Letter 63: When the dispute arose between Jerome and Epiphanius on the one side and Rufinus and John of Jerusalem on the other (see Letter LI.), Theophilus bishop of Alexandria, being appealed to by the latter sent the presbyter Isidore to report to him on the matter. Isidore reported against Jerome and consequently Theophilus refused to answer several of ...
Letter 63: To Theophilus (c. 397 AD)
[An early letter in the Jerome-Theophilus relationship, before they became allies in the anti-Origenist campaign. When Jerome and Epiphanius clashed with Rufinus and John of Jerusalem over Origenism, Theophilus — then still neutral — sent a priest named Isidore to investigate. Isidore sided against Jerome, and Theophilus subsequently refused to answer Jerome's letters. When Theophilus finally wrote, it was to lecture Jerome about obeying church canons. Jerome replies that obedience to the canons has always been his first priority, then scolds Theophilus for being too lenient with the Origenists.]
[The full text of this letter exists only as a summary in the available source.]
Human translation - New Advent (NPNF / ANF series)
Latin / Greek Original
Original text not yet available in this corpus.
This letter still needs a Latin or Greek source-text backfill. The source link, when available, is preserved so the text can be checked and added later.
View sourceRevision history
- 2026-03-20v2.1.0-import
Initial corpus import from New Advent / NPNF.
Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/3001063.htm
Related Letters
Justice has departed from humanity.
Replying to the preceding letter Jerome again congratulates Theophilus on the success of his efforts to put down Origenism, and informs him that they have already borne fruit as far west as Italy. He then asks him for the decrees of his council (held recently at Alexandria). The date of the letter is 400 A.D.
You care for Pentapolis — you truly do.
Jerome writes to Theophilus to apologize for his delay in sending Latin versions of the latter's letter (CXIII.) and invective against John Chrysostom. Possibly, however, the allusion may be not to these but to some other work of Theophilus (e.g. a paschal letter.) This delay he attributes to the disturbed state of Palestine, the severity of the...
It is some time since I received your letter, but I waited to be able to reply by some fit person; that so the bearer of my answer might supply whatever might be wanting in it. Now there has arrived our much beloved and very reverend brother Strategius, and I have judged it well to make use of his services, both as knowing my mind and able to co...