Collect of the Day
O Lord, God of truth, Your Word is a lamp to our
feet and a light on our path. You gave Your servant Jerome delight in his study
of Holy Scripture. May those who continue to read, mark, and inwardly digest
Your Word find in it the food of salvation and the fountain of life; through
Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one
God, now and forever. Amen.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Commemoration of Jerome, Translator of Holy Scripture
Jerome was born in a little village on the Adriatic Sea
around the year A.D. 345. At a young age he went to study in Rome, where he was
baptized. After extensive travels, he chose the life of a monk and spent five
years in the Syrian desert. There he learned Hebrew, the language of the Old
Testament . After ordination at Antioch and visits to Rome and Constantinople,
Jerome settled in Bethlehem. From the original Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, he
used his ability with languages to translate the Bible into Latin, the common
language of his time. This translation, called the Vulgate, was the authoritative
version of the Bible in the western Church world for over 1,000 years.
Considered one of the great scholars of the early church, Jerome died on
September 30, 420. He was originally interred at Bethlehem but his remains were
eventually taken to Rome. [Commission on Worship
of the The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod]
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