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“Jerome - on Didymus the Blind”
From Jerome, De Viris Illustribus, CIX
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Relevant
books
Hicks, Jonathan Douglas
(2024), Lectures on the Psalms (Ancient Christian Texts), (IVP
Academic)
Hill
R. C. (2005), Didymus the Blind: Commentary on Zechariah (Fathers of the Church
111)
|
Chapter CIX Didymus, of Alexandria, becoming blind while very young, and therefore
ignorant of the rudiments of learning, displayed such a miracle of
intelligence as to learn perfectly dialectics and even geometry, sciences
which especially require sight. He wrote many admirable works:
Commentaries on all the Psalms, Commentaries on the Gospels of Matthew and
John, On the doctrines, also two books Against the Arians, and
one book On the Holy Spirit, which I translated in Latin, eighteen
volumes On Isaiah, three books of commentaries On Hosea,
addressed to me, and five books On Zechariah, written at my request,
also commentaries On Job, and many other things, to give an account
of which would be a work of itself. He is still living, and has already
passed his eighty-third year. |
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original Latin text
Jerome
Didymus the Blind