequence of which I suppose that I have begun alread...

Augustine of HippoJerome|c. 398 AD|augustine hippo
barbarian invasionchristologyeducation booksfriendshipgrief deathillnessproperty economics
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Travel & mobility

Augustine to Jerome, my dear and venerable brother, greetings in the Lord.

Your letter reached me — and I must confess, it stung. But truth sometimes stings, and I would rather be stung by a friend than flattered by an enemy.

Let me address the matter of the letter's delivery first, because this seems to have caused you real distress — and rightly so, if the facts are as you describe them. I did not send my letter to circulate publicly. I entrusted it to a brother named Profuturus, who was supposed to deliver it directly to you. He never made the journey — he was made a bishop before he could depart, and then he died. What happened to the letter after that, I genuinely do not know. If copies circulated without my knowledge, I am sorry for it — not because I am ashamed of what I wrote, but because you deserved to read it first.

Now, to the substance.

You invoke the authority of Origen, Didymus, Apollinaris, and the Greek commentators. I honor their learning. But authority is not a substitute for argument. If the greatest minds in history have agreed on a position, that is a reason to examine it carefully — not a reason to accept it without examination. Truth is not determined by a vote of the learned.

You ask: if Peter genuinely sinned, what hope is there for the rest of us? But I think you are asking the wrong question. The right question is: does Scripture tell the truth? If Peter sinned and Scripture says so, then Scripture is telling the truth, and we must accept it — even if it makes us uncomfortable. If Peter did not sin and Paul's rebuke was a performance, then Scripture is telling a kind of lie — a noble lie, perhaps, but a lie nonetheless. And once we admit that Scripture can lie nobly, we have no principle by which to resist anyone who claims that any other passage is similarly "noble" rather than true.

I do not doubt Peter's greatness. I do not doubt his faithfulness after Pentecost. But I note that the Lord himself predicted Peter would deny him three times — and Peter did. Is it so impossible that the same man, years later, could waver under social pressure? Not in his faith, but in his conduct? And is it not precisely the glory of Scripture that it records even the failures of the greatest saints, so that the rest of us — who are far less than Peter — may know that there is forgiveness and restoration even for those who stumble?

I write this in love, not in rivalry. You are my elder in years and in learning. But truth belongs to neither of us — it belongs to Christ. And I trust you will agree that we must follow it wherever it leads, even when it leads against our own previous positions.

Please write back. Privately.

Farewell in Christ.

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

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