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| Benedictus PP. XV Spiritus paraclitus IntraText CT - Text |
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15. Holding principles like these, Jerome was compelled, when he
discovered apparent discrepancies in the Sacred Books, to use every endeavor to
unravel the difficulty. If he felt that he had not satisfactorily settled the
problem, he would return to it again and again, not always, indeed, with the
happiest results. Yet he would never accuse the sacred writers of the slightest
mistake - "that we leave to impious folk like Celsus, Porphyry, and
Julian."[40] Here he is in full agreement with Augustine, who
wrote to Jerome that to the Sacred Books alone had he been wont to accord such
honor and reverence as firmly to believe that none of their writers had ever
fallen into any error; and that consequently, if in the said books he came
across anything which seemed to run counter to the truth, he did not think that
that was really the case, but either that his copy was defective or that the
translator had made a mistake, or again, that he himself had failed to
understand. He continues:
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40. Id., Epist. ad Pammachium, 57, 9, 1. 41. S. Augustine, Ad S. Hieron., inter epist. S. Hier., 116, 3. |
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