Textual Transmission and the Construction of Spiritual Authority: The Early Reception of Jerome of Stridon
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Evidence from Early Manuscripts and Jerome’s Publishing Strategies
3. Dissemination and Reception in Jerome’s Reading Community
4. Jerome, Augustine, and Pelagianism
5. Mentions of Jerome by Fifth Century Authors
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
| 1 | See selected essays on Jerome’s reception in Cain & Lössl (eds.), Jerome of Stridon: His Life, Writings and Legacy. |
| 2 | The most important contribution in this regard is Andrew Cain’s The Letters of Jerome, in which the author highlights Jerome’s self-promoting strategies in his letters as an important factor in forming his reputation and legacy. Cain demonstrates how Jerome used letter writing for propagandistic purposes, to attract benefactors and to legitimize his authority as a teacher of exegesis as well as asceticism. |
| 3 | Studies have been made concerning Jerome’s early reception in Gaul; see, e.g., Mathisen, “The Use and Misuse of Jerome in Gaul During Late Antiquity”, in Cain and Lössl, pp. 191–208; Driver, “From Palestinian Ignorance to Egyptian Wisdom”. |
| 4 | An important theoretician in this regard is Roger Chartier; see his Cultural History and Order of Books (Chartier 1988, 1994). |
| 5 | Cain, Letters of Jerome, p. 3: “In the final tally, then, the historical Jerome was an extremely marginalized figure in his own time and therefore a far cry from the ‘Saint Jerome’ construct of medieval hagiography that heavily influenced most scholarly traditions down to the twentieth century and some even down to the present day.” (Cf. Cain 2009a), “Rethinking Jerome’s Portraits of Holy Women”, pp. 47–49. |
| 6 | He was declared doctor of the church in 1295, by pope Boniface VIII. |
| 7 | An important complementary list was later published by (Divjak and Römer 1976). |
| 8 | This is reflected in the lists of preserved manuscripts presented in Codices Latini Antiquiores, presented further below. |
| 9 | This concerns fragments of Jerome’s commentaries on Isaiah (two manuscripts), on Jeremiah (including the prologue) and on the Psalms, as well as two manuscripts containing his prefaces and translations of the Old Testament. Three manuscripts from this century contain work by Jerome together with other texts: Hieronymus-Gennadius, De Viris Illustribus; Augustinus, De Liber de Haeresibus, De Cura Pro Mortuis Gerenda, Encheiridion; Hieronymus, Epistulae (221–24)./Hieronymus-Gennadius, De Viris Illustribus; Anastasius Bibliothecarius, Vitae Romanorum Pontificum./Sulpicius Severus, Vita S Martini, Epistulae, Dialogi; Hieronymus, Vita S Pauli. An interesting manuscript kept in Naples, however, contains a lot of texts by Jerome; see further below. |
| 10 | Jerome’s commentaries on Ecclesiastes, on Matthew, on Isaiah and on Jeremiah are preserved in extracts. Moreover, his books Against Jovinian and his Dialogue against the Pelagians are represented, along with letters. The chronicle by Jerome (and Eusebius) is also represented in two manuscripts. One of these includes both the work On Illustrious Men, two chronicles and Vegetius’ work on the military life and warfare. |
| 11 | https://elmss.nuigalway.ie/ (accessed on 5 November 2025). |
| 12 | Half of the preserved manuscripts contain Christian texts. Apart from the manuscripts containing texts from the Old and New Testament, the following texts are represented: Augustinus: Opuscula, De civitate dei, Contra duas epistulas; (Eusebius) + Hieronymus: Chronicon (5 mss), In Ecclesiasten; Ambrosius: De fide (2 mss), in Lucam (2 mss); Maximius: Contra Ambrosium; Rufinus: De benedictionibus patriarcharum; Lactantius: Institutio divina (2 mss), De opificio dei; Cyprianus: testimonia, De opere et elemosynis (2 mss), De sacramentum calicis, Epistulis; Hilarius Pictaviaensis: In Psalmos (3 mss), De trinitate (4 mss); Probus: De catholicis; Nicetas De vigiliis servorum dei; Fragmentum patristicum (unknown content); Gesta concilii Aquiliensis; Liber Paschalis./ Only in one of these mostly only fragmentarily preserved manuscripts there are parts of more than one text in the same manuscript, today hosted by Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris (BnF Lat. 8907 (CLA V/572)): Hilarius Pictaviensis De trinitate, Ambrosius De fide, Gesta Concilii Aquiliensis, and Maximinus Contra Ambrosium. |
| 13 | This is indicated by his use of the word liber for the two letter collections that are listed. Jerome only used the word liber for work that he had finished and had published, as was first observed by Arns (Arns 1953, pp. 18–20). |
| 14 | Concerning Jerome’s letter collections, see Cain, Letters of Jerome, pp. 13–19, 68–71. |
| 15 | See also A. Fürst, Augustinus-Hieronymus, Epistulae mutuae, Briefwechsel, FC 41/1 and 2, Turnhout 2003. |
| 16 | Cf. Augustine’s own summary in his Retractationes, and then, the collection made after his death by Possidius, and the early posthumous collections of the letter collections of Cyprian (by Pontius) and Ambrose (by Paulinus of Mailand). |
| 17 | The treatises in question will be discussed further below. |
| 18 | See Göransson and Dunn (forthcoming), “The Early Text Transmission of Jerome’s Letters”, for more detailed information about the text tradition and the early circulation of the letters of Jerome including a detailed description of the early Naples manuscript, and the contents of other early manuscripts. |
| 19 | This is also presented in detail in Göransson and Dunn, The Early Transmission of Jerome’s Letters. |
| 20 | Concerning Jerome’s readers as a textual community, see (Pålsson 2024, pp. 76–78); (cf. Haines-Eitzen 2012, p. 28). |
| 21 | Jerome dedicated works to certain readers in his prefaces; concerning the function of prefaces, see Cain, Jerome’s Commentaries, pp. 47–53. The associates to which he dedicated most commentaries were Paula and Eustochium (the commentaries on Galatians, Titus, Philemon, Ephesians, Ecclesiastes, Nahum, Micha, Zephaniah, Haggai; to Eustochium, after Paula’s death, the commentaries on Isaiah and Ezekiel) and Pammachius (the commentaries on Obadiah, Hosea, Joel, Amos, Daniel, the latter to Pammachius and Marcella). |
| 22 | See, e.g., Jerome, ep. 25, 26, 28, to Marcella; 64 and 78 to Fabiola. For a list of these letters, see Cain, Letters of Jerome, pp. 218–19; cf. the discussion in Canellis, “Jerome’s Hermeneutics”, pp. 56–66. |
| 23 | This is stated in the very beginning of the works: Adv. Helv. I 1 (PL 23, p. 183): Nuper rogatus a fratribus, ut adversus libellum cujusdam Helvidii responderem…; Adv. Iovin. I 1 (PL 23, p. 211): … sancti ex urbe Roma fratres cujusdam mihi Joviniani Commentariolos transmiserunt, rogantes, ut eorum ineptiis responderem…. |
| 24 | Jerome, C. Rufin. I 3. |
| 25 | ep. 83 in Jerome’s collection. |
| 26 | See, e.g., ep. 54, to the widow Furia, cf. 54.1; ep. 107, to Laeta concerning the education of her daughter; ep. 130 to the virgin Demetrias. |
| 27 | As argued by Cain, Letters of Jerome. |
| 28 | Cf. Cain, Letters of Jerome, chap. 3: “Claiming Marcella”. |
| 29 | Jerome, ep. 71.5. Cf. Williams, The Monk and the Book, p. 243: “… the conception of his complete works … had apparently begun to take hold”. |
| 30 | Jerome, ep. 126.2. |
| 31 | Jerome, ep. 126.1 (CSEL 56, p. 143): … quos libros reor sanctum parentem uestrum habere Oceanum. olim enim editi sunt multis Rufini libri aduersus nos calumnias respuentes. |
| 32 | Jerome, Comm. Mt. praef. |
| 33 | Jerome, ep. 47.3 (CSEL 54, p. 346): Opusculorum meorum, quia plurima euolauerunt de nidulo suo et temerario editiones honore uulgata sunt, nihil misi, ne eadem forsitan mitterem, quae habebas. |
| 34 | Jerome, ep. 60.11 (CSEL 54, p. 562): Illum oculis, illum manibus, illum sinu, illum ore tenebat. Cumque in stratu frequenter evolveret, saepe super pectus soporati, dulcis pagina decidebat. Si vero peregrinorum, si amicorum quispiam venerat, laetabatur nostro super se testimonio. Et quidquid minus in opusculo erat, distinctione moderata, et pronuntiationis varietate pensabat; ut in recitando illo, ipse vel placere quotidie, vel displiciere videretur. |
| 35 | Jerome, ep. 24.1 (CSEL 54, p. 214). |
| 36 | Jerome, Comm. Os. II, praef. (CCSL 76, p. 55): Tu autem, Pammachi, qui nos facere praecepisti hoc, necesse est ut fautor sis imperii tui … uiperamque et scorpium iuxta fabulas poetarum, aduras cauterio, solea conteras; et Scylleos canes ac mortifera carmina sirenarum surda aure pertranseas; ut pariter audire et nosse ualeamus quid uaticinetur Osee propheta…. |
| 37 | Comm. Eph. I, praef. (PL 26, pp. 439–40): Quamobrem obsecro tam vos quae in praesentiarum estis, quam sanctam Marcellam, unicum viduitatis exemplar, ne facile maledicis et invidis opuscula mea tradatis, neque detis sanctum canibus, et margaritas mittatis ante porcos. Cf. the discussion in Cain, Jerome’s Commentaries, pp. 55–57. |
| 38 | See, e.g., Jerome, Comm. Hier. I praef.; Comm. Hier. V praef; Comm. Ioel praef. |
| 39 | See below, concerning Jerome’s and Augustine’s different views. |
| 40 | The clearest example of such criticism is found in the writings of Rufinus, mainly his Apology against Jerome, but it was also brought up by Pelagius; cf. Evans, Pelagius, pp. 6–25. |
| 41 | Concerning his expulsion from Rome, see Cain, “Origen, Jerome, and the Senatus Pharisaeorum”. |
| 42 | Cf. Cain, “Rethinking Jerome’s Portraits”, p. 48: “Jerome, then, faced many dire challenges—most, alas, of his own creation—which seriously impaired his efforts to establish himself in the eyes of contemporary Christians as a credible authority figure.” |
| 43 | For scholarly treatments of this conflict, see (Squires 2019; Dupont et al. 2025; Löhr 2015). Concerning Jerome’s heresiological treatment of Pelagianism, see (Jeanjean 1999, pp. 245–69, 387–431). |
| 44 | Concerning Jerome’s involvement in this controversy, see Evans, Pelagius, 6–42. Pelagius’ critique seems to have concerned not only Jerome’s dependence on Origen’s work, but his views on asceticism as well. Further evidence that Jerome’s approach to Origen was questioned is found in Sulpicius Severus’ Dialogues, cf. below. |
| 45 | See ep. 104 in Jerome’s collection. Another issue of contestation concerned the interpretation of Galatians 2.11–14, see ep. 67 in Jerome’s collection and ep. 28 in Augustine’s. Cf. the scholarly discussions in Fürst, Augustins Briefwechsel; Hennings, Der Briefwechsel; White, The Correspondence. |
| 46 | The first letter that Augustine wrote to Jerome took nine years to reach the addressee, and there were several complications with the delivery of the letters. See Hennings, Der Briefwechsel, for a detailed description of this complexity and its consequences. |
| 47 | Jerome, ep. 102.3. The same name is used for Rufinus in ep. 70.6; C. Rufin. I 30. |
| 48 | Concerning Orosius see, e.g., (Dunn 2025). |
| 49 | Cf. Augustine’s letter to Oceanus, ep. 180. |
| 50 | Rufinus wrote the Apologia ad Anastasium as a reaction to critique directed against him in the context of the Origenist controversy. |
| 51 | Jerome, ep. 126.1. |
| 52 | Jerome, ep. 134.1 (CSEL 56, p. 262): … tuaque dicta quasi mea defendere … ut perniciosissima heresis de ecclesiis auferatur…. |
| 53 | Jerome, Dial. Pelag. III 19. |
| 54 | Augustine, ep. 180.2 (CSEL 44, p. 698): De origine animarum quid sanctus Hieronymus sentiat, iam sciebam…. |
| 55 | Augustine, ep. 180.2 (CSEL 44, p. 698): uerum tamen, si aliquid hinc, quo ista quaestio solui queat, uel legisti uel ex ore eius audisti uel tibi ipsi dominus cogitanti donauit, ut noueris, impertire, obsecro, mihi, ut gratias uberiores agam. |
| 56 | Augustine, ep. 180.5. |
| 57 | It does not appear to have been published immediately after being written (in 397) but rather later and perhaps even after Jerome’s death. Since it ends quite abruptly, it has been argued that Jerome never actually finished it, since the conflict had come to an end (cf. Kelly 1975, p. 207). |
| 58 | Augustine, ep. 169.13. |
| 59 | The work Against Vigilantius was written for the presbyters Riparius and Desiderius (cf. C. Vigil. 3). |
| 60 | Jerome, ep. 141 (CSEL 56, pp. 290–91): … omnes heretici detestantur et me pari persequuntur odio…. |
| 61 | Jerome, ep. 143.1 (CSEL 56, p. 293): heresis Caelestina. |
| 62 | Augustine, C. Iul. 3.17.32. Jerome is also mentioned in connection with Manichaeism in Contra Iulianum, Opus imperfectum 4.88, 89, 121. |
| 63 | Augustine, C. Iul. 2.10.33; cf. 2.10.37, in which Jerome is also mentioned together with other authorities. |
| 64 | Augustine, C. Iul. 2.10.36. |
| 65 | Augustine, De natura 65.78. The claim that the will is “drawn neither to virtue or to vice” comes from Against Jovinian II 3. |
| 66 | Augustine, ep. 148.7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, 15. |
| 67 | Augustine, De gest. pelag. 66. |
| 68 | Concerning this debate and the reception of Jerome, see Mathisen, “Use and Misuse”, pp. 201–5. |
| 69 | Faustus, ep. 3 (CSEL 21, pp. 173–74): “‘The globes of the stars’, he [Jerome] says, ‘are thought to be bodily spirits’.” |
| 70 | Faustus, ep. 3 (CSEL 21, pp. 173–74): “‘If the angels’, he [Jerome] says, ‘are said to be celestial bodies that are impure in comparison with God, how do you think that the human being should be valued?’”. |
| 71 | Claudianus, De statu animae 1.11–12. |
| 72 | Sulpicius Severus, Dial. 1.7 (SC 510, p. 128): … Hieronymus, uir maxime catholicus et sacrae legis peritissimus, Origenem secutus primo tempore putabatur, qui nunc idem praecipue uel omni illius scripta damnaret. |
| 73 | Sulpicius Severus, Dial. 1.9. |
| 74 | Sulpicius Severus, Dial. 1.9 (SC 510, p. 136): Nam qui haereticum esse arbitrantur, insani sunt. There is an indication that Jerome’s theory of asceticism had not been well received by certain monks in Gaul; “a certain book by him” (quendam illius libellum, p. 132) is mentioned in which he had criticized monks who did not go far enough in their asceticism. This probably refers to descriptions in Jerome’s Letter 22 of certain characteristics that should not be found in monastics. It is interesting in this connection to note that Vigilantius, a main opponent of Jerome and a critic of radical asceticism, appears to have had ecclesiastical support in his native Gaul; cf. Jerome, Contra Vigilantium 2. |
| 75 | Cassian, De Incarn. 7.26 (CSEL 17, pp. 384, 385). |
| 76 | Gennadius, Vir. Ill. 40 (Herding, p. 89). Mathisen translates these words with “to teach him [Jerome] the nature of the soul” and lets this add to his argument concerning Gennadius’ approach to Jerome (“Use and Misuse”, p. 205). We would settle for the former translation, which implies that it is Orosius who is supposed to learn from Jerome, rather than the other way around. |
| 77 | Vir. Ill. 63. |
| 78 | Vir. Ill. 17 (Herding, p. 79): … obtrectatori opusculorum suorum respondit duobus voluminibus…. |
| 79 | Concerning Helvidius, Gennadius comments upon his erroneous use of the Scriptures; in his chapter on Vigilantius, Gennadius describes him as ignorant of the meaning of the Scriptures and particularly criticizes an interpretation of a vision in the book of Daniel. The presentations are similar to Jerome’s depictions in Against Helvidius and Letter 61 to Vigilantius respectively. It is remarkable that Gennadius omits important aspects of Vigilantius’ teaching, which were discussed by Jerome in Against Vigilantius, and seems to rely only on Jerome’s letter to Vigilantius. |
| 80 | Vir. Ill. 33 (Herding, p. 85): cuius pravitatem Hieronymus arguens libellum documentis scripturarum sufficienter satiatum adversum eum edidit. |
| 81 | Vir. Ill. 36. |
| 82 | Vir. Ill. 1. |
| 83 | For Jerome’s reception in late antique Gaul, see Mathisen, “Use and Misuse”; concerning Gennadius, see pp. 199–200. Mathisen’s main argument is that Jerome’s early reception in Gaul was quite poor; he was only mentioned by a few authors and not in an overtly appreciative way. |
| 84 | Sulpicius Severus, Dial. 1.8 (SC 510, p. 132). |
| 85 | Sulpicius Severus, Dial. 1.7 (SC 510, p. 128). |
| 86 | Prosper of Aquitaine, Carmen 1.57. Concerning a possible dependence on Augustine’s Against Julian, see (Vessey 2009, pp. 234–35). |
| 87 | Sulpicius Severus, Dial. 1.8. |
| 88 | Augustine, De Doctrina Christiana 4.48; cf. 4.116. |
| 89 | Hydatius, Chron. 12; 21 (Burgess, pp. 80, 84). |
| 90 | Sidonius Apollinaris, ep. 4.3.7 (Anderson, p. 74). Cf. Mathisen, “Use and Misuse”, p. 200. |
| 91 | Sidonius Apollinaris, ep. 9.2.2 (Anderson, p. 504). |
| 92 | As argued by Cain, The Letters of Jerome, cf. n. 2 above. |
| 93 | We thus do not completely agree with the statement by Cain that: “In his own lifetime, Jerome never came close to enjoying the widespread acclaim that accrued to him posthumously.” (“Rethinking Jerome’s Portraits”, p. 47). |
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Göransson, E.; Pålsson, K. Textual Transmission and the Construction of Spiritual Authority: The Early Reception of Jerome of Stridon. Religions 2025, 16, 1459. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111459
Göransson E, Pålsson K. Textual Transmission and the Construction of Spiritual Authority: The Early Reception of Jerome of Stridon. Religions. 2025; 16(11):1459. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111459
Chicago/Turabian StyleGöransson, Elisabet, and Katarina Pålsson. 2025. "Textual Transmission and the Construction of Spiritual Authority: The Early Reception of Jerome of Stridon" Religions 16, no. 11: 1459. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111459
APA StyleGöransson, E., & Pålsson, K. (2025). Textual Transmission and the Construction of Spiritual Authority: The Early Reception of Jerome of Stridon. Religions, 16(11), 1459. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16111459

