Letter 60: One of Jerome's finest letters, written to console his old friend, Heliodorus, now Bp. of Altinum, for the loss of his nephew Nepotian who had died of fever a short time previously. Jerome tries to soothe his friend's grief (1) by contrasting pagan despair or resignation with Christian hope, (2) by an eulogy of the departed both as man and presb...

JeromeHeliodorus|c. 390 AD|jerome
arianismbarbarian invasionconversioneducation booksfriendshipgrief deathhumorillnessimperial politicsmonasticismproperty economicsslavery captivitytravel mobility
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Imperial politics
From: Jerome, priest and scholar in Bethlehem
To: Heliodorus, Bishop of Altinum
Date: ~396 AD
Context: One of Jerome's finest letters — a deeply felt eulogy for Heliodorus's nephew Nepotian, the young priest who had died of fever, combined with a searing portrait of the disasters engulfing the Roman Empire.

Heliodorus,

Small minds cannot grapple with large subjects. The greater the theme, the more completely it overwhelms a writer who lacks the words to match it. Nepotian — who was mine and yours and ours, or rather who was Christ's, and because Christ's all the more ours — has left us behind, old men struck with grief too great to bear. We thought he would be our heir. Instead, all that is ours is his corpse.

For whom shall my mind now labor? Whom shall my poor writings seek to please? Where is the man whose voice was sweeter than a swan's last song? My mind is dazed. My hand trembles. A mist covers my eyes and stammering seizes my tongue. My very pen seems to feel his loss. As often as I try to write and scatter the flowers of this tribute upon his tomb, my eyes fill with tears, my grief returns, and I can think of nothing but his death.

In ancient times, children stood over the bodies of their parents and publicly proclaimed their praises — drawing tears and sighs from everyone who heard them. But here the natural order is reversed. We, his elders, are paying the tribute that the young man should have paid to us.

What shall I do? Shall I add my tears to yours? The apostle forbids it — he calls the Christian dead "those who sleep" [1 Thessalonians 4:13]. The Lord himself said, "The girl is not dead but sleeping" [Mark 5:39]. Lazarus was said to have "fallen asleep" before he was raised [John 11:11]. So Christian death is a sleep, not an ending. But even knowing this, the tears come. Jesus himself wept for Lazarus — not because he doubted the resurrection, but because he loved his friend [John 11:35]. There is a grief that faith allows. What faith forbids is despair.

Let me tell you what Nepotian was. He was a soldier first — he served in the emperor's guard. But his heart was never in it. While other young officers spent their pay on women and horses, he gave his to the poor. He left the army, took holy orders, and became a priest at Altinum under your guidance. He was your nephew, but more importantly, he was your student.

As a priest, he was everything a priest should be. He kept his church spotlessly clean — the altar always polished, the walls whitewashed, the floors swept. The curtains were always fresh, the sacristy always in order. In every detail, no matter how small, he showed the same care. Some might call this trivial. I call it a mark of character. A man who attends to small duties faithfully will not neglect great ones.

He preached well — not with the empty fireworks of the schools, but with the solid learning of a man who had mastered the Scriptures. He had studied my own books, and I say this without vanity: he was one of the few readers I have had who understood what I was trying to do. He combined genuine learning with genuine humility — a combination rarer than people suppose.

And now he is gone, taken by fever in the flower of his years. The world he has left behind is hardly worth staying in. Look around us. The Roman Empire is collapsing. Goths, Huns, Vandals, Sarmatians — the barbarians press in from every side. Thrace, Macedonia, Dalmatia, Pannonia — all ravaged. The very capital trembles. Churches are burned. Monasteries are sacked. Nuns are violated. Priests are murdered at their altars. The bones of the saints are dug up and scattered.

Count the disasters of our generation: Adrianople, where an emperor and his army were swallowed by the earth [the Battle of Adrianople in 378 AD, where Emperor Valens was killed by the Visigoths]. The walls of Rome themselves are no longer a guarantee of safety. What the world outside those walls looks like, I do not need to tell you. You have seen it with your own eyes.

In such times, can we really mourn that Nepotian has been taken early? He has been delivered from the catastrophe. He sleeps while the world burns. "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord" [Revelation 14:13]. He is beyond the reach of the barbarians, beyond the reach of fever, beyond the reach of grief. He is where we all hope to be.

Let us not grieve for him, then, but for ourselves — for we must go on living in a world that grows darker by the day. Let us engrave him on our hearts, hold him fast in memory, and if we can no longer speak with him, let us never cease to speak of him.

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

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