Letter 46: Jerome writes to Marcella in the name of Paula and Eustochium, describing the charms of the Holy Land, and urging her to leave Rome and to join her old companions at Bethlehem. Much of the letter is devoted to disposing of the objection that since the Passion of Christ the Holy Land has been under a curse. The date of the letter is A.D.

JeromeMarcella|c. 385 AD|jerome
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Barbarian peoples/invasions; Imperial politics; Persecution or exile
From: Paula and Eustochium (written by Jerome), ascetics in Bethlehem
To: Marcella, ascetic noblewoman in Rome
Date: ~386 AD
Context: Written in the voices of Paula and Eustochium, this letter urges Marcella to leave Rome and join them in Bethlehem — a love letter to the Holy Land and its sacred geography.

Marcella,

Love knows no measure, impatience no bounds, eagerness no delay. That is why we — students presuming to instruct our teacher — write to you now. We are like the proverbial pig trying to lecture the goddess of invention. You were the one who lit our fire. You were the one who urged us, by teaching and example, to embrace this life. You gathered us under your wing like a mother hen [Matthew 23:37]. Will you now let us flutter about with no mother nearby, dreading every hawk, flinching at every shadow? Cut off from you, we do what we can: we plead, we cry, we beg you — give us back the Marcella we love. She is gentle, she is warm, she is sweeter than honey. She must not turn harsh with us now, when it was her kindness that drew us to this life in the first place.

If what we ask is right, our eagerness is nothing to be ashamed of. And if all Scripture supports our case — well, we are only pressing you toward the very path you always pointed out to us.

What were God's first words to Abraham? "Get out of your country, away from your kindred, to a land that I will show you" [Genesis 12:1]. The patriarch — the first to receive a promise of Christ — was told to leave the Chaldeans, leave the city of confusion, leave the plain of Shinar where human pride had tried to build a tower to heaven [Genesis 11:1-9]. He had to cross the waters of this world and its treacherous rivers — the rivers where the saints sat down and wept as they remembered Zion [Psalm 137:1] — to reach the promised land, a land watered from above, a land of hills and valleys that looks to heaven for its rain [Deuteronomy 11:11].

The spiritual attractions of this place more than make up for anything the world can offer. Mary herself left the lowlands for the hill country when she knew she carried the Son of God within her [Luke 1:39].

Perhaps you will scold us for jumping around in Scripture rather than proceeding in order. Fair enough. But love has no logic, and impatience follows no outline.

Let us go back further still. Tradition holds that Adam lived and died on this very spot. The place where our Lord was crucified is called Calvary [which means "skull"] because the skull of the first man was buried there. The second Adam's blood, dripping from the cross, washed away the sins of the first. "Awake, you who sleep, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give you light" [Ephesians 5:14].

By its three names — Jebus, Salem, Jerusalem — this city encodes a theology. Jebus means "trampled down." Salem means "peace." Jerusalem means "vision of peace." First you are humbled, then you find peace, then at last you see it clearly.

But you will object: "If all this is true, why did the Lord weep over Jerusalem? Why did he say, 'Your house is left to you desolate'?" [Matthew 23:38]. A fair point — and we do not deny that the city was judged. But it was judged for its sins, not for its geography. The holy places remain holy. The cross still stands where it was planted. The tomb is still empty. The whole land blazes with sacred memory, and every step you take is a page of Scripture come to life.

We have walked where the Magi knelt, where the shepherds heard the angels sing, where Lazarus came stumbling out of the tomb. We have stood at the Jordan where Christ was baptized, have eaten bread in Cana where he turned water into wine, have prayed in Nazareth where the angel said to a young girl, "Hail, full of grace" [Luke 1:28]. We have climbed the Mount of Olives and looked down at the place of the Ascension. We have visited every site — and every one of them burns with the presence of the living God.

Meanwhile, what does Rome offer you? Crowds, noise, the games, the constant social performance. Even the churches there are full of political maneuvering. Bethlehem is simple. Bethlehem is quiet. Here, there is only the manger, only the cave, only the stars.

Come to us, Marcella. Bring your faith and your learning. We will walk the holy places together — Bethlehem, Nazareth, Galilee, Jerusalem. And when, accompanied by Christ, we have made our way back to our cave through all the places where churches stand like victory banners commemorating the Lord's triumphs, we will sing heartily, weep freely, and pray without ceasing. "Wounded with the Savior's arrow," we will say to one another: "I have found the one my soul loves; I will hold him and never let him go" [Song of Songs 3:4].

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

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