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| Benedictus PP. XV Spiritus paraclitus IntraText CT - Text |
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13. Jerome further shows that the immunity of Scripture from error or
deception is necessarily bound up with its Divine inspiration and supreme
authority. He says he had learnt this in the most celebrated schools, whether
of East or West, and that it was taught him as the doctrine of the Fathers, and
generally received. Thus when, at the instance of Pope Damasus, he had begun
correcting the Latin text of the New Testament, and certain
"manikins" had vehemently attacked him for "making corrections
in the Gospels in face of the authority of the Fathers and of general
opinion," Jerome briefly replied that he was not so utterly stupid nor so
grossly uneducated as to imagine that the Lord's words needed any correction or
were not divinely inspired.[29] Similarly, when explaining Ezechiel's
first vision as portraying the Four Gospels, he remarks:
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29. Id., Epist. ad Marcellam, 27, 1, 1. 30. Id., In Ezech., 1:15-18. |
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