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SAINT GREGORY THE GREAT
REGISTER OF THE EPISTLES
BOOK IV
EPISTLE I.
TO CONSTANTIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Constantius, Bishop of Mediolanum (Milan).
On receiving the letters of your Fraternity I returned great thanks to Almighty
God, that I was counted worthy to be refreshed by the celebration of your ordination.
Truly that all, by the gift of God, with one accord concurred in your election,
is a fact which thy Fraternity ought with the utmost consideration to estimate,
since, after God, you are greatly indebted to those who with so submissive
a disposition desired you to be preferred before themselves.
It becomes you, therefore, with priestly benignity to respond to their behaviour,
and with kind sympathy to attend to their needs. If perchance there are any
faults in any of them, rebuke these with well-considered reproofs, so that
your very priestly indignation be mingled with a savour of sweetness, and that
so you may be loved by your subjects even when you are greatly feared. Such
conduct will also induce great reverence for your person in their judgment;
since, as hasty and habitual rage is despised, so discriminate indignation
against faults for the most part becomes the formidable in proportion as it
has been slow.
Further, John our subdeacon, who has returned, has reported many good things
of you as to which we beseech Almighty God Himself to fulfil what He has begun;
to the end that He may shew thee to have advanced in good inwardly and outwardly
both now among men and hereafter among the angels.
Moreover, we have sent thee, according to custom, a pallium to be used in
the sacred solemnities of mass. But I beg you, when you receive it, to vindicate
its dignity and its meaning by humility.
EPISTLE II.
TO CONSTANTIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Constantius, Bishop of Mediolanum.
My most beloved son, the deacon Boniface, has conveyed to me certain private
information through thy Fraternity's letter; namely that three bishops, having
sought out rather than found an occasion, have separated themselves from the
pious communion of your Fraternity, saying that you have assented to the condemnation
of the Three Chapters(1), and have given a security(2). And, indeed, whether
there has been any mention made of the Three Chapters in any word or writing
whatever thy Fraternity remembers well; although thy Fraternity's predecessor,
Laurentius, did send forth a most strict security to the Apostolic See, to
which most noble men in legitimate number subscribed; among whom I also, at
that time holding the praetorship of the city, likewise subscribed; since after
such a schism had taken place about nothing, it was right that the Apostolic
See should take heed, with the view of guarding in all respects the unity of
the Universal Church in the minds of priests. But as to its being said that
our daughter, Queen Theodelinda, after hearing this news, has withdrawn herself
from thy communion, it is for all reasons evident that, though she has been
seduced to some little extent by the words of bad men, yet, on the arrival
of Hippolytus the notary, and John the abbot, she will seek in all ways the
communion of your Fraternity(3). To her also I have addressed a letter(4),
which I beg your Fraternity to transmit to her without delay. Further, with
regard to the bishops who appear to have separated themselves, I have written
another letter, which when you have caused to be shewn to them, I doubt not
that they will repent of the superstition of their pride before thy Fraternity.
Furthermore, you have accurately and briefly informed me of what has been
done, whether by King Ago(5) or by the Kings of the Franks. I beg your Fraternity
to make known to me in all ways what you have so far ascertained. But, if you
should see that Ago, King of the Lombards, is doing nothing with the Patrician(6),
promise him on our part that I am prepared to give attention to his case, if
he should be willing to arrange anything with the republic advantageously.
EPISTLE Ill.
TO CONSTANTIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Constantius, Bishop of Mediolanum.
It has come to my knowledge that certain bishops of your diocese, seeking
out rather than finding an occasion, have attempted to sever themselves from
the unity of your Fraternity, saying that thou hadst given a security(7) at
the Roman city for thy condemnation of the three Chapters. And the fact is
that they say this because they do not know how I am accustomed to trust thy
Fraternity even without security. For if there had been need for anything of
the kind, your mere word of mouth could have been trusted. I, however, do not
recollect any mention between us of the three Chapters either in word or in
writing. But as for them, if they soon return from their error, they should
be spared, because, according to the saying of the Apostle Paul, They understand
neither what they say nor where of they affirm (1 Tim. i. 7). For we, truth
guiding us and our conscience bearing witness, declare that we keep the faith
of the holy synod of Chalcedon in all respects inviolate, and venture not to
add anything to, or to subtract anything from, its definition(8). But, if any
one would fain take upon himself to think anything, either more or less, contrary
to it, and to the faith of this same synod, we anathematize him without any
hesitation, and decree him to be alien from the bosom of Mother Church. Any
one, therefore, whom this my confession does not bring to a right mind, no
longer loves the synod of Chalcedon, but hates the bosom of Mother Church.
If then those who appear to have been thus dating have presumed thus to speak
in zeal of soul, it remains for them, having received this satisfaction, to
return to the unity of thy Fraternity, and not divide themselves from the body
of Christ, which is the holy universal Church.
EPISTLE IV.
TO QUEEN THEODELINDA.
Gregory to Theodelinda, Queen of the Lombards(9).
It has come to our knowledge by the report of certain persons that your Glory
has been led on by some bishops even to such an offence against holy Church
as to withdraw yourself from the communion of Catholic unanimity. Now the more
we sincerely love you, the more seriously are we distressed about you, that
you believe unskilled and foolish men, who not only do not know what they talk
about, but can hardly understand what they have heard.
For they say that in the times of Justinian of pious memory, some things were
ordained contrary to the council of Chalcedon; and, while they neither read
themselves nor believe those who do, they remain in the same error which they
themselves reigned to themselves concerning us. For we, our conscience bearing
witness, declare that nothing was altered, nothing violated, with respect to
the faith of this same holy council of Chalcedon; but that whatever was done
in the times of the aforesaid Justinian was so done that the faith of the council
of Chalcedon should in no respect be disturbed. Further, if any one presumes
to speak or think anything contrary to the faith of the said synod, we detest
his opinion, with interposition of anathema. Since then you know the integrity
of our faith under the attestation of our conscience, it remains that you should
never separate yourself from the communion of the Catholic Church, lest all
those tears of yours, and all those good works should come to nothing, if they
are found alien from the true faith. It therefore becomes your Glory to send
a communication with all speed to my most reverend brother and fellow-bishop
Constantius, of whose faith, as well as his life, I have long been well assured,
and to signify by your letters addressed to him how kindly you have accepted
his ordination, and that you are in no way separated from the communion of
his Church; although I think that what I say on this subject is superfluous:
for, though there has been some degree of doubtfulness in your mind, I think
that it has been removed from your heart on the arrival of my son John the
abbot, and Hippolytus the notary.
EPISTLE V.
TO BONIFACE, BISHOP.
Gregory to Boniface, Bishop of Regium (Reii).
It is a shame for priests to be admonished about matters of divine worship.
For they are then to their disgrace required to do what they ought themselves
to require to be done. Yet lest, as I do not suppose, thy Fraternity should
neglect in any respect the things that pertain to the work of God, we have
thought fit to exhort thee specially on this very head. We therefore admonish
thee that the clergy of the city of Regium be to no extent released by the
indulgence of thy Fraternity in duties demanded by their office. But in the
things that pertain to God let them be most instantly and most earnestly compelled.
We desire thee also to study the reputation of the aforesaid clergy, that nothing
bad, nothing that at all contravenes ecclesiastical discipline, be heard of
them; seeing that it is to its adornment, not to foulness of deeds, that their
office appertains. Further, we decree that what we determined in the case of
the Sicilians be observed by thy subdeacons(1); nor mayest thou suffer this
our decision to be infringed by the contumacy or temerity of any one whatever;
that so, as we believe will be the case, all that has been said above being
most strictly kept in force by thee, thou mayest neither prove a transgressor
of our admonition, nor be accused as guilty of remissness in the order of pastoral
rule which has been committed to thee.
EPISTLE VI.
TO CYPRIAN, DEACON.
Gregory to Cyprian, Deacon and Rector of Sicily.
It has been reported to us that a native of the province of Lucania, Petronilla
by name, was converted through the exhortation of the bishop Agnellus, and
that all her property, though she had it in her own power, she nevertheless
bestowed on the monastery which she entered even by a special deed of gift:
also that the aforesaid bishop died leaving half of his substance to one Agnellus,
his son, who is said to be a notary of our Church, and half to the said monastery.
But, when they had fled for refuge to Sicily because of the calamity impending
on Italy, the above-named Agnellus is said to have corrupted her morals and
defiled her, and, finding her with child, to have seduced her from the monastery,
and to have taken away with her all her be longings, both those that had been
her own and such as she might have had given her by his own father, and that,
after perpetrating such and so great a crime, he claims these things as his
own. We therefore exhort thy Love to cause the aforesaid man, and the above-named
woman, to be summarily brought before thee, and to institute a most thorough
enquiry into the case. And, if thou shouldest find it to be as reported to
us, determine an affair defiled by so many iniquities with the utmost severity
of expurgation; to the end that both strict retribution may overtake the above-named
man, who has regarded neither his own nor her condition, and that, she having
been first punished and consigned to a monastery under penance, all the property
that had been taken away from the oft above-named place, with all its fruits
and accessions, may be restored.
EPISTLE VII.
TO GENNADIUS, PATRICIAN.
Gregory to Gennadius, Patrician and Exarch of Africa.
We are well assured that the mind of your religious Excellency is inflamed
with zeal of divine love against those things especially which are done in
unseemly wise in the churches. We therefore the more gladly impose on you the
correction of faults in ecclesiastical cases as we have confidence in the bent
of your pious disposition. Be it known, then, to your Excellence that it has
been reported to us by some who have come to us from the African parts that
many things are being committed in the council of Numidia contrary to the way
of the Fathers and the ordinances of the canons. And, being unable to bear
any longer the frequent complaints that have reached us about such things,
we committed them to be enquired into to our brother and fellow-bishop Columbus(3),
of whose gravity his very reputation, which is spread abroad, now allows us
not to doubt. Wherefore, greeting you with fatherly affection, we exhort your
Excellence that in all things pertaining to ecclesiastical discipline you should
lend him the support of your assistance, lest, if what is done amiss should
not be enquired into anti visited, it should grow with greater license into
future excesses through precedent of long continuance. Know moreover, most
excellent son, that if you seek victories, and are dealing for the security
of the province committed to you, nothing will avail you more for this end
than being zealous in restraining as far as possible the lives of priests and
the intestine wars of Churches.
EPISTLE VIII.
TO JANUARIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Januarius, Bishop of Caralis (Cagliari).
We think indeed that thy position may in itself be enough to compel thee to
be instant in the fulfilment of pious duties. But, lest remissness of any kind
should intervene to abate thy zeal, we have thought it right to exhort thee
especially with regard to them. Now it has come to our knowledge that your
Stephen, when departing this life, by his last will and testament directed
a monastery to be founded. But it is said that his desire is so far un-accomplished
owing to the delay of the honourable lady Theodosia, his heiress. Wherefore
we exhort thy Fraternity to pay the utmost attention to this matter, and admonish
the above-named lady, to the end that within a year's space she may establish
a monastery as has been directed, and construct everything without dispute
according to the will of the departed. But if she should put off the completion
of the design out of negligence or artfulness (as, for instance, if she is
unable to found it in the place that had been appointed, and it is thought
fit that it be placed elsewhere, and the matter is neglected through the intervening
delay), then we desire that it be built by the diligence of thy Fraternity,
and that, all things being set in order, the effects and revenues that have
been left be appropriated by thee to this venerable place. For so thou wilt
both escape condemnation for remissness before the awful Judge, and, in accordance
with our most religious laws, wilt be accomplishing with episcopal zeal the
pious wishes of the departed, which had been disregarded(4).
EPISTLE IX.
TO JANUARIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Januarius, Bishop of Caralis (Cagliari).
Pastoral zeal ought indeed in itself to have sufficiently instigated thee,
even without oar aid, to protect profitably and providently the flock of which
thou hast taken charge, and to preserve it with diligent circumspection from
the cunning devices of enemies. But, since we have found that thy Charity needs
also the written word of our authority for the aug mentation of thy firmness,
it is necessary for us, by the exhortation of brotherly love, to strengthen
thy faltering disposition towards the earnestness of religious activity.
Now it has come to our knowledge that thou art remiss in thy guardianship
of the monasteries of the handmaidens of God situated in Sardinia; and, though
it had been prudently arranged by thy predecessors that certain approved men
of the clergy should have the charge of attending to their needs, this has
now been so entirely neglected that women specially dedicated to God are compelled
to go in person among public functionaries about tributes and other liabilities,
and are under the necessity of running to and fro through villages and farms
for making up their taxes, and of mixing themselves unsuitably in business
which belongs to men. This evil let thy Fraternity remove by an easy correction;
that is, by carefully deputing one man of approved life and manners, and o
such age and position as to give rise to no evil suspicion of him, who may,
with the fear of God, so assist the inmates of these monasteries that they
may no longer be allowed to wander, against rule, for any cause whatever, private
or public, beyond their venerable precincts; but that whatever has to be done
in their behalf may be transacted reasonably by him whom you shall depute.
But let the nuns themselves, rendering praises to God and confining themselves
to their monasteries, no longer suggest any evil suspicion to the minds of
the faithful. But if any one of them, either through former license, or through
an evil custom of impunity, has been seduced, or should in future be led, into
the gulph of adulterous lapse, we will that, after enduring the severity of
adequate punishment, she be consigned for penance to some other stricter monastery
of virgins, that she may there give herself to prayers and fastings, and profit
herself by penitence, and afford an example of the more rigorous kind of discipline,
such as may inspire fear in others. Further, let any one who may be detected
in any iniquity with women of this class be deprived of communion, if he be
a layman; but, if he be a cleric, let him also be removed from his office,
and thrust into a monastery for his ever to be deplored excesses.
We also desire thee to hold councils of bishops twice in the year, as is said
to have been the custom of thy province, as well as being ordered by the authority
of the sacred canons; that, if any among them be of moral character inconsistent
with his profession, he may be convicted by the friendly rebuke of his brethren,
and also that measures may be taken with paternal circumspection for the security
of the flock committed to him, and for the well-being of souls. It has come
to our knowledge also that male and female slaves of Jews, who have fled for
refuge to the Church on account of their faith, are either restored to their
unbelieving masters, or paid for according to their value in lieu of being
restored. We exhort therefore that thou by no means allow so bad a custom to
continue; but that whosoever being a slave to Jews, shall have fled for refuge
to venerable places, thou suffer him not in any degree to sustain prejudice.
But, whether he had been a Christian before, or been baptized now, let him
be supported in his claim for freedom, without any loss to the poor, by the
patronage of ecclesiastical compassion.
Let not bishops presume to sign baptized infants a second time on the forehead
with chrism; but let the presbyters anoint those who are to be baptized on
the breast, that the bishops may afterwards anoint them on the forehead(5).
With regard also to founding monasteries, which divers persons have ordered
to be built, if thou perceivest that any persons to whom the charge has been
assigned put it off on unjust pretexts, we desire thee to insist sagaciously
according to what the laws enjoin, lest (as God forbid should be the case)
the pious retentions of the departed should be frustrated through thy neglect.
Further, as to the monastery which Peter is said to have formerly ordered to
be constructed in his house, we have seen fit that thy Fraternity should make
accurate enquiry into the amount of the revenues there. And in case of there
being a suitable provision, when all diminutions of the property and what is
said to have been dispersed have been recovered, let the monastery with all
diligence and without any delay be founded. But, if the means are insufficient
or detrimental(6), we desire thee, after closely investigating everything as
has been commanded, to send a report to us, that we may know how to deliberate
with the Lord's help with regard to its construction. Let, then, thy Fraternity
give wise attention to all the points above referred to, so as neither to be
found to have transgressed the tenour of our admonitions nor to stand liable
to divine judgment for too little zeal in thy pastoral office.
EPISTLE X.
TO ALL THE BISHOPS OF DALMATIA.
Gregory to all the bishops through Dalmatia(7).
It behoved your Fraternity, having the eyes of the flesh closed out of regard
to Divine judgment, to have omitted nothing that appertains to God and to a
right inclination of mind, nor to have preferred the countenance of any man
whatever to the uprightness of justice. But now that your manners have been
so perverted by secular concerns, that, forgetting the whole path of the sacerdotal
dignity that is yours, and all sense of heavenly fear, you study to accomplish
what may please yourselves and not God, we have held it necessary to send you
these specially strict written orders, whereby, with the authority of the blessed
Peter, Prince of the apostles, we enjoin that you presume not to lay hands
on any one whatever in the city of Salona, so far as regards ordination to
episcopacy, without our consent and permission; nor to ordain any one in the
same city otherwise than as we have said.
But if, either of your own accord, or under compulsion from any one whatever,
you should presume or attempt to do anything contrary to this injunction, we
shall decree you to be deprived of participation of the Lord's body and blood,
that so your very handling of the business, or your very inclination to transgress
our order, may cut you off from the sacred mysteries, and no one may be accounted
a bishop whom you may ordain. For we wish no one to be rashly ordained whose
life can be found fault with. And so, if the deacon Honoratus is shewn to be
unworthy, we desire that a report may be sent us of the life and manners of
him who may be elected, that whatever is to be done in this matter we may allow
to be carried out salubriously with our consent.
For we trust in Almighty God that, as far as in us lies, we may never suffer
to be done what may damage our soul; never what may damage your Church. But,
if the voluntary consent of all should so fix on one person that by the favour
of God he may be proved worthy, and there should be no one to dissent from
his being ordained, we wish him to be consecrated by you in this same church
of Salona under the license granted in this present epistle; excepting notwithstanding
the person of Maximus, about whom many evil reports have reached us: and, unless
he desists from coveting the higher order, it remains, as I think, that after
full enquiry, he should be deprived also of the very office which he now holds.
EPISTLE XI.
TO MAXIMIANUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Maximianus, Bishop of Syracuse.
It had indeed been committed to thy Fraternity long ago by our authority to
correct in our stead any excesses or unseemly proceedings that there might
be in the Church and other venerable places of Sicily(8). But, seeing that
a complaint has reached us of some things having been so far neglected, we
have thought it fit that thy Fraternity should again be specially stirred up
to correct them.
For we learn that in the case of revenues of Churches that have been newly
acquired the canonical disposition of their fourth parts does not prevail(9),
but that the bishops of the several places distribute a fourth part of the
ancient revenues only, retaining for their own use those that have been recently
acquired. Wherefore let thy Fraternity make haste actively to correct this
evil custom that has crept in, so that, whether in the case of former revenues
or of such as have accrued now or may accrue, the fourth parts may be dispensed
according to the canonical distribution of them. For it is unseemly that one
and the same substance of the Church should be rated, as it were, under two
different laws, namely, that of usurpation and that of the canons.
Permit not presbyters, deacons, and other clerks of whatever order, who serve
churches, to be abbots of monasteries; but let them either, giving up clerical
duties, be advanced to the monastic order, or, if they should decide to remain
in the position of abbot, let them by no means be allowed to have clerical
employment. For it is very unsuitable that, if one cannot fulfil the duties
of either of these positions with diligence proportional to its importance,
any one should be judged fit for both, and that so the ecclesiastical order
should impede the monastic life, and in torn the rule of monasticism impede
ecclesiastical utility. Of this thing also we have taken thought to warn thy
Charity; that, if any one of the bishops should depart this life, or (which
God forbid) should be removed for his transgressions, the hierarchs and all
the chief of the clergy being assembled, and in thy presence making an inventory
of the property of the Church, all that is found should be accurately described,
and nothing should be taken away in kind, or in any other way whatever, from
the property of the Church, as is said to have been done formerly, as though
in return for the trouble of making the inventories. For we desire all that
pertains to the protection of what belongs to the poor to be so executed that
in their affairs no opportunity may be left for the venality of self-interested
men.
Let visitors of churches, and their clerks who with them are at trouble in
parishes that are not of their own city, receive according to thy appointment
some subsidy for their labour. For it is just that they should get payment
in the places where they are found to lend their services.
We most strongly forbid young women to be made abbesses. Let thy Fraternity,
there fore, permit no bishop to veil any but a sexagenarian virgin, whose age
and character may demand this being done; that so, this as well as the above-named
points being set right with the Lord's help by the urgency of thy strict requirement,
thou mayest hasten to bind up again with canonical ties the long loosened state
of venerable things, and also that divine affairs may be arranged, not by the
incongruous wills of men, but with adequate strictness. The month of October,
Indiction(12).
EPISTLE XV.
TO JANUARIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Januarius, Bishop of Caralis (Cagliari).
Theodosia, a religious lady, being desirous of carrying out the intention
of her late husband Stephen by the building of a monastery(1), has begged us
to transmit our letters to your Fraternity, whereby, through our commendation,
she may the more tea lily be counted worthy of your aid. She asserts that her
husband had given directions for the monastery to be constructed on the farm
called Piscenas, which has come into the possession of the guest-house (Xenodachii)
of the late bishop Thomas. Now, though the possessor of the property would
allow her to found it on land that is not her own, yet seeing that the lord
with reason objects(2), we have thought it right to agree to her petition;
which is that she should, with the Lord's help, construct a monastery for handmaidens
of God in a house belonging to herself, which she asserts that she has at Caralis.
But, since she says that the aforesaid house is burdened by guests and visitors,
we exhort thy Fraternity to take pains to assist her in all ways, and lend
the aid of thy protection to her devotion, so that thy assistance and assiduity
may make thee partaker of the reward of her departed husband's earnestness
and her own. As to the relics which she requests may be placed there, we desire
that they be deposited with due reverence by thy Fraternity.
EPISTLE XVIII.
TO MAURUS, ABBOT.
Gregory
to Maurus, &c.
The care of churches which is evidently inherent in the priestly office compels
us to be so solicitous that no fault of neglect may appear with regard to them.
Since, however, we have learnt that the church of Saint Pancratius, which had
been committed to presbyters, has been frequently neglected, so that people
coming there on the Lord's day to celebrate the solemnities of mass have returned
murmuring on finding no presbyter, we therefore, after mature deliberation,
have determined to remove those presbyters, and with the favour of God constitute
for the same church a congregation of monks in a monastery, to the end that
the abbot who shall preside there may give care and attention in all respects
to the aforesaid church. And we have also thought fit to put thee, Maurus,
over this monastery as abbot, ordaining that the lands of the aforesaid church,
and whatever may have come into its possession, or accrued from its revenues,
be applied to this thy monastery, and belong to it without any diminution;
but on condition whatever needs to be effected or repaired in the church above
written may be so effected and repaired by thee without fail.
But lest, after the removal of the presbyters to whom this church had previously
been committed, it should seem to be without provision for divine service,
we therefore enjoin thee by the tenour of this authority to supply it with
a peregrine(3) presbyter to celebrate the sacred solemnities of mass, who,
nevertheless, must needs both live in thy monastery, and have from it provision
for his maintenance.
But let this also above all be thy care, that there over the most sacred body
of the blessed Pancratius the work of God be executed daily without fail. These
things, then, which by the tenour of this precept we depute thee to do, we
will that not only thou perform, but that they be also so observed and fulfilled
for ever by those who shall succeed thee in thy office and place, that there
may be no possibility henceforth of neglect being found in the aforesaid church.
EPISTLE XX.
TO MAXIMUS, PRETENDER (Proesumptorem)(4).
Gregory to Maximus, Pretender in Salona.
Though the merits of any one's life were in other respects such as to offer
no impediment to his ordination to priestly offices, yet the crime of canvassing
in itself is condemned by the severest strictness of the canons. Now we have
been informed that thou, having either obtained surreptitiously, or pretended,
an order from the most pious princes, hast forced thy way to the order of priesthoods,
which is of all men to be venerated, while being in thy life unworthy. And
this without any hesitation we believed, inasmuch as thy life and age are not
unknown to us, and further, because we are not ignorant of the mind of our
most serene lord the Emperor, in that he is not accustomed to mix himself up
in the causes of priests, lest he should in any way be burdened by our sins.
An unheard-of wickedness is also spoken of; that, even after our interdiction,
which was pronounced under pain of excommunication of thee and those who should
ordain thee, it is said that thou wast brought forward by a military force,
and that presbyters, deacons, and other clergy were beaten. Which proceeding
we can in no wise call a consecration, since it was celebrated by excommunicated
men. Since, therefore, without any precedent, thou hast violated such and so
great a dignity, namely that of the priesthood, we enjoin that, until I shall
have ascertained from the letters of our lords or of our responsalis, that
thou wast ordained under a true and not a surreptitious order, thou and thy
ordainers by no means presume to handle anything connected with the priestly
office, and that you approach not the service of the holy altar till you have
heard from us again. But, if you should presume to act in contravention of
this order, be ye anathema from God and from the blessed Peter, Prince of the
apostles, that your punishment may afford an example to other catholic churches
also, through their contemplation of the judgment upon you. The month of May,
Indiction 12.
EPISTLE XXI.
TO VENANTIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Venantius, Bishop of Luna (in Etruria).
It has reached us by the report of many that Christian slaves are detained
in servitude by Jews living in the city of Luna(6); which thing has seemed
to us by so much the more offensive as the sufferance of it by thy Fraternity
annoys us. For it was thy duty, in respect of thy place, and in thy regard
for the Christian religion, to leave no occasion for simple souls to serve
Jewish superstition not through persuasion, but, in a manner, by right of authority.
Wherefore we exhort thy Fraternity that, according to the course laid down
by the most pious laws, no Jew be allowed to retain a Christian slave in his
possession. But, if any are found in their power, let liberty be secured to
them by protection under the sanction of law. But as to any that are on the
property of Jews, though they be themselves free from legal obligation, yet,
since they have long been attached to the cultivation of their lands as bound
by the condition of their tenure, let them continue to cultivate the farms
they have been accustomed to do, rendering their payments to the aforesaid
persons, and performing all things that the laws require of husbandmen or natives,
except that no farther burden be imposed on them. But, whether any one of these
should wish to remain in his servitude, or any to migrate to another place,
let the latter consider with himself that he will have lost his rights as a
husbandman by his own rashness, though he has got rid of his servitude by force
of law. In all these things, then, we desire thee to exert thyself so wisely
that neither mayest thou be a guilty pastor of a dismembered flock, nor may
thy too little zeal render thee reprehensible before us.
EPISTLE XXIII.
TO HOSPITO, DUKE OF THE BARBARICINI(7).
Gregory
to Hospito, &c.
Since no one of thy race is a Christian, I hereby know that thou art better
than all thy race, in that thou in it art found to be a Christian. For, while
all the Barbaricini live as senseless animals, know not the true God, but adore
stocks and stones, in the very fact that thou worshippest the true God thou
shewest how much thou excellest them all. But carry thou out the faith which
thou hast received in good deeds and words, and offer what is in thy power
to Christ in whom thou believest, so as to bring to Him as many as thou canst,
and cause them to be baptized, and admonish them to set their affection on
eternal life. And if perchance thou canst not do this thyself, being otherwise
occupied, I beg thee, with my greeting, to succour in all ways our men whom
we have sent to your parts, to wit my fellow-bishop Felix, and my son, the
servant of God, Cyriacus(8), so that in aiding their labours thou mayest shew
thy devotion to Almighty God, and that He whose servants thou succourest in
their good work may be a helper to thee in all good deeds. We have sent you
through them a blessing(9) of St. Peter the apostle, which I beg you to receive,
as you ought to do, kindly. The month of June, Indiction 12.
EPISTLE XXIV.
TO ZABARDAS, DUKE OF SARDINIA.
Gregory
to Zabardas, &c.
From the letters of my brother and fellow-bishop Felix, and of the servant
of God, Cyriacus, we have learnt your Glory's good qualities. And we give great
thanks to mighty God, that Sardinia has got such a duke; one who so knows how
to do his duty to the republic in earthly matters as to know also how to exhibit
to Almighty God dutiful regard for the heavenly country. For they have written
to me that you are arranging terms of peace with the Barbaricini on such conditions
as to bring these same Barbaricini to the service of Christ. On this account
I rejoice exceedingly, and, should it please Almighty God, will speedily notify
your gifts to our most serene princes. Do you, therefore, accomplish what you
have begun, shew the devotion of your heart to Almighty God, and help to the
utmost of your power those whom we have sent to your parts for the conversion
of the Barbaricini 1); knowing that such works may avail much to aid you both
before our earthly princes and in the eyes of the heavenly king.
EPISTLE XXV.
TO THE NOBLES AND PROPRIETORS IN SARDINIA.
Gregory
to the Nobles, &c.
I have learnt from the report of my brother and fellow-bishop Felix, and my
son the servant of God, Cyriacus(2), that nearly all of you have peasants (rusticos(3))
on your estates given to idolatry. And this has made me very sorry, since I
know that the guilt of subjects weighs down the life of their superiors, and
that, when sin in a subject is not corrected, sentence is flung back on those
who are over them. Wherefore, magnificent sons, I exhort that with all care
and all solicitude ye be zealous for your souls, and see what account you will
render to Almighty God for your subjects. For indeed they have been committed
to you for this end, that both they may serve for your advantage in earthly
things, and you, through your care for them, may provide for their souls in
the things that are eternal. If, then, they pay what they owe you, why pay
you not them what you owe them? That is to say, your Greatness should assiduously
admonish them, and restrain them from the error of idolatry, to the end that
by their being drawn to the faith you may make Almighty God propitious to yourselves.
For, lo, you observe how the end of this world is close at hand; you see that
now a human, now a divine, sword rages against us: and yet you, the worshippers
of the true God, behold stones adored by those who are committed to you, and
are silent(4). What, I pray you, will you say in the tremendous judgment, when
you have received God's enemies into your power, and yet disdain to subdue
them to God and recall them to Him? Wherefore, addressing you with due greeting,
I beg that your Greatness would be earnestly on the watch to give yourselves
to zeal for God, and hasten to inform me in your letters which of you has brought
how many to Christ. If, then, haply from any cause you are unable to do this,
enjoin it on our aforesaid brother and fellow-bishop Felix, or my son Cyriacus,
and afford them succour for the work of God, that so in the retribution to
come you may be in a state to partake of life by so much the more as you now
afford succour to a good work.
EPISTLE XXVI,
TO JANUARIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Januarius, Bishop of Caralis (Cagliari).
We have ascertained from the report of our fellow-bishop Felix and the abbot
Cyriacus that in the island of Sardinia priests are oppressed by lay judges,
and that thy ministers despise thy Fraternity; and that, so far as appears,
while you aim only at simplicity, discipline is neglected. Wherefore I exhort
thee that, putting aside all excuses, thou take pains to rule the Church of
which thou hast received the charge, to keep up discipline among the clergy,
and fear no one's words. But, as I hear, thou hast forbidden thy Archdeacon
to live with women, and up to this time art set at naught with regard to this
thy prohibition. Unless he obey thy command, our will is that he be deprived
of his sacred order.
There is another tiling also which is much to be deplored; namely, that the
negligence of your Fraternity has allowed the peasants (rusticos) belonging
to lily Church to remain up to the present time in infidelity. And what is
the use of my admonishing you to bring such as do not belong to you to God,
if you neglect to recover your own from infidelity? Hence you must needs be
in all ways vigilant for their conversion. For, should I succeed in finding
a pagan peasant belonging to any bishop whatever in the island of Sardinia,
I will visit it severely on that bishop.
But now, if any peasant should be found so perfidious and obstinate as to
refuse to come to the Lord God, he must be weighted with so great a burden
of payment as to be compelled by the very pain of the exaction to hasten to
the right way(5).
It has also come to our knowledge that some in sacred orders who have lapsed,
either after doing penance or before, are recalled to the office of their ministry;
which is a thing that we have altogether forbidden; and the most sacred canons
also declare against it. Whoso, then, after having received any sacred order,
shall have lapsed into sin of the flesh, let him so forfeit his sacred order
as not to approach any more the ministry of the altar. But, lest those who
have been ordained should ever perish, previous care should be taken as to
what kind of people are ordained, so that it be first seen to whether they
have been continent in life for many years, and whether they have had a care
for reading and a love of almsgiving. It should be enquired also whether a
man has perchance been twice married. It should also be seen to that he be
not illiterate, or under liability to the state, so as to be compelled after
assuming a sacred order to return to public employment. All these things therefore
let your Fraternity diligently enquire into, that, every one having been ordained
after diligent examination. none may be easily liable to be deposed after ordination.
These things which We have written to your Fraternity do you make known to
all the bishops under you, since I myself have been unwilling to write to them,
lest I might seem to lessen your dignity.
It has also come to our ears that some have been offended by our having forbidden
presbyters to touch with chrism those who are to be baptized. And we indeed
acted according to the ancient use of our Church: but, if any are in fact hereby
distressed, we allow that, where there is a lack of bishops, presbyters may
touch with chrism, even on their foreheads, those who are to be baptized(6).
EPISTLE XXVII.
TO JANUARIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Januarius, Bishop of Caralis (Cagliari).
Thy Fraternity ought indeed to have been so attentive to pious duties as to
be in no need at all of our admonitions to induce thee to fulfil them: yet,
as certain particulars that require correction have come to our knowledge,
there is nothing incongruous in your having besides a letter addressed to you
bearing our authority.
Wherefore we apprize you that we have been given to understand that it has
been the custom for the Guest-houses (Xenodochia) constituted in the parts
about Caralis to submit their accounts in detail from time to time to the bishop
of the city; that is, so as to be governed under his guardianship and care.
Now, as thy Charity is said to have so far neglected this, we exhort, as has
been said, that the inmates who are or have been established in these Guest-houses
submit their accounts in detail from time to time. And let such persons be
ordained to preside over them as may be found most worthy in life, manners
and industry, and at any rate religiosi (7), whom judges may have no power
of annoying, lest, if they should be such as could be summoned to the courts,
occasion might be given for wasting the feeble resources which they have: concerning
which resources we wish thee to take the greatest care, so that they be given
away to no one without thy knowledge, lest the carelessness of thy Fraternity
should go so far as to let them be plundered.
Moreover, thou knowest that the bearer of these presents, Epiphanius the presbyter,
was criminally accused in the letters of certain Sardinians. We, then, having
investigated his case as it was our will to do, and finding no proof of what
was charged against him, have absolved him, so that he might be restored to
his place. We therefore desire thee to search out the authors of the charge
against him: and, unless he who sent those same letters be prepared to support
his charges by canonical and most strict proofs, let him on no account approach
the mystery of holy communion.
Further, as to Paul the cleric, who is said to have been often detected in
malpractices, and who had fled into Africa, having returned to a lay state
of life in despite of his cloth, if it is so, we have seen to his being given
up to penance after previous corporal punishment, to the end that, according
to the apostolic sentence, by means of affliction of the flesh the spirit may
be saved, and also that he may be able to wash away with continual tears the
earthly filth of sin, which he is said to have contracted By wicked works.
Moreover, in accordance with the injunctions of the canons, let no religious
person (religiosus) associate with those who have been suspended from ecclesiastical
communion.
Further, for ordinations or marriages of clerics, or from virgins who are
veiled, let no one presume to receive any fee, unless they should prefer to
offer something of their own accord.
As to what should be done in the case of women who have left monasteries for
a lay life, and have taken husbands, we have conversed at length with thy Fraternity's
aforesaid presbyter, from whose report your Holiness may be more fully informed.
Further, let religious clerics (religiosi clerici)(7) avoid resort to or the
patronage of laymen; but let them be in all respects subject to thy jurisdiction
according to the canons, lest through the remissness of thy Fraternity the
discipline of the Church over which thou presidest should be dissolved.
Lastly, as to the men who have sinned with the aforesaid women who had left
their monasteries, and are said to be now suspended from communion, if thy
Fraternity should observe them to have repented worthily for such a wickedness,
we will that thou restore them to holy communion.
EPISTLE XXIX.
TO JANUARIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Januarius, Bishop of Caralis (Cagliari).
It has come to our knowledge that in the place within the province of Sardinia
called Phausiana it is said to have been once the custom to ordain a bishop;
but that, through stress of circumstances, the custom has for long fallen into
disuse. But, as we are aware that now, owing to scarcity of priests, certain
pagans remain there, living like wild beasts, and entirely ignorant of the
worship of God, we exhort thy Fraternity to make haste to ordain a bishop there
according to the ancient way; such a one, that is, as may be suitable for this
work, and may take pains to bring wanderers into the Lord's flock with pastoral
zeal; that so, while he devotes himself there to the saving of souls, neither
may you be found to have required what was superfluous, nor may we repent of
having re-established in vain what had been once discontinued.
EPISTLE XXX.
TO CONSTANTINA AUGUSTA.
Gregory
to Constantina, &c.
The Serenity of your Piety, conspicuous for religious zeal and love of holiness,
has charged me with your commands to send to you the head of Saint Paul, or
some other part of his body, for the church which is being built in honour
of the same Saint Paul in the palace. And, being desirous of receiving commands
from you, by exhibiting the most ready obedience to which I might the more
provoke your favour towards me, I am all the more distressed that I neither
can nor dare do what you enjoin. For the bodies of the apostles Saint Peter
and Saint Paul glitter with so great miracles and terrors in their churches
that one cannot even go to pray there without great fear. In short, when my
predecessor, of blessed memory, was desirous of changing the silver which was
over the most sacred body of the blessed apostle Peter, though at a distance
of almost fifteen feet from the same body, a sign of no small dreadfulness
appeared to him. Nay, I too wished in like manner to amend something not far
from the most sacred body of Saint Paul the apostle; and, it being necessary
to dig to some depth near his sepulchre, the superintendent of that place found
some bones, which were not indeed connected with the same sepulchre; but, inasmuch
as he presumed to lift them and transfer them to another place, certain awful
signs appeared, and be died suddenly.
Besides all this, when my predecessor, of holy memory, was desiring in like
manner to make some improvements not far from the body of Saint Laurence the
martyr, it not being known where the venerable body was laid, diggings were
made in the course of search, and suddenly his sepulchre was unawares disclosed;
and those who were present and working, monks and mansionarii(8), who saw the
body of the same martyr, which they did not indeed presume to touch, all died
within ten days, so that none might survive who had seen the holy body of that
righteous man.
Moreover, let my most tranquil lady know that it is not the custom of the
Romans, when they give relics of saints, to presume to touch any part of the
body; but only a cloth (brandeum) is put into a box (pyxide), and placed near
the most sacred bodies of the saints: and when it is taken up it is deposited
with due reverence in the Church that is to be dedicated, and such powerful
effects are thereby produced there as might have been if their bodies had been
brought to that special place. Whence it came to pass in the[ times of Pope
Leo, of blessed memory, as has been handed down from our forefathers, that,
certain Greeks being in doubt about such relics, the aforesaid pontiff took
scissors and cut this same cloth (brandeum), and from the very incision blood
flowed. For in the Roman and all the Western parts it is unendurable and sacrilegious
for any one by any chance to desire to touch the bodies of saints: and, if
one should presume to do this, it is certain that this temerity will by no
means remain unpunished. For this reason we greatly wonder at the custom of
the Greeks, who say that they take up the bones of saints; and we scarcely
believe it. For certain Greek monks who came here more than two years ago dug
up in the silence of night near the church of Saint Paul, bodies of dental
men lying in the open field, and laid up their bones to be kept in their own
possession till their departure. And, when they were taken and diligently examined
as to why they did this, they confessed that they were going to carry those
bones to Greece to pass for relics of saints. From this instance, as has been
already said, the greater doubt has been engendered in us whether it be true
that they really take up the bones of saints, as they are said to do.
But what shall I say of the bodies of the blessed apostles, when it is well
known that, at the time when they suffered, believers came from the East to
recover their bodies as being those of their own countrymen? And, having been
taken as far as the second milestone from the city, they were deposited in
the place which is called Catacumbas. But, when the whole multitude came together
and endeavoured to remove them thence, such violence of thunder and lightning
terrified and dispersed them that they on no account presumed to attempt such
a thing again. And then the Romans, who of the Lord's loving-kindness were
counted worthy to do this, went out and took up their bodies, and laid them
in the places where they are now deposited.
Who then, most serene lady, can there be so venturesome as, knowing these
things, to presume, I do not say to touch their bodies, but even at all to
look at them? Such orders therefore having been given the by you, which I could
by no means have obeyed, it has not, so far as I find, been of your own motion;
but certain men have wished to stir up your Piety against me, so as to withdraw
from me (which God forbid) the favour of your good will, and have therefore
sought out a point in which I might be found as if disobedient to you. But
I trust in Almighty God that your most kind good will is in no way being stolen
away from me, and that you will always have with you the power of the holy
apostles, whom with all your heart and mind you love, not from their bodily
presence, but from their protection.
Moreover, the napkin, which you have likewise ordered to be sent you, is with
his body, and so cannot be touched, as his body cannot be approached. But since
so religious a desire of my most serene lady ought not to be wholly unsatisfied,
I will make haste to transmit to you some portion of the chains which Saint
Peter the apostle himself bore on his neck and his hands, from which many miracles
are displayed among the people; if at least I should succeed in removing it
by filing. For, while many come frequently to seek a blessing from these same
chains, in the hope of receiving a little part of the filings, a priest attends
with a file, and in the case of some seekers a portion comes off so quickly
from these chains that there is no delay: but in the case of other seekers
the file is drawn for long over the chains, and yet nothing can be got from
them. In the month of June, Indiction(12).
EPISTLE XXXI.
TO THEODORUS, PHYSICIAN.
Gregory to Theodorus, Physician to the Emperor.
I myself give thanks to Almighty God, that distance does not separate the
hearts of those who truly love each other mutually. For lo, most sweet and
glorious son, we are far apart in body, and yet are present with each other
in charity. This your works, this your letters testify, this I experienced
in you when present, this I recognize in your Glory when absent May this make
you both beloved of men and worthy for ever before Almighty God. For, charity
being the mother of virtues, you bring forth the fruits of good works for this
reason that you keep in your soul the very root of those fruits. Now what you
have sent me God inspiring you, for the redemption of captives, I confess that
I have received both with joy and with sorrow. With joy, that is, for you,
whom I thus perceive to be preparing a mansion in the heavenly country; but
with exceeding sorrow for myself, who, over and above my care of the property
of the holy apostle Peter, must now also give an account of the property of
my most sweet son, the lord Theodorus, and be held responsible for having spent
it carefully or negligently. But may Almighty God, who has poured into your
mind the bowels of His own mercy, who has granted to you to take anxious thought
for what is said of our Saviour by the excellent preacher--That, though he
was rich, yet far us he became poor (2 Cor. viii.(9))--may He, at the coming
of the same Saviour, shew you to be rich in virtues, cause you to stand free
from all fault. and giant to you heavenly for earthly joys; abiding joys for
transitory.
As to what you say you desire to be done for you near the most sacred body
of the holy apostle Peter, be assured that, though your tongue were silent,
your charity bids the doing of it. Would indeed that we were worthy to pray
for you: but that I am not worthy I have no doubt. Still, however, there are
here many worthy folk, who are being redeemed from the enemy by your offering,
and serve our Creator faithfully, with regard to whom you have done what is
written; Lay up alms in the bosom of the poor, and it shall pray for thee (Ecclus.
xxix. 15).
But, since he loves the more who presumes the more, I have some complaint
against the most sweet disposition of my most glorious son the lord Theodorus;
namely that he has received from the holy Trinity the gift of genius, the gift
of wealth, the gift of mercy and charity, and yet is unceasingly bound up in
secular causes, is occupied in continual processions, and neglects to read
daily the words of his Redeemer. For what is sacred Scripture but a kind of
epistle of Almighty God to His creature? And surely, if your Glory were resident
in any other place, and were to receive letters from an earthly emperor, you
would not loiter, you would not rest, you would not give sleep to your eyes,
till you had learnt what the earthly emperor had written.
The Emperor of Heaven, the Lord of men and angels, has sent thee his epistles
for thy life's behoof; and yet, glorious son, thou neglectest to read these
epistles ardently. Study then, I beseech thee, and daily meditate on the words
of thy Creator. Learn the heart of God in the words of God, that thou mayest
sigh more ardently for the things that are eternal, that your soul may be kindled
with greater longings for heavenly joys. For a man will have the greater rest
here in proportion as he has now no rest in the love of his Maker. But, that
you may act thus, may Almighty God pour into you the Spirit the Comforter:
may He fill your soul with His presence, and in filling it, compose it.
As to me, know ye that I suffer here many and innumerable bitternesses. But
I give thanks to Almighty God that I suffer far less than I deserve.
I commend to your Glory my son, your patient, the lord Narses. I know indeed
that you hold him as in all respects commended to you; but I beg you to do
what you are doing, that, in asking for what I see is being done, I may by
my asking have a share in your reward. Furthermore, I have received the blessing(9)
of your Excellency with the charity wherewith it was sent to me. And I have
presumed to send you, in acknowledgment of your love, a duck with two small
ducklings, that, as often as your eye is led to look at it, the memory also
of me may be recalled to you among the occupations and tumults of business.
EPISTLE XXXII.
TO NARSES THE PATRICIAN.
Gregory
to Narses, &c.
Your most sweet Charity has said much to me in your letters in praise of my
good deeds, to all which I briefly reply, Call me not Noemi, that is beautiful;
but call me Mara, that is bitter; far I am full of bitterness (Ruth (i. 20).
But as to the cause of the presbyters(1), which is pending with my brother
and fellow-bishop, the most reverend Patriarch John, we have, as I think, for
our adversary the very man whom you assert to be desirous of observing the
canons. Further, I declare to thy Charity that I am prepared, with the help
of Almighty God, to prosecute this same cause with all my power and influence.
And, should I see that in it the canons of the Apostolic See are not observed,
Almighty God will give unto me what I may do against the contemners of the
same.
As to what your Charity has written to me, asking me to give thanks for you
to my son the chief physician and ex-praefect Theodorus, I have done so, and
have by no means ceased to commend you as much as I could. Further, I beg you
to pardon me for replying to your letters with brevity; for I am pressed by
such great tribulations that it is not allowed me either to read or to speak
much by letter. This only I say to thee, For the voice of groaning I have forgotten
to eat my bread (Ps. ci. 5(2)). All that are with you I beg you to salute in
my name. Give my salutations to the lady Dominica, whose letter I have not
answered, because, though she is Latin, she wrote to me in Greek.
EPISTLE XXXIII.
TO ANTHEMIUS, SUBDEACON.
Gregory
to Anthemius, &c.
Those whom our Redeemer vouchsafes to convert to himself from Judaical perdition
we ought, with reasonable moderation, to assist; lest (as God forbid should
be the case) they should suffer from lack of food. Accordingly we charge thee,
under the authority of this order, not to neglect to give money every year
to the children of Justa, who is of the Hebrews; that is to Julianus, Redemptus,
and Fortuna, beginning from the coming thirteenth Indiction; and know that
the payment is by all means to be charged in thy accounts.
EPISTLE XXXIV.
TO PANTALEO, PRAEFECT
Gregory to Pantaleo, Praefect of Africa.
How the law urgently prosecutes the most abominable pravity of heretics is
not unknown to your Excellency(3). It is therefore no light sin if these, whom
both the integrity of our faith and the strictness of the laws condemn, should
find licence to creep up again in your times. Now in those parts, so far as
we have learnt, the audacity of the Donatists has so increased that not only
do they with pestiferous assumption of authority cast out of their churches
priests of the catholic faith, but fear not even to rebaptize those whom the
water of regeneration had cleansed on a true confession. And we are much surprised,
if indeed it is so, that, while you are placed in those parts, bad men should
be allowed thus to exceed. Consider only in the first place what kind of judgment
you will leave to be passed upon you by men, if these, who in the times of
others were with just reason put down, find under your administration a way
for their excesses. In the next place know that our God will require at your
hand the souls of the lost, if you neglect to amend, so far as possibility
requires it of you, so great an abomination. Let not your Excellency take amiss
my thus speaking. For it is because we love you as our own children that we
point out to you what we doubt not will be to your advantage. But send to us
with all speed our brother and fellow-bishop Paul(4), lest opportunity should
be given to any one under any excuse for hindering his coming; in order that,
on ascertaining the truth more fully, we may be able, with God's help, to settle
by a reasonable treatment of the case how the punishment of so great a crime
ought to be proceeded with.
EPISTLE XXXV.
TO VICTOR AND COLUMBUS, BISHOPS(5).
Gregory to Victor and Columbus, Bishops of Africa.
After what manner a disease, if neglected in its beginning, acquires strength
we have proved from our own necessities, whosoever of us have had our lot in
this life. If, then, it were met by the foresight of skilful physicians at
its birth, we know that it would cease before doing very much harm from being
attended to too late. On this consideration, then, reason ought to impel us,
when diseases of souls are beginning, to make haste to resist them by all the
means in our power, lest, while we neglect applying wholesome medicines, they
steal away from us the lives of many whom we are striving to win for our God.
Wherefore it behoves us so with watchful carefulness to guard the folds of
sheep which we see ourselves to be put over as keepers that the p?o?ling wolf
may find everywhere shepherds to resist him, and may have no way of entrance
thereinto.
For indeed we find that the stings of the Donatists have in your parts so
disturbed the Lord's flock, as though it were guided by no shepherd's control.
And there has been reported to us what we cannot speak of without heavy sorrow,
seeing that very many have already been torn by their poisoned teeth. Lastly,
in order with most wicked audacity to drive catholic priests from their churches,
they are said, in their most atrocious wickedness, even to have slain many
besides, on whom the water of regeneration had conferred salvation, by rebaptizing
them. All this saddens our mind exceedingly, for that, while you are placed
there, it has been allowed to damned presumption to perpetrate such wickedness.
In this matter we exhort your Fraternity by this present writing, that, after
discussion held and a council assembled, you should eagerly and with all your
power so oppose this still nascent disease that neither may it acquire strength
from neglect nor scatter the woes of pestilence in the flock committed to your
charge. For, if in any way whatever (as we do not believe will be the case)
you neglect to resist iniquity in its beginning, they will wound very many
with the sword of their error. And it is in truth a most serious thing to allow
to be ensnared in the noose of diabolical fraud those whom we are able to rescue
beforehand from being entangled. Moreover it is better to prevent any one from
being wounded than to search out how one that is wounded may be healed. Considering
this, therefore, hasten ye by sedulous prayer and all the means in your power,
to quell sacrilegious wickedness, so that subsequent news, through the aid
of the grace of Christ, may cause us more joy for the punishment of those men
than sadness for their excesses.
Furthermore, take all possible pains to send to us with all speed our brother
and fellow-bishop Paul(6), to the end that, on learning more particularly from
him the causes of so great a crime, we may be able by the succour of our Creator
to apply the medicine of fitting rebuke to this most atrocious wickedness.
EPISTLE XXXVI.
TO LEO, BISHOP.
Gregory to Leo, Bishop of Catana(7).
We have found from the report of many that a custom has of old obtained among
you, for subdeacons to be allowed to have intercourse with their wives. That
any one should any more presume to do this was prohibited by the servant of
God, the deacon of our see, under the authority of our predecessor(8), in this
way; that those who at that time had been coupled to wives should choose one
of two things, that is, either to abstain from their wives, or on no account
whatever presume to exercise their ministry. And, according to report, Speciosus,
then a subdeacon, did for this reason suspend himself from the office of administration,
and up to the time of his death bore indeed the office of a notary, but ceased
from the ministry which a subdeacon should have exercised. After his death
we have learnt that his widow, Honorata, has been relegated to a monastery
by thy Fraternity for having associated herself with a husband. And so if,
as is said, her husband suspended himself from ministration, it ought not to
be to the prejudice of the aforesaid woman that she has contracted a second
marriage, especially if she had not been joined to the subdeacon with the intention
of abstaining from the pleasures of the flesh.
If, then, you find the truth to be as we have been informed, it is right for
you to release altogether the aforesaid woman from the monastery, that she
may be at liberty to return without any fear to her husband.
But for the future let thy Fraternity be exceedingly careful, in the case
of any who may be promoted to this office, to look to this with the utmost
diligence, that, if they have wives, they shall enjoy no licence to have intercourse
with them: but you must still strictly order them to observe all things after
the pattern of the Apostolic See.
EPISTLE XXXVIII.
TO QUEEN THEODELINDA.
Gregory to Theodelina, Queen of the Lombards(9).
It has come to our knowledge from the report of certain persons that your
Glory has been led on by some bishops even to the offence against holy Church
of suspending yourself from the communion of Catholic unanimity. Now the more
we sincerely love you, the more seriously are we distressed about you, that
you believe unskilled and foolish men, who not only do not know what they talk
about, but can hardly understand what they have heard; who, while they neither
read themselves, nor believe those who do, remain in the same error which they
have themselves feigned to themselves concerning us For we venerate the four
holy synods; the Nicene, in which Arius, the Constantinopolitan, in which Macedonius,
the first Ephesine, in which Nestorius, and the Chalcedonians, in which Eutyches
and Dioscorus, were condemned; declaring that whosoever thinks otherwise than
these four synods did is alien from the true faith. We also condemn whomsoever
they condemn, and absolve whomsoever they absolve, smiting, with interposition
of anathema, any one who presumes to add to or take away from the faith of
the same four synods, and especially that of Chalcedon, with respect to which
doubt and occasion of superstition has arisen in the minds of certain unskilled
men.
Seeing, then, that you know the integrity of our faith from my plain utterance
and profession, it is right that you should have no further scruple of doubt
with respect to the Church of the blessed Peter, Prince of the apostles: but
persist ye in the true faith, and make your life firm on the rock of the Church;
that is on the confession of the blessed Peter, Prince of the apostles, lest
all those tears of yours and all those good works should come to nothing, if
they are found alien from the true faith. For as branches dry up without the
virtue of the root, so works, to whatsoever degree they may seem good, are
nothing, if they are disjoined from the solidity of the faith.
It therefore becomes your Glory to send a communication with all speed to
our most reverend brother and fellow-bishop Constantius, of whose faith and
life I have long been well assured, and to signify by your letters addressed
to him how kindly you accept his ordination, and that you are in no wise separated
from the communion of his Church, so that we may truly rejoice with a common
exultation, as for a good and faithful daughter. Know also that you and your
works will please God, if, before his assize comes, they be approved by the
judgment of his priests.
EPISTLE XXXIX.
TO CONSTANTIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Constantius, Bishop of Mediolanum (Milan).
Having read the letter of your Holiness, we find that you are in a state of
serious distress, principally on account of the bishops and citizens of Briscia
(Brescia) who bid you send them a letter in which you are asked to swear that
you have not condemned the Three Chapters(1). Now, if your Fraternity's predecessor
Laurentius did not do this, it ought not to be required of you. But, if he
did it, he was not with the universal Church, and contradicted what he had
sworn to in his security(2). But, inasmuch as we believe him to have kept his
oath, and to have continued in the unity of the Catholic Church, there is no
doubt that he did not swear to any of his bishops that he had not condemned
the Three Chapters. Hence your Holiness may conclude that you ought not to
be forced to do what was in no wise done by your predecessor. But, lest those
who have thus written to you should be offended, send them a letter declaring
under interposition of anathema that you neither take away anything from the
faith of the synod of Chalcedon nor received those who do, and that you condemn
whomsoever it condemned, and absolve whomsoever it absolved. And thus I believe
that they may be very soon satisfied(3)
Further, as to what you write about many of them being offended because you
name our brother and fellow-bishop John of the Church of Ravenna during the
solemnities of mass, you should enquire into the ancient custom; and, if it
has been the custom, it ought not now to be found fault with by foolish men.
But, if it has not been the custom, a tiring ought not to be done at which
some may possibly take offence. Yet I have been at pains to make careful enquiry
whether the same John our brother and fellow-bishop names you at the altar;
and they say that this is not done. And, if he does not make mention of your
name, I know not what necessity obliges you to make mention of his. If indeed
it can be done without any one taking offence, your doing anything of this
kind is very laudable, since you shew the charity you have towards your brethren.
Further, as to what you write of your having been unwilling to transmit my
letter to Queen Theodelinda on the ground that the fifth synod was named in
it, if you believed that she might thereby be offended, you did right in not
transmitting it. We are therefore doing now as you recommend, namely, that
we should only express approval of the four synods. Yet, as to the synod which
was afterwards held in Constantinople, called by many the fifth, I would have
you know that it neither ordained nor held anything in opposition to the four
most holy synods, seeing that nothing was done in it with respect to the faith,
but only with respect to persons; and persons, too, about whom nothing is contained
in the acts of the Council of Chalcedon(4) but, after the canons had been promulged,
discussion arose, and final action was ventilated concerning persons. Yet still
we have done as you desired, making no mention of this synod. But we have also
written to our daughter the queen what you wrote to us about the bishops. Ursicinus,
who wrote something to you against our brother and fellow-bishop John, you
ought by your letters addressed to him, with sweetness and reason, to restrain
from his intention. Further, concerning Fortunatus(5), we desire your Fraternity
to be careful, lest you be in any way surreptitiously influenced by bad men.
For I hear that he ate at the table of the Church with your predecessor Laurentius
for many years until now, that he sat among the nobles, and subscribed, and
that with our brother's knowledge he served in the army. And now, after so
many years, your Fraternity thinks that he should be driven from the position
which he now occupies. This seems to me altogether incongruous. And so I have
given you this order through him, but privately. Still, if there is anything
reasonable that can be alleged against him, it ought to be submitted to our
judgment. But, if it please Almighty God, we will send letters through your
man to our son the lord Dynamius.
EPISTLE XLVI.
TO RUSTICIANA, PATRICIAN.
Gregory
to Rusticiana, &c.
On receiving your Excellency's letters I was glad to hear that you had reached
Mount Sinai. But believe me, I too should have liked to go with you, but by
no means to return with you. And yet I find it very difficult to believe that
you have been at the holy places and seen many Fathers. For I believe that,
if you had seen them, you would by no means have been able to return so speedily
to the city of Constantinople. But now that the love of such a city has in
no wise departed from your heart, I suspect that your Excellency did not from
the heart devote yourself to the holy things which you saw with the bodily
eye. But may Almighty God illuminate your mind by the grace of His lovingkindness
and give unto you to be wise, and to consider how fugitive are all temporal
things, since, while we are thus speaking, both time runs on and the Judge
approaches, and lo the moment is even now near when against our will we must
give up the world which of our own accord we will not. I beg that the lord
Apio and the lady Eusebia, and their daughters, be greeted in my behalf. As
to that lady my nurse, whom you commend to me by letter, I have the greatest
regard for her, and desire that she should be in no way incommoded. But we
are pressed by such great straits that we cannot excuse even ourselves from
exactions (angariis)(6) and burdens at this present time.
EPISTLE XLVII.
TO SABINIANUS, DEACON(7).
Gregory
to Sabinianus, &c.
Thou knowest what has been done in the case of the prevaricator Maximus(8).
For after the most serene lord the Emperor had Sent orders that he should not
be ordained(9), then he broke out into a higher pitch of pride. For the men
of the glorious patrician Romanus(1) received bribes from him, and caused him
to be ordained in such a manner that they would have killed Antoninus, the
sub-deacon and rector of the patrimony, if he had not fled. But I despatched
letters to him, after I had learnt that he had been ordained against reason
and custom, telling him not to presume to celebrate the solemnities of mass
unless I should first ascertain from our most serene lords what they had ordered
with regard to him. And these my letters, having been publicly promulged or
posted in the city, he caused to be publicly torn, and thus bounced forth more
openly into contempt of the Apostolic See. How I was likely to endure this
thou knowest, seeing that I was before prepared rather to die than that the
Church of the blessed apostle Peter should degenerate in my days. Moreover
thou art well acquainted with my ways, that I bear long; but if once I have
determined not to bear, I go gladly in the face of all dangers. Whence it is
necessary with the help of God to meet danger, lest he be driven to sin to
excess. Look to what I say, and consider what great grief inspires it.
But it has come to my ears that he has sent [to Constantinople] a cleric,
I know not whom, to say that the bishop Malchus(2) was put to death in prison
for money. Now as to this there is one thing that thou mayest shortly suggest
to our most serene lords;--that, if I their servant had been willing to have
anything to do with the death of Lombards, the nation of the Lombards at this
day would have had neither king nor dukes nor counts, and would have been divided
in the utmost confusion. But, since I fear God, I shrink from having anything
to do with the death of any one. Now the bishop Malchus was neither in prison
nor in any distress; but on the day when he pleaded his cause and was sentenced
he was taken without my knowledge by Boniface the notary to his house, where
a dinner was prepared for him, and there he dined, and was treated with honour
by the said Boniface, and in the night suddenly died, as I think you have already
been informed. Moreover I had intended to send our Exhilaratus to you in connection
with that business; but, as I considered that the case was now done with, I
consequently abstained from doing so.
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