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SAINT GREGORY THE GREAT
REGISTER OF THE EPISTLES
BOOK VII
EPISTLE II.
TO COLUMBUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Columbus, Bishop of Numidia (1).
We received at the hands of the bearer, your deacon, the epistle of your Fraternity,
in which you informed us of what had been done among you with regard to the
person of the bishop Paul. This has been done so late that he could not now
have appeared here in person. For his Excellency also, our son Gennadius the
Patrician, sent his chancellor to us with reference to the same case. But when
we had caused enquiry to be made whether he was willing to plead against him
[i.e. against the bishop Paul] before us, he replied that he had been by no
means sent with this intent but had only brought hither certain three persons
from his Church who would allege many things against him. While, then, we neither
found him prepared to commence an action, nor were moved by the quality of
those persons to regard them as fit accusers of a bishop, we could not gainsay
or offer hindrance to the often before-mentioned bishop Paul, who petitioned
us in the hope of having leave given him to resort to the royal city; but we
presently allowed him according to his petition, with two others whom he should
take with him, to set forth. If, then, there have been any things that could
be reasonably said against him, the proper course would have been for him to
come here at once, and for your Fraternity to inform us of all particulars,
as you have now done. For, as to your having signified to us that you suffer
from the enmities of many on account of our frequently visiting you by our
letters, there is no doubt, most reverend brother, that the good suffer from
the grudges of the bad, and that those who are intent on divine works are harassed
by the oppositions of the perverse. But, in proportion as these bad things
are around you, ought you to be more instantly occupied with the care of the
government committed to you, and to watch for the custody of the flock of Christ;
and in proportion as the contrariety of unrighteous men presses upon you, ought
the care of pastoral solicitude to inflame you to be more active, and very
certain of the promised reward, to the end that you may be able to offer to
the chief Shepherd gain from the work given you to do.
EPISTLE IV.
TO CYRIACUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Cyriacus, Bishop of Constantinople.
We have received with becoming charity our common sons, George the presbyter
and Theodore your deacon; and we rejoice that you have passed from the care
of ecclesiastical business to the government of souls, since, according to
the voice of the Truth, faithful in a little will be faithful also in much
(Luke xvi. 10). And to the servant who administers well it is said, Because
thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler aver many
things (Matth. xxv. 23); to whom also it is presently said further with respect
to eternal retribution, Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. Now you say in
your letter that you had exceedingly wished for rest. But in this you shew
that you have fitly assumed pastoral responsibility, since, as a place of rule
should be denied to those who covet it, so it should be offered to those who
fly from it. And no man taketh this honour unto himself, but he that is called
of God, as was Aaron (Hebr. v. 4). And again the same excellent preacher says,
If one died far all, then all died; and Christ died for all. It remaineth that
they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him which
died for them, and rose again (2 Cor. v. 14, 15). And to the shepherd of holy
Church it is said, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me? Feed My sheep (John
xxi. 17). From which words it appears that, if one who is able refuses to feed
the sheep of Almighty God, he shews that he does not love the chief Shepherd.
For if the Only-begotten of the Father, for accomplishing the good of all,
came forth from the secrecy of the Father into the midst of us, what shall
we say, if we prefer our secrecy to the good of our neighbours? Thus rest is
to be desired by us with all our heart; and yet for the advantage of many it
should sometimes be laid aside. For, as we ought with full desire to fly from
occupation, so, if there should be a want of some one to preach, we must needs
put a willing shoulder under the burden of occupation. And this we are taught
by the conduct of two prophets(2), one of whom attempted to shun the office
of preaching, while the other desired it. For to the Lord who sent him Jeremias
replied saying, Ah, Lord God, I cannot speak; far I am a child (Jer. i. 6).
And when Almighty God sought for some one to preach, saying, Whom shall I send,
and who will go for us? Isaias offered himself of his own accord, saying, Here
am I, send me (Isai. vi. 8). Lo, different voices proceeded outwardly from
the two, but they flowed from the same fountain of love.
For indeed there are two precepts of charity; to wit, the love of God and
of one's neighbour. Wherefore Isaias, wishing to profit his neighbours by an
active life, desires the office of preaching; but Jeremias, longing to cling
assiduously to the love of his Maker by a contemplative life, protests against
being sent to preach. What, then, one laudably desired the other laudably shrunk
from: the latter lest by speaking he should lose the gains of silent contemplation;
the former lest by keeping silence he should feel the loss of diligent work.
But this is nicely to be observed in both, that he who refused did not resist
finally, and he who wished to be sent saw himself previously purged by a coal
from the altar; that so no one who has not been purged should dare to approach
sacred ministries, nor any one whom heavenly grace chooses refuse proudly under
a show of humility.
Moreover I find yon in your epistles seeking with great longing after serenity
of mind, and panting for tranquillity of thought apart from perturbation. But
I know not in what manner your Fraternity can attain to this. For one who has
undertaken the pilotage of a ship must needs watch all the more as he further
recedes from shore, so as sometimes to foresee from signs the coming storms;
sometimes, when they come, either, if they are small, to ride over them in
a straight course, or, if they swell violently, to avoid them as they rush
on by steering sideways; and often to watch alone when all who are without
charge of the ship are at rest. How, moreover, having undertaken the burden
of pastoral charge, can you have serenity of thought, seeing that it is written,
Behold giants groan under the waters (Job xxvi. 5)? For, according to the words
of John, The waters are peoples (Rev. xvii. 15). And the groaning of giants
under the waters means that whoso in this world has increased in degree of
power, as though in a sort of massive size of body, feels the load of greater
tribulation by so much the more as he has taken on himself the care of ruling
peoples. But, if the power of the Holy Spirit breathes upon the afflicted mind,
forthwith what was done bodily for the people of Israel takes place with us
spiritually. For it is written, But the children of Israel walked upon dry
land in the midst of the sea (Exod. xiv. 29). And through the prophet the Lord
promises saying, When thou passest through the waters. I will be with thee,
and the rivers shall not overflow thee (Isai. xliii. 2). For the rivers overflow
those whom the active business of this world confounds with perturbation of
mind. But he who is sustained in mind by the grace of the Holy Spirit passes
through the waters, and yet is not overflowed by the rivers, because in the
midst of crowds of peoples he so proceeds along his way as not to sink the
head of his mind beneath the active business of the world.
I also, who, unworthy as I am, have come to a place of rule, had sometimes
determined to seek some place of retirement: but, seeing the Divine counsels
to be opposed to me, I submitted the neck of my heart to my Maker's yoke; especially
reflecting on this, that no hidden places whatever can save the soul without
the grace of God; and this we observe sometimes, when even saints go astray.
For Lot was righteous in the depraved city itself, and sinned on the mountain
(Gen. xix.). But why speak of these instances, when we know of greater ones?
For what is pleasanter than Paradise? What safer than Heaven? And yet man out
of Paradise, and the angel from heaven, by sinning fell. His power, then, should
be sought, His grace implored, without whom we are nowhere without fault, with
whom we are nowhere without righteousness. We should, then, take care that
perturbation of thought get not the better of our minds; for it can by no means
be entirely got rid of. For whosoever is in a place of rule must needs have
to think sometimes even of earthly things, and to have a care also of external
things, that the flock committed to him may be able to subsist for accomplishing
what it has to do. But it should be most carefully seen to, that this same
care pass not due measure, and that, when lawfully admitted into the heart,
it be not allowed to become excessive. Whence it is rightly said through Ezekiel(3),
Let not the priests shave their heads, nor suffer their lacks to grow long;
but palling let them poll their heads (Ezek. xliv. 20). For what are hairs
in the head by signification but thoughts in the mind? For, rising above the
brain insensibly, they denote cares of the present life, which from negligent
perception, since they come on sometimes importunely, advance as it were without
our feeling them. Since, then, all who are over others ought indeed to have
outward anxieties, and yet not to devote themselves to them exceedingly, the
priests are rightly forbidden either to shave the head or to let their locks
grow long, so that they nay neither entirely cut off from themselves carnal
thoughts for the life of their subjects, nor again allow them to grow too much.
And it is also there well said, Polling let them pall their heads; meaning
that the anxieties of a temporal charge should both proceed as far as is needful,
and yet should be soon cut short, lest they grow to an immoderate length. While
therefore both, through external provision administered, the life of bodies
is protected, and again intentness of heart is not hindered through the same
being immoderate, the hairs on the head of the priest are kept to cover the
skin, and cut short so as not to veil the eyes.
Furthermore, we have received in full faith your letters addressed to us,
and give thanks to Almighty God, who, by the mutual confession of the faithful,
guards the coat that is without seam woven from the top throughout, that is
to say His Church, in the unity of grace, from all rent of error; and against
the deluge (so to speak) of so many sins of the perishing world constructs
an ark of many planks in which the elect of Almighty God may be preserved unto
life. For, when we in our turn send the confession of our faith to you, and
you shew your charity towards us, what are we doing in holy Church but smearing
the ark with pitch; lest any wave of error enter, and kill all the spiritual
as being men, and the carnal as being beasts.
But, when you have wisely professed a right faith, it remains doubtless that
you should keep the more warily the peace of hearts, because of what the Truth
says, Have salt in yourselves, and have peace one with another (Mark ix. 50).
And Paul the apostle admonishes, saying, Endeavouring to keep the unity of
the Spirit in the bond of peace (Ephes. iv. 3). And again he says, Follow peace
with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see God (Hebr. xii.
14). Which peace indeed you will then truly have with us, if you turn away
from the pride of a profane name, according to what the same teacher of the
Gentiles says, O Timothy, keep that which is committed to thy trust, avoiding
profane novelties of words (1 Tim. vi. 20). For indeed it is too bad, if these
who have been made preachers of humility should glory in the elation of a vain
name, when the true preacher says, But God forbid that I should glory, save
in the crass of our Lord Jesus Christ (Gal. vi. 14.). He then is truly glorious
who glories not in temporal power, but, for the name of Christ, glories in
His passion. Herein therefore we embrace you from the bottom of our heart,
herein we recognize you as priests, if, rejecting the vanity of words, you
occupy the place of holiness with holy humility. For behold, we have been scandalized
by this impious appellation, and retain in our mind and express in words by
no means slight complaints. But your Fraternity knows how the Truth says, If
thou offerest thy gift before the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother
hath ought against thee, leave there thy gift, and go thy way to be first reconciled
to thy brother, and then thou shale come and after thy gift (Matth. v. 23,
24). Herein is to be considered, that, while every fault is done away by the
offering of sacrifice, so great is the evil of offence engendered in another's
heart that from one who has so sinned the Lord accepts not the sacrifice itself
which is wont to do away sin. Take heed then with speed to wipe off cause of
offence from your heart, that Almighty God may be able to regard as acceptable
the sacrifice of your offering.
Furthermore, while you have truly and accurately professed the right faith,
we find that among those whom you have held to be condemned by the most holy
general synods you have condemned a certain Eudoxius; whose name we have not
found mentioned in the Latin language either in synods or in the books of the
bishops of blessed memory, Epiphanius, Augustin, or Philaster, whom we know
to have been the chief disputants against heretics(4). Now if any one of the
catholic Fathers really condemns him, we undoubtedly follow their opinion.
If, however, in your synodical epistle you have wished to condemn by name those
also who, apart from the holy synods, are condemned in the writings of the
Fathers, your Fraternity has mentioned too few by many; but if those whom the
general synods reject, then too many by this one. But in the midst of all these
things it is to be remembered, that in order that we may be free to profess
the true faith and to order whatever has to be done in peace and concord, we
ought to pray incessantly for the life of our most serene lords and of their
offspring, that Almighty God would subdue barbarous nations under their feet,
and grant them long and happy lives, to the end that through a Christian empire
the faith which is in Christ may reign.
EPISTLE V.
TO CYRIACUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Cyriacus, Bishop of Constantinople.
When in time past I represented the Apostolic See in the royal city, I became
acquainted with the good qualities of your Holiness. And I greatly rejoice
that the care of souls has been committed to you. And though unworthy, I beseech
Almighty God with all the prayers in my power that He would even increase His
grace in you, and cause you to gather gain of souls for the eternal country.
But, whereas you say that you are weak for this work that has been put upon
you, we know that the first virtue is acknowledgment of infirmity; and from
this we gather that you can fulfil well the ministry you have undertaken, that
we see how, out of humility, you acknowledge your own infirmity For we are
all infirm; but he is more infirm who has not strength to consider his infirmity.
But you, most blessed brethren, are for this reason strong, that, distrusting
your own strength, you trust in the power of Almighty God.
I cannot, however, express by the words of a letter how much my heart is bound
to your Charity. But I pray that Almighty God may by the gift of His grace
multiply the same charity that is between us, and may take away all occasion
of offence, lest the holy Church, united by the profession of the true faith,
and compacted by conjunction of the hearts of the faithful, should suffer any
damage from priests disputing with each other, which God forbid. I at any rate,
in all that I speak, in all that I say, against the proud conduct of certain
persons, still, through the bounty of Almighty God, never relinquish custody
of inward charity; but so execute outwardly what belongs to justice as by no
means to disregard inwardly what belongs to love and kindness. And do you also
ever return my love, and guard what belongs to peace and kindness; that, remaining
of one mind, so as to allow no dissension to come in between us, we may be
better able from the very unity of our hearts to obtain what we seek from the
Lord.
Furthermore, I commend to your Holiness John, presbyter of Chalcedon, and
Athanasius of Isauria, that no one may set you against them by underhand misrepresentations;
for I have thoroughly examined their faith, and have found them sound in their
confessions, which have also been given in writing.
Now may the Holy Trinity protect you with His hand, and render you always
vigilant anti careful in the custody of souls, to the end that in the eternal
retribution you may be counted worthy to be crowned, not only for your own
work, but also for the amelioration of your subjects,
EPISTLE VI.
TO MAURICIUS AUGUSTUS.
Gregory to Mauricius Augustus.
Almighty God, who has made your Piety to be the guardian of ecclesiastical
peace, preserves you by the same faith which, through unity among priests,
you preserve; and when you submit your heart humbly to the yoke of heavenly
loving-kindness, it is brought to pass by heavenly grace that you tread your
enemies under the foot of valour. For it cannot be of small advantage that,
when John of holy memory had departed this life, your Piety long hesitated,
and somewhat deferred the time, while seeking counsel in the fear of Almighty
God, in order, to wit, that the cause of God might be ordered, as it should
be, with great fear(5). Whence also I think that my brother and fellow-priest
Cyriacus is proved to be exceedingly fit for pastoral rule, in that the long
deliberation of your Piety has raised him to this degree. And we all know how
diligent and how practised he has long been in the administration of ecclesiastical
affairs. Whence also I doubt not that it has been brought about by Divine ordering
that one who had administered the least things well should fitly undertake
the greater, and should pass from the charge of affairs to the government of
souls. Wherefore in all our prayers we beseech Almighty God to repay this good
work to the Serenity of our lords and to their pious offspring both in the
present world and also with a perpetual recompense, and to grant to my aforesaid
brother and fellow-priest, who has been put over the Lord's flock, to shew
himself fully solicitous in the care of souls; that he may be able irreprovably
both to correct what is wrong in his subjects and to foster what is right unto
further increase; to the end that the judgment of your Piety concerning him
may be approved, not only before men, but also before the eyes of the Supernal
Majesty.
The venerable men, George the presbyter and Theodore the deacon, in consideration
of the command of my lords and the imminence of the winter season, I have not
allowed to be delayed in this city
EPISTLE VII.
TO PETER, DOMITIAN, AND ELPIDIUS.
Gregory to Peter, Domitian, and Elpidius, Bishops(6).
I rejoice exceedingly that you welcomed with great joy the ordination of the
most holy Cyriacus, my brother and fellow-priest. And since we have learnt
from the preaching of Paul the apostle that If one member rejoice, all the
members rejoice with it (1 Cor. xii. 26), you must needs consider with how
great exultation I rejoice with you in this thing, wherein not one member,
but many members of Christ have rejoiced. Nevertheless, so far as I have been
able to consider your Fraternity's letters on a cursory perusal, great joy
has carried you away into immoderate praise of this my brother. For you say
that he has appeared in the Church like the sun, so that you all cried out,
This is the day which the lord hath made; let us rejoice and be glad in it
(Ps. cxvii. 24)(7). Yet surely this is a promise of the life to come, seeing
that it is said, The righteous shall shine forth as the sun (Matth. xiii. 43;
Wisd. iii. 7). For, in whatsoever virtue any one may excel, how can he shine
forth as the sun while still in the present life, wherein The corruptible body
presseth down the saul, and the earthly tabernacle weigheth down the mind that
museth upon many things (Wisd. ix. 15); wherein We see another law in our members
warring against the law of our mind, and bringing us into captivity by the
law of sin which is in our members (Rom. vii. 23); wherein Even in ourselves
we have the answer of death, that we should not trust in ourselves (2 Cor.
i. 9); wherein also the Prophet cries aloud, Fear and trembling are canto upon
me, and darkness hath covered me (Ps. liv. 6)(8)? For it is written also, A
wise man abideth as the sun; a fool changeth as the moan (Ecclus. xxvii. 12);
where the comparison of the sun is not applied to the splendour of his brightness,
but to perseverance in well-doing. But the good beginning of his ordination
could not as yet be praised by you with regard to perseverance. And as to your
saying that you cried out, This is the day which the Lord hath made, you ought
to have considered of whom this is said. For what comes before is this; The
stone which the builders refused, the same is made the head-stone of the corner.
This is the Lord's doing, and it is marvellous in our eyes (Ps. cxvii. 22)(9).
And with regard to this same stone it is forthwith added, This is the day which
the Lord hath made. For He who for strength of building is said to be a stone,
for the grace of illumination is called the Day, being also made, because He
became incarnate. In Him we are enjoined to rejoice and be glad, because He
has overcome in us the darkness of our error by the light of His excellence.
In praise of a creature, then, that expression ought not to have been used
which is suitable to the Creator alone.
But why should I find fault with these things, knowing as I do how joy carries
away the mind? For your charity engendered in you great gladness, which gladness
of heart the tongue applauding followed. This being so, the praise which charity
found to hand cannot now be called a fault. But to me concerning my most holy
brother there should have been briefly said what I might accept with satisfaction,
seeing that I knew him to be one who has long given to me especially this proof
of his greatness; that, having been occupied in so many affairs of ecclesiastical
administration, he has kept a tranquil heart in the midst of turbulent throngs,
and always restrained himself with a gentle bearing. And this indeed is no
small commendation of a great and unshaken mind, not to have been perturbed
among the perturbations of business.
Furthermore, your Fraternity should be instant in continual prayers, that
Almighty God may guard in our aforesaid brother and fellow-priest what has
been well begun, and ever lead him on to what is better still. This should
ever be the prayer of you, most holy ones, and of the people subject to him.
For the deserts of rulers and peoples are so connected with each other that
often the lives of subjects are made worse from tile fault of those who are
over them, and often the lives of pastors fall off from the ill desert of peoples.
For that the evil doings of one who is over others does very great harm to
those who are under him the Pharisees are evidence, of whom it is written,
Ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men. For ye neither go in yourselves,
neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in (Matth. xxiii. 13). And that
the fault of peoples does much harm to the life of pastors we perceive in what
David did (2 Kings ii. 24). For he, praised by the testimony of God, he, conscious
of heavenly mysteries, being inflated by the turnout of hidden elation, sinned
in numbering the people; and yet the punishment fell upon the people for David's
sin. Why was this? Because in truth according to the desert of subject peoples
are the hearts of rulers disposed. Now the righteous Judge rebuked the fault
of the sinner by visitation on those on account of whom he sinned. But, because
he himself, waxing proud of his own will, was not free from fault, he himself
also received punishment of his fault. For the fierce wrath, which smote the
people bodily, prostrated also the ruler of the people with inmost sorrow of
heart. Consider therefore these things mutually; and, even as he who is put
over you and over the people should intercede for all, so should all of you
pray for his conversation and manners, that before Almighty God both you may
profit by imitation of him, and he may be aided by your deserts. Further, let
us all with one accord pray continually with great weeping to the utmost of
our powers for out most serene lords and their pious offspring, that protecting
heavenly grace may guard their lives, and subdue the necks of the nations to
the Christian empire.
EPISTLE XI.
TO RUFINUS, BISHOP OF EPHESUS.
Gregory
to Rufinus, &c.
The charity of your acts of friendship in the past has moved us to visit your
Fraternity with the present letter. For we have been refreshed with great joy
by learning from reports given us of your health that all is well with you.
But, while this is so, we implore Almighty God, that as in the present life,
which is as it were a shadow of the future one, He has granted you to rejoice
in the transitory welfare of your body, so in that heavenly country wherein
is true life He may cause us to give thanks and rejoice with a common exultation
for the perfected salvation of your soul. Now the bearer of this, desiring
to be commended to you by a letter from us, having been asked by us whether
he had learnt letters as becomes a clerk, replied that he was ignorant of them.
What further commendation, then, with regard to him I should give to your Fraternity
I know not; except that you should be solicitous about his soul, and watch
over him with pastoral zeal, so that, as he cannot read, your tongue may be
a book to him, and that in the goodness of your preaching and work he may see
what to follow. For the living voice usually draws the heart more closely than
perfunctory reading. But, while, as his master, you supply him inwardly with
this spiritual teaching, let not outward care for him also be wanting, that
by its aid he come to long for spiritual things, and lest, if such aid is slighted,
you should no longer have one to preach to.
EPISTLE XII.
TO RESPECTA, ABBESS.
Gregory to Respecta, Abbess of Massilia (Marseilles) in Gaul.
The demand of a pious wish ought to be accomplished by a consequent result,
that so the benefit demanded may be validly attained, and sincerity of devotion
may laudably shine forth. Accordingly to the monastery consecrated to the honour
of Saint Cassian wherein you are selected to preside--in accordance with the
petition of our children Dynamius and Aureliana, who are shewn, in their religious
devotion, to have united it to the house in their possession by connecting
the buildings--we have seen fit to allow these privileges:--We appoint that
on the death of the abbess of the aforesaid monastery, not a stranger, but
one whom the congregation may choose for itself from among its own members,
shall be ordained; whom (provided however that she be judged worthy of this
ministry) the bishops of the same place shall ordain. Further, with regard
to the property and management of the same monastery, we decree that neither
bishop nor any ecclesiastic shall have any power; but appoint that these things
shall in all respects pertain to the charge of thy Solicitude, or of her who
may be abbess in the same place after thee. If on the day of the Saint's anniversary,
or of the dedication, of the aforesaid monastery the bishop should resort thither
for celebrating the sacred solemnities of mass, still his office must be so
executed that his chair be not placed there, except on the aforesaid days while
he is celebrating there the solemnities of mass. And when he departs, let his
chair be at the same time removed from the same oratory. But on all other days
let the offices of mass be performed by the presbyter whom the same bishop
may appoint.
Furthermore, with regard to the life and deeds of the handmaidens of God,
or of the abbess who may be constituted in the above-written monastery, we
enjoin on the bishop, in the fear of God, to devote careful attention to them;
so that, if any of those who dwell there, her fault demanding it, ought to
be subjected to punishment, he may himself visit the offence according to the
vigour of the sacred canons. These things, then, being by us ordained and granted,
do thou, in the ordering of thy congregation, study to shew thyself so earnestly
attentive in all respects that the malice of the malignant foe may find nothing
there that can be contaminated. All these things, therefore, embraced in this
paper of injunctions, we ordain to be observed, under Christ's protection,
in all respects and by all persons for ever in thy monastery, to the end that
the benefits of the privileges allowed may always continue firm and inviolate.
The month of November, Indict. 15.
EPISTLE XIII.
TO FORTUNATUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Fortunatus, Bishop of Fanum(1).
As it is reprehensible and deserving of punishment for any one to sell consecrated
vessels except in cases sanctioned by law and the sacred canons, so it is not
a matter for reproach or penalty if they should be disposed of with a compassionate
purpose for the redemption of captives. Since, then, we find from the information
given us by your Fraternity that you have borrowed money for the redemption
of captives, and have not the means of repaying it, and on this account desire,
with our authority, to dispose of some consecrated vessels,--in this case,
seeing that the decrees of both the laws and the canons approve, we have thought
fit to lend our approval, and grant you leave to dispose of the consecrated
vessels. But, lest their sale should possibly lead to any ill-feeling against
yourself, they ought to be disposed of, up to the amount of the debt, in the
presence of John our defensor, and their price should be paid to the creditors,
to the end that, the business being completed with observance of this kind,
neither may the creditors feel loss from having lent the money, nor your Fraternity
sustain ill-will now or at any future time.
EPISTLE XV.
TO GEORGE, PRESBYTER.
Gregory to George, Presbyter, and to Theodore, deacon, of the Church of Constantinople.
Mindful of your goodness and charity, I greatly blame myself, that I gave
you leave to return so soon: but, since I saw you pressing me importunately
once and again for leave to go, I considered that it might be a serious matter
for your Love to tarry with us longer. But, after I had learnt that you had
lingered so long on your journey owing to the winter season, I confess that
I was sorry that you had been sent away so soon. For, if your Love was trouble
to accomplish your intended journey, it had been better that you had lingered
with me than away from me.
Moreover,
after your departure I learnt from information given me by my most beloved
sons the deacons that
your Love had said that our Almighty Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ, when He descended into hell, saved all who there acknowledged
Him as God, and delivered them from the pains due to them. With regard to this
subject I desire that your Charity should think very differently. For, when
He descended into hell, He delivered through His grace those only who both
believed that He should come and observed His precepts in their lives. For
it is evident that after the incarnation of the Lord no one can be saved, even
of those who hold His faith, who have not the life of faith; since it is written,
They acknowledge that they know God, but in deeds they deny Him (Tit. i. 16).
And John says, He that saith that he knows Him, and keepeth not His commandments,
is a liar (1 John ii. 4). James also, the brother of the Lord, writes saying,
Faith without works is dead (Jam. ii. 20). If, then, believers now are not
saved without good works, while the unbelieving and reprobate without good
action were saved by our Lord descending into hell, then the lot of those who
never saw the incarnation of the Lord was better than that of these who have
been born after the mystery of His incarnation. But what fatuity it argues
to say or think this the Lord Himself testifies to His disciples, when He says,
Many kings and prophets have desired to see the things which ye see, and have
not seen them (Matth. xiii. 17; Luke x. 24). But, that I may not detain your
Love with argument of my own, learn what Philaster, in the book which he wrote
about heresies, says about this heresy. His words are these; "They are
heretics who say that the Lord descended into hell, and announced himself after
death to all who were already there, so that in acknowledging Him there they
might be saved; seeing that this is contrary to the prophet David where he
says, But in hell who shall acknowledge thee (Ps. vi. 6)? And to the Apostle;
As many as have shined without law shall perish without law (Rom. ii. 12)." And
with his words the blessed Augustine also agrees in the book which he wrote
about heresies.
Considering, therefore, all these things, hold ye nothing but what the true
faith teaches through the Catholic Church: namely, that the Lord in descending
into hell rescued from infernal durance those only whom while living in the
flesh He preserved through His grace in faith and good conduct. For in that
which He says in the Gospel, When I shall be lifted up from the earth, I will
draw all to myself (John xii. 32), He means all that are elect. For one could
not be drawn to God after death who had separated himself from God by evil
living. May Almighty God keep you under His protection, that, wherever ye are,
ye may feel in soul and body the aid of His grace.
EPISTLE XVII.
TO SABINIANUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Sabinianus, Bishop of Jadera(2).
If thou hadst been at pains to weigh with careful consideration the rule of
ecclesiastical administration and the order of ancient custom, neither would
any fault of unlawful presumption have crept in upon thee, nor would others
have incurred danger by occasion of thy sin. Now there is no doubt that thou
wast aware how that, certain things having come to our ears about Maximus which
were no Slight bar to his advancement to the priesthood, we had not given our
assent to it, and that it was our will that he should not attain to what he
strove after till there had been adequate satisfaction concerning the things
that were said. But, when thou oughtest by all means to have observed this,
it came rather to pass that he, snatching at the episcopate with the greediness
of a blind mind, inclined thee unwarily to favour him in spite of our prohibition.
But, lest even then the things that had been reported to us should remain unexamined,
he was summoned to come hither by letters from us. And, when he was so perversely
inclined as to defer doing so, we took care to admonish him in repeated letters,
under pain of interdiction from communion, to make haste to come to us for
his purification, putting aside all excuses: but he chose rather to submit
to excommunication than to evince obedience. Whence the result is (awful to
be said), that the pravity of his perverse disposition involves others in his
own perdition. Now however, inasmuch as we have learnt that thou dissentest
from his wickedness, we exhort thee by the present writing (that so it may
profit thy soul to have severed thyself, even though late, from him) that thou
henceforth neither communicate with him nor make mention of his name in the
sacred solemnities of mass; and also that thou defer not coming to us without
delay, yea and bring others with thee too, such as thou canst, whether bishops
or other religious persons, so that (the cause being thoroughly examined),
both your absolution, should the case require it, may fittingly and decently
ensue, and that those who have fallen into the sin of the like temerity may
be recalled to the way of salvation, with the help of the blessed Peter, Prince
of the apostles, by an arrangement well-pleasing to Christ. Moreover, let any
bishop or religious person that may come to us know that he will sustain no
prejudice or injustice, but that all will be arranged so as to please our Redeemer
after full ascertainment of the truth; to the end that even from our way of
ordering the matter, with the Lord's approval, it may appear to all that we
are not moved by private grudge against any man, but by zeal for God and for
the adjustment of ecclesiastical order.
EPISTLE XIX
TO MARINIANUS, ARCHBISHOP.
Gregory to Marinianus, Archbishop of Ravenna(3).
Your Fraternity has been long aware after what manner the Church of Ariminum
has been hitherto deprived of pastoral government by reason of the known bodily
affliction of the priest who was ordained by us(4). Now we, moved by the prayers
of the inhabitants of that place, having frequently exhorted him to return
with the help of the Lord to his Church, if he should feel himself relieved
from this affliction of the head whereby he was kept away, he has been expected
now for four years since the leave of absence given him. And, when at the instance
of clergy and citizens who have come from thence anti urged us with entreaties,
we urgently exhorted him to return with them, the Lord helping him, if able
to do so, he begged of us by a supplication in writing(5), that, inasmuch as
by reason of this affliction wherewith he is held he can in no wise rise to
the government of the same Church, or to the office undertaken by him, we should
ordain a bishop to this same Church. Hence, seeing that the charge laid upon
us of caring for all the Churches constrains us to see that pastoral guardianship
be no longer wanting to the flock of the faithful, and being compelled by their
entreaties, and by his renunciation on the ground of his own inability, we
have resolved that a bishop should be ordained to this same Church of Ariminum:
and, having issued our precept according to custom, we have not failed to admonish
the clergy and people of the same Church, to the end that they may concur with
concordant provision to choose for themselves a prelate(6). We therefore exhort
your Fraternity that him whom all with one consent shall choose (as they themselves
also have requested leave to do) you cause to be summoned before you; and test
him by cautious enquiry on all sides. And if, by favour of the Lord, none of
the things that are punished with death in the text of the Heptateuch are found
in him, and if, on the report of trustworthy persons, his life should approve
itself to you, send him to us with the certification of his election, adding
your own letter of testification, to the end that a prelate of this same Church
may, under the ordering of the Lord, be by us consecrated.
EPISTLE XX.
TO THE CLERGY AND PEOPLE ARIMINUM(7).
Gregory
to the Clergy, &c.
Our pastoral charge constrains us to succour with anxious consideration any
Churches that are deprived of the government of a priest. Accordingly, inasmuch
as your Church has long been deprived of pastoral rule from the malady, as
you know, of its own priest, we, moved by your entreaties, have not failed
to admonish the said bishop, that, if he should feel himself recovered from
that malady, he should resume the ministry of the priesthood undertaken by
him. And be, having been again and again warned by us, has now under the pressure
of the same malady intimated by a supplication addressed to us in writing that
by reason of this malady he can by no means rise to the government of the said
Church or to the office undertaken by him. We therefore, compelled by the hopeless
condition of this same person, have held it necessary to take thought for the
setting in order of your Church. We exhort, then, that all of you, with one
consent, without noise or disturbance, choose with the help of the Lord such
a priest to preside over you as may not be disapproved by the venerable canons,
and also be found worthy of so great a ministry. And let him, when required,
come to us to be ordained, with the solemnity of a decree attested by the subscriptions
of all and followed up by the written approval of the visitor(8), to the end
that your Church, by the Lord's ordering, may have its own priest.
We desire also that him whom your unanimity may have chosen you take without
delay to our brother and fellow-bishop Marinianus at Ravenna(9), that, having
been thoroughly examined and tested by him, he may be supported by his testimony
also when he comes to us.
EPISTLE XXIII.
TO FORTUNATUS AND ANTHEMIUS(9a).
Gregory to Fortunatus, bishop, and Anthemius, guardian (defensori).
Catellus, the bearer of these presents, has informed us that his sister, who
had been betrothed to one Stephen, has, through divine mercy moving her, been
converted(1) in a monastery at Naples, and that the same Stephen improperly
detains a house and some other things belonging to her. And, inasmuch as legal
decrees (Caus. 17, q. 2, c. 28) have appointed that a betrothed woman, should
she wish to be converted, shall suffer no loss whatever, let thy Fraternity,
together with Anthemius the subdeacon, endeavour by diligent enquiry to investigate
the truth. And it; as we have been informed, you find that the Stephen above-named
is keeping a house or anything else unjustly, let him be urgently warned by
your exhortation to restore without any delay or altercation what he unduly
detains, and not to defer under any kind of excuse the restitution of what
is not his own. And if perchance you find him neglect your exhortation, notify
this to us, giving also an accurate account of the facts of the case, to the
end that, when the merits of the case are known, he may be forced by other
means, in accordance with equity, to make the restitution which he scorns to
make of his own accord out of regard to honesty. Commending the bearer of these
presents to thy Fraternity, we exhort thee to allow him no longer to suffer
from delay on this account.
EPISTLE XXV.
TO GREGORIA.
Gregory to Gregoria, Lady of the Bed-chamber (cubicularioe) to Augusta.
I have received the longed for letters of your Sweetness, in which you have
been at pains all through to accuse yourself of a multitude of sins: but I
know that you fervently love the Almighty Lord, and I trust in His mercy that
the sentence which was pronounced with regard to a certain holy woman proceeds
from the month of the Truth with regard to you: Her sins, which are many, are
forgiven her, for she loved much (Luke vii. 47). And how they were forgiven
is shewn also by what follows afterwards; that she sat at the Lord's feet,
and heard the word from His mouth (Luke x. 39)(2). For, being rapt in the contemplative,
she had transcended the active life, which Martha her sister still pursued
(Ib. 40). She also sought earnestly her buried Lord, and, stooping over the
sepulchre, found not His body. But, even when the disciples went away, she
remained standing before the door of the sepulchre, and whom she sought as
dead, Him she was counted worthy to see alive, and announced to the disciples
that He had risen again. And this was by the wonderful dispensation of the
loving-kindness of God, that life should be announced by a woman's mouth, because
by a woman's mouth had been the first taste of death in Paradise. And at another
time also, with another Mary, she saw the Lord after His resurrection, and
held His feet. Bring before your eyes, I pray you, what hands held whose feet.
That woman who had been a sinner in the city, those hands which had been polluted
with iniquity, touched the feet of Him who sits at the right hand of the Father
above all the angels. Let us estimate, if we can, what those bowels of heavenly
loving-kindness are, that a woman who had been plunged through sin into the
whirlpool's depth should be thus lifted high on the wing of love through grace.
It is fulfilled, sweet daughter, it is fulfilled, what was promised to us by
the prophetic voice concerning this time of the holy Church: And in that day
the house of David shall be an open fountain for ablution of the sinner and
of her that is unclean (Zach. xiii. 1). For the house of David is an open fountain
for ablution to us sinners, because we are washed from the filth of our iniquities
by mercy now disclosed through the son of David our Saviour.
But as
to what thy Sweetness has added in thy letters, namely that thou wilt continue
to be urgent with
me
till I write that it has been revealed to me
that thy sins are forgiven, thou hast demanded a difficult, nay even an unprofitable
thing; difficult indeed, because I am unworthy of having a revelation made
to me; but unprofitable, because thou oughtest not to become secure about thy
sins, except when in the last day of thy life thou shall be able no longer
to bewail them. But, until that day comes, thou oughtest, ever suspicious and
ever fearful, to be afraid of faults, and wash them with daily tears. Assuredly
the apostle Paul had already ascended into the third heaven, had also been
caught up into Paradise, and heard secret words which it was not lawful for
a man to speak (2 Cor. xii. 2, &c.), and yet, still fearful, he said, I
keep under my body, and bring it into subjection, lest that by any means, while
preaching to others, I myself should become a castaway (1 Cor. ix. 27). One
who is caught up into heaven still fears; and shall one whose conversation
is still on earth desire already not to fear? Consider, most sweet daughter,
that security is wont to be the mother of carelessness. Thou oughtest not,
then, in this life to have security, whereby thou mayest be rendered careless.
For it is written, Happy is the man that is always afraid (Pray. xxviii. 14).
And again it is written, Serve the Lord in fear, and rejoice unto him with
trembling (Ps. ii. 11). In short, then, it must needs be that in the time of
this life trembling possess your soul, to the end that it may hereafter rejoice
without end through the joy of security. May Almighty God fill your soul with
the grace of His Holy Spirit, and, after the tears which you daily shed in
prayer, bring you to eternal joys.
EPISTLE XXVI.
TO THEOCTISTA, PATRICIAN(3).
Gregory
to Theoctista, &c.
That your Excellency, though placed in so great a tumult of affairs, is full
of the fruitfulness of the sacred word, and incessantly pants after eternal
joys, for this I give great thanks to Almighty God, in that in you I see fulfilled
what is written of the elect fathers, But the children of Israel walked on
dry land through the midst of the sea (Exod. xv. 19). But on the other hand,
I am come into the depth of the sea, and the storm hath overwhelmed me (Ps.
lxviii. 3)(4). But you, as I see, walk with dry feet through the waves of secular
affairs to the country of promise. Let us give thanks, then, to that Spirit
who lifts up the hearts which He fills; who amid the tumults of men makes a
solitude in the soul; and in whose presence there is no place, wherein a soul
moved by compunction can be, which is not a secret one. For you inhale the
odour of eternal sweetness, and so ardently love the bridegroom of your soul
as to be able to say with the heavenly bride, Draw me after thee; we run in
the odour of thine ointments (Cant. i. 3). But in the letters of your Excellency
I find this deficiency; that you have been unwilling to tell me about your
most serene mistress, how studiously she reads, or how she is moved by compunction
in her reading. For your presence ought to be of great advantage to her, that
amid the billows of affairs under which she continually suffers and by which,
whether she will or no, she is drawn abroad, she may be recalled inwardly to
the love of the heavenly country. And this also you ought to investigate, as
often as tears are given her for her soul, whether her compunction arises still
from fear, or whether now from love(5).
For there are two kinds of compunction, as you know: one that is afraid of
eternal pains, the other that sighs for heavenly rewards; since the soul that
is athirst for God is first moved to compunction by fear, and afterwards by
love. For in the first place it is affected to tears because, while recollecting
its evil doings, it fears to suffer for them eternal punishments. But, when
fear has died away in the anxiety of a long sorrow, a certain security has
birth from a sense of pardon; and the mind is enflamed with love of heavenly
joys. And one who previously wept for fear of punishment begins afterwards
to weep most bitterly for being kept back from the kingdom. For the soul contemplates
what are those choirs of angels, what is the very society of blessed spirits,
what the vision of the inward brightness of God; and laments more for the lack
of unending good than it wept before when it feared eternal evil; and thus
it comes to pass that the compunction of fear, when perfected, draws the mind
to the compunction of love. All this is well described in the sacred and true
history, understood figuratively, which says, Axa the daughter of Caleph sighed
sitting on an ass. And her father said to her, What wouldest than? Who answered,
Give me a blessing, Thou hast given me a South and dry land; give me also a
watered land. And her father gave her the upper springs, and the nether springs
(Josh. xv. 18)(6). For indeed Axa sits on an ass, when the soul presides over
the irrational motions of the flesh. And sighing she seeks a watered land from
her father, because the grace of tears is to be sought with great longing from
our Creator. For there are some who have already freely received the gift of
speaking in behalf of justice, of protecting the oppressed, of giving of their
own to the needy, of having ardour of faith, but have not yet the grace of
tears. These, that is to say, have a South and dry land, but still need springs
of water; because, while they are occupied in good works, wherein they are
great and fervent, they have still sore need (either from fear of punishment,
or from love of the heavenly kingdom) to lament the sins which they cannot
be without while they live. But since, as I have said, there are two kinds
of compunction, her father gave her the upper springs and the nether springs.
For the soul receives the upper springs, when she afflicts herself in tears
for desire of the heavenly kingdom; but she receives the nether springs, when
she shudders with weeping at the punishments of hell. And indeed the nether
springs are given first, and the upper springs afterwards. But, because the
compunction of love is far above the other indignity, there was need for the
upper springs to be mentioned first, and the nether springs afterwards. You
then, who through the operation of the Almighty Lord know by experience both
kinds of compunction, ought anxiously to try to discover day by day how much
you are profiling your most serene mistress by your words.
Further, I beg you to take especial care to instruct in good morals the little
lords whom you are bringing up, and to admonish the glorious eunuchs who are
appointed to attend them that they should speak to them such things as may
move their minds to mutual charity between themselves and to gentleness towards
subjects; lest, if they should conceive now any grudge against each other,
it should break out openly hereafter. For in truth the words of those who bring
up children will be either milk, if they are good, or poison if they are evil.
Let them therefore so speak now to the little ones that the latter may shew
hereafter what good words they had sucked from the months of those who nursed
them.
Furthermore, my beloved son, Sabinianus the deacon, has brought thirty pounds
of gold, sent by your Excellency to be given for the redemption of captives
and for distribution to the poor; with regard to which I rejoice, but tremble
for myself, seeing that I shall have to render an account before the tremendous
Judge, not only of the substance of Saint Peter, Prince of the apostles, but
also of your possessions. But to you may Almighty God return heavenly things
for earthly, and eternal for temporal. I have now to inform you that from the
city of Crotona, which, lying on the Adriatic Sea in the land of Italy, was
taken last year by the Lombards, many noble men and many noble women were led
away captive, and children were parted from their parents, parents from their
children, husbands from their wives, and wives from their husbands; of whom
some have already been redeemed. But, because of the heavy prices put upon
them, many have remained so far in the hands of those most abominable Lombards.
But I sent at once for their redemption a moiety of the money sent by you.
Out of the other moiety I have arranged for the purchase of bed-clothes for
the handmaidens of God whom you in Greek language call monastriae; seeing that
they suffer from grievous bareness in their beds during the very severe cold
of this winter; there being many of them in this city. For, according to the
official list of them, they are found to be three thousand in number. They
do indeed receive fourscore pounds a year from the possessions of Saint Peter,
Prince of the apostles. But what is this for so great a multitude, especially
in this city, where everything is so dear? Their life, moreover, is such, and
strict to such a degree in tears and abstinence, that we believe that, but
for them, not one of us could have subsisted for so many years in this place
among the swords of the Lombards.
Furthermore, I send you, as a blessing from Saint Peter the apostle, a key
from his most sacred body; with respect to which key the miracle has been wrought
which I now relate. A certain Lombard, having found it on his entrance into
a city in the parts beyond the Po, and, paying no regard to it as Saint Peter's
key, but wishing to make something of it for himself in that he saw it to be
of gold, took out a knife to cut it. But presently seized by a spirit, he plunged
the knife wherewith he had thought to cut it into his own throat, and in the
same hour fell down dead. And when Autharith, king of the Lombards(7), and
many others belonging to him came to the place, and he who had stabbed himself
was lying apart in one place dead, and this key on the ground in another, exceeding
fear came upon all, so that no one ventured to lift this same key from the
ground. Then a certain Lombard who was a Catholic, and known to be given to
prayer and almsgiving, Minulf by name, was called, and himself lifted it from
the ground. But Autharith, in consideration of this miracle, made another golden
key, and sent it along with this to my predecessor of holy memory, declaring
what kind of miracle had through it occurred. I have taken thought, then, to
send your Excellence this key, through which Almighty God cut off a proud and
faithless man, that through it you who fear and love Him may be enabled to
have both present and eternal welfare.
EPISTLE XXVII.
TO ANASTASIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Anastasius, Bishop of Antioch.
I have received through the hands of our common son the deacon Sabinianus
the longed for letter of your most sweet Holiness, in which the words have
flowed not from your tongue but from your soul. And it is not surprising that
one speaks well who lives perfectly. And, since you have learnt, through the
Spirit teaching you in the school of the heart, the precepts of life--to despise
all earthly things and to speed to the heavenly country,--in proportion as
you have advanced in good you think what is good of others. But, when I heard
many things said in the letters of your Blessedness in praise of me, I understood
your intention; how that you wished to describe not what I am, but what I ought
to be. But as to your saying that I ought to remember my manner of life, and
on no account give place to the malignant spirit who seeks to sift souls, I
indeed recollect myself to have been always of bad manner of life, and hasten
to overcome and put an end to this my manner of life, if I can. If however,
as you believe, I have had anything good in me, I trust in the help of Almighty
God that I have not forgotten it. But your Holiness, as I see, by the words
of sweetness at the beginning and the words that follow, has wished your letter
to be like a bee, which carries both honey and a sting, satiating me with the
honey and piercing me with the sting. But meanwhile I return to meditation
on the words of Solomon, That better are the wounds of one that loves than
the kisses of a flattering foe (Prov. xxvii. 6). Thus, as to your saying that
we ought not to give occasion of offence for no cause at all, this is what
your son, our most pious lord (for whose life we ought continually to pray)
has already written repeatedly; and what he says out of power I know that you
say out of love. Nor do I wonder that you have made use of imperial language
in your letters, since there is a very close relationship between love and
power. For both presume in a princely way; both ever speak with authority.
And indeed on the receipt of the synodical epistle of our brother and fellow-bishop
Cyriacus it was not worth my while to make a difficulty on account of the profane
title at the risk of disturbing the unity of holy Church: but nevertheless
I took care to admonish him with respect to this same superstitious and proud
title, saying that he could not have peace with us unless he corrected the
elation of the aforesaid expression, which the first apostate invented. You,
however, ought not to say that this is a matter of no consequence, since, if
we bear it with equanimity, we are corrupting the faith of the Universal Church;
for you know how many not only heretics but heresiarchs have issued from the
Constantinopolitan Church. And, not to speak of the injury done to your dignity,
if one bishop is called Universal, the Universal Church comes to ruin, if the
one who is universal falls. But far, far be this levity from my ears. Yet I
trust in Almighty God that what He has promised He will soon fulfil; Whosoever
exalteth himself shall be humbled (Luke xiv. 11).
So much, in the midst of many occupations. I have briefly replied to what
you have said in your letters: for what I ought not just now to express in
writing remains imprinted on my mind. I beg your Blessedness always to recall
me to your memory in your holy prayers, that so your intercessions may rescue
me from temporal and eternal ills. Pray moreover zealousy and fervently for
the most serene lord the Emperor; for his life is very necessary for the world.
I refrain from saying more, for I doubt not that you know.
EPISTLE XXVIII.
TO THEODORE, PHYSICIAN.
Gregory to Theodore, Physician at Constantinople.
My most beloved son the deacon Sabinianus(8), on his return to me, brought
me no letter from your Glory; but he conveyed hither what had been sent for
the poor and captives; whence I understood the reason. It was that you would
not speak by letters to a man, having by a good deed made your address to Almighty
God. For this same deed of yours has a voice of its own, which calls to the
secret ears of God, as it is written, Hide thy alms in the bosom of the poor,
and it shall entreat for thee (Eccles. xxix. 15). And indeed to me, I confess,
it is sad to expend what is not my own, and to add to the accounts which I
keep of the substance of the Church those also of the property of my most sweet
son the lord Theodore. And yet I rejoice with your benignity that you carefully
attend to and observe what the Truth says; Give alms, and behold, all things
are clean unto you (Luke xi 41); and this which is written, Even as water quencheth
fire, so alms quench sin (Ecclus. iii. 33). Paul the apostle also says, Let
your abundance supply their want, that their abundance also may be a supply
to your want (2 Cor. viii. 14). Tobias admonishes his son, saying, If thou
hast much, give abundantly; but if thou hast little, of that little impart
willingly (Tob. iv. 9). You therefore observe all these precepts: but we beg
you to pray for us, lest we should dispense the fruits of your labours indiscreetly,
and not as need requires; lest from that whereby you diminish sins we should
heap up sins. Now may Almighty God keep you under His protection, and so grant
you human favour in an earthly court as to bring you after a long life to the
eternal joys of a heavenly court.
We send you as the benediction of Saint Peter, Prince of the apostles, whom
you greatly love, a key from his most sacred body, in which is enclosed iron
from his chains, that what bound his neck for martyrdom, may loose yours from
all sins.
EPISTLE XXX.
TO NARSES, THE RELIGIOUS (Narsae relegioso)(9)
Gregory
to Narses, &c.
When I was sending Romanus the guardian (defensorem) to the royal city, he
sought long your letters, but they could not be found: but afterwards they
were found among many letters from other persons, your Sweetness, therein telling
me of your afflictions and tribulations of spirit, and making known the oppositions
to you of bad men. But, I pray you, in all this recall to your mind what I
believe too that you never forget, That all who will live godly in Christ stiffer
persecution. (2 Tim. iii. 12). And with regard to this I confidently say that
you would live less godly if you suffered persecution less. For let us hear
what else the same teacher of the Gentiles says to his disciples; Yourselves
know, brethren, our entrance in unto you, that it was not in vain; for we lead
before suffered and been shamefully entreated (1 Thess. ii. 1). Lo, most sweet
son, the holy preacher declared that his entrance would have been of no effect,
if he had not been shamefully entreated; and thy Charity wishes to say good
things, but refuses to endure evil things. Wherefore thou must needs gird thyself
up more tightly in the midst of adverse circumstances, that adversity itself
may the more increase thy desire for the love of God and thy earnestness in
good works. So the seeds of harvests germinate the more fruitfully for being
covered over with frost; so fire is kept down by a blast, that it may grow
greater. I know indeed that from the perverse speeches of so many evil tongues
thou endurest a violent storm, and bearest in thy soul billows of contradictions.
But remember what the Lord says by the Psalmist, I heard thee in the secret
place of storm; I proved thee at the waters of contradiction (Psal. lxxx. 8)
(9a). For, if in the midst of them that contradict thou doest the things that
are of God, then thou art proved a true worker.
Further, your most sweet Charity has written to me that I should write something
in the way of admonition to the monasteries which, through your prayers and
influence, have been instituted by our son the lord Paul. But, if they are
vessels of God, I know that they have through the grace of compunction a fountain
of wisdom within, and ought not to take in the little drops of my dryness.
Further, your perfect wisdom recollects that in Paradise there was no rain,
but a fountain ascended from the midst of Paradise to water the face of the
ground. Those souls, then, that through the grace of compunction have a fountain
in themselves have no need of rain from another's tongue.
Further, you inform me in your letter of the passing away of the lady Esychia
(1); and I rejoiced with great exultation that that good soul, which laboured
in a foreign country, has arrived happily at its own. Further, greet in my
behalf my glorious daughters, the lady Dominica and the lady Eudochia. But,
inasmuch as I hear that it is now a long time since the aforesaid lady Dominica
was made a prioress, let your Charity watch over her in this regard; that,
as she is no longer compelled to serve in the toil of an earthy court, she
may fly perfectly from all noises of this world, devote herself entirely to
God, and leave no part of herself outside herself; but that she also gather
together as many souls as she can to the service of her Creator, that their
minds through her word may receive the grace of compunction, and that she herself
may so much the more speedily be absolved from all her sins as, through her
life and her tongue, the souls of others also shall have broken loose from
the bands of sins. Moreover, since no one among men in this world is without
sin (and what else is sinning but flying from God?), I say confidently that
this my daughter also has some sins. Wherefore, that she may perfectly satisfy
her mistress, that is eternal Wisdom, let her, who fled alone, return with
many. For the guilt of turning away will be imputed to no one who in returning
brings back gain.
Further, I beg you to greet in my behalf the lord Alexander and the lord Theodorus.
But with respect to your saying in your letter that I ought to write to my
most excellent daughter the lady Gurdia, and her most holy daughter the lady
Theoctista (2), and their magnificent husbands, the lord Marinus and the lord
Christidorus, and to give them some admonition about their souls, your most
sweet Greatness well knows that there are none at present in the city of Constantinople
who can translate well into Greek what has been dictated in Latin. For keeping
to the words, but attending little to the sense, they both fail to make the
words understood and also mangle the sense. On this account I have written
shortly to my aforesaid daughter the lady Gurdia; but have not addressed the
others. Further, I have sent you two camisiae and four oraria, which I beg
may be humbly offered, with the blessing of St. Peter, to the aforesaid men.
Besides, a certain person on his death has left me by will a little boy; taking
thought for whose soul, I have sent him to your Sweetness, that he may live
in this world in the service of one through whom he may be able to attain to
the liberty of heaven. Further, I beg your most sweet Charity to visit frequently
my most beloved son, the deacon Anatolius, whom I have sent to represent the
Church in the royal city, that after the toils which he endures in secular
causes he may find rest with you in the word of God, and wipe away the sweat
of this his earthly toil as it were with a kind of white napkin. Commend him
to all who are known to you, though I am sure that, if he is perfectly known,
he needs no commendation. Yet do you shew with regard to him how much you love
the holy apostle Peter, and me. Now may Almighty God guard your Charity, to
me most sweet, from enemies within and without, and, when it shall please Him,
bring you to heavenly kingdoms.
EPISTLE XXXI.
TO CYRIACUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Cyriacus, Bishop of Constantinople.
We have received the letters of four Blessedness, which speak to us in words
not of the tongue but of the soul. For they open to me your mind, which, however,
was not closed to me, since of myself I retain experience of the same sweetness.
Wherefore I return thanks continually to Almighty God, since, if charity the
mother of virtues abides in your heart towards us, you will never lose the
branches of good works, seeing that you retain the very root of goodness. You
ought, then, to shew the beauty of this charity to me and to all your brethren
by this good work in the first place, -- your hastening to discard that word
of pride whereby grave offence is engendered in the Churches, thus fulfilling
in all ways what is written, Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in
the bond of peace (Ephes. iv. 3): and again, Give none occasion to the adversary
to speak reproachfully (1 Tim. v. 14). For then will true charity be displayed,
if there is no schism among us through an example of pride, For, as for me,
I call Jesus to witness in my soul, that to no one among men from the highest
to the lowest do I wish to give occasion of offence. I desire that all should
be great and honourable, yet so that their honour detract not from the honour
of Almighty God. For whoso covets to be honoured against God to me is not honourable.
But, that you may learn what good will I have towards your Blessedness, I have
sent my son the deacon Anatolius to the feet of our most pious lords, for satisfying
their Piety and your Fraternity that I desire to injure no man m this matter,
but to keep the humility that is pleasing to God, and the concord of holy Church.
And because Antichrist, the enemy of God, is near at hand, I studiously desire
the he may not find anything belonging. to himself, not only in the manners,
but even m the titles of priests. Let then what has been introduced after a
new fashion be removed in like manner as it was brought in, and peace in the
Lord will remain with us inviolate. For what pleasantness, what charity, will
there be amongst us, if we cheer ourselves up with words, while we are galled
by facts? Let then your Holiness so act that we may feel in our inmost hearts
the good things you speak of, to the end that, the hearts of priests being
in unanimity, when we supplicate for the life of our most pious lords, we may
be counted worthy to be heard all the more as peace illuminates your prayers
before the eyes of God, and no stain of discord darkens them.
EPISTLE XXXII.
TO ANASTASlUS, PRESBYTERS (3).
Gregory
to Anastasius, &c.
That a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good
things (Matth. xii. 35; Luke vi. 45), this thy Charity has shewn, both in thy
habitual life and lately also in thy epistle; wherein I find two persons at
issue with regard to virtues; that is to say, thyself contending for charity,
and another for fear and humility. And, though occupied with many things, though
ignorant of the Greek language, I have nevertheless sat as judge of your contention.
But, in very truth, thou hast, in my judgment, thyself conquered thy opponent
by the apostolical sentence, which I proffered to you during your contention,
That there is no fear in charity,, but perfect charity casteth out fear; because
fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in charity. I know then
how much thy Fraternity is made perfect in charity. And, since thou lovest
Almighty God much, thou oughtest to presume on thy neighhour much. For it is
not places or ranks that make us neighbours to our Creator; but either our
good deserts join us to Him, or our bad deserts separate us from Him. Since,
then, it is still uncertain what any one is inwardly, how was it that thou
wast afraid to write, ignorant as thou art as to which of us two is the superior?
And indeed that thou livest well I know, but I am conscious myself of being
burdened by many sins. And though thou art thyself a sinner, still thou art
much better than I, since thou bearest thine own sins only, but I those also
of the persons committed to me. In this, then, I look upon thee as lofty, in
this I look upon thee as great, that in a great place and lofty before human
eyes thou hast not felt thyself advanced at all. For therein, while honour
is paid thee by men outwardly, thy mind is sunk into depths, because burdened
by distracting cares. But to thee Almighty God has done as it is written; He
hath laid down ascents in the heart, in the valley of tears (Ps. lxxxiii. 6).
To me, however, thou mightest have appeared far loftier, far more sublime,
hadst thou never undertaken the leadership of the monastery which is called
Neas, seeing that in that monastery, as I hear, there is indeed an appearance
of monks kept up, but many secular things are done under the garb of sanctity.
But even to this I shall think that heavenly grace has brought thee, if what
in that place displeases Almighty God should be corrected under thy guidance.
But, since
there have been wont to be quarrels between the father of this same monastery
and the
pastor of
the Church of Jerusalem, I believe that Almighty
God has willed that thy Love and my most holy brother and fellow-priest Amos
should be at the same time at Jerusalem for this end, that the quarrels which
I have spoken of should be put an end to. Shew, then, now how much you loved
before. For I know that both of you are abstinent, both learned, both humble;
whence the glory of our Saviour must needs be praised, according to the language
of the Psalm, in timbrel and chorus (Ps. cl. 4). For in a timbrel the sound
from the skin is dry, but in a chorus there is a concord of voices. What therefore
is denoted by a timbrel but abstinence, and what by a chorus but unanimity?
Since then by abstinence ye praise the Lord in timbrel, I beg that by unanimity
ye praise Him in chorus. The Truth also in person says, Have salt in yourselves,
and have peace one • with another (Mark ix. 50). What is denoted by salt
but wisdom, as Paul attests, who says, Let your speech be alway in grace, seasoned
with salt (Col. iv. 6)? Since, then, we know that you have salt through the
teaching of the heavenly word, it remains that through the grace of charity
you keep with all your hearts peace between yourselves. All this I say, dearest
brother, because I love you both exceedingly, and am much afraid lest the sacrifices
of your prayers should be stained by any dissension between you.
The blessing which you sent, first by Exhilaratus the Secundicerius (4), and
afterwards by Sabinianus the deacon, I received with thanksgiving, since from
a holy place it became you to send holy things, and to shew by your very gift
whom you serve continually. May Almighty God protect you with His right hand,
and preserve you scatheless from all evils.
EPISTLE XXXIII.
TO MAURICIUS AUGUSTUS.
Gregory to Mauricius Augustus.
The provident piety of my lords, test perchance any scandal might be engendered
in the unity of Holy Church by the dissension of priests, has once and again
deigned to admonish me to receive kindly the representatives of my brother
and fellow-priest Cyriacus, and to give them liberty to return soon. And although,
most pious lord, all your injunctions are suitable and provident, yet I find
that by such an admonition I am reproved as being m your judgment indiscreet.
But, even though my mind has been wounded in no slight degree by a proud and
profane title, could I possibly be guilty of so great indiscretion as not to
know what I owed to the unity of the faith and to ecclesiastical concord, and
to refuse to receive the representatives and the synodical letter of my brother
on account of bitterness from whatever cause intervening? Far be this from
me. Such wisdom had been unwisdom. For what is due from us for conserving unity
of faith is one thing; what is due for restraining elation is another. Times
therefore were to be distinguished, lest the newness of my aforesaid brother
might in any point be disturbed (5). Whence also I received his representatives
with great affection. Whatever charity I owed to them I displayed, and honoured
them more than it had been the ancient custom to do, and caused them to celebrate
the sacred solemnities of mass with me; since, even as my deacon ought not
to serve, for exhibition of the sacred mysteries, him who has either committed
the sin of elation or corrects it not himself when committed by others, so
it was right that his ministers should attend, in the celebration of mass,
on me, who, under the keeping of God, have not fallen into the error of pride.
I have however taken care to admonish earnestly the same my brother and fellow-bishop
that, if he desires to have peace and concord with all, he must refrain from
the appellation of a foolish title. As to this, the piety of my lords has charged
me in their orders, saying that offence ought not to be engendered among us
for the appellation of a frivolous name. But I beseech your imperial Piety
to consider that some frivolous things are very harmless, and others exceedingly
harmful. Is it not the case that, when Antichrist comes and calls himself God,
it will be very frivolous, and yet exceedingly pernicious? If we regard the
quantity of the language used, there are but a few syllables; but if the weight
of the wrong, there is universal disaster. Now I confidently say that whosoever
calls himself, or desires to be called, Universal Priest, is in his elation
the precursor of Antichrist, because he proudly puts himself above all others.
Nor is it by dissimilar pride that he is led into error; for, as that perverse
one wishes to appear as above all men, so whosoever this one is who covets
being called sole priest, he extols himself above all other priests. But, since
the Truth says, Every one that exalteth himself shall be humbled (Luke xiv.
11; xviii. 14), I know that every kind of elation is the sooner burst as it
is the more inflated. Let then your Piety charge those who have fallen into
an example of pride not to generate any offence by the appellation of a frivolous
name. For I, a sinner, who by the help of God retain humility, need not to
be admonished to humility. Now may Almighty God long guard the life of our
most serene lord for the peace of holy Church and the advantage of the Roman
republic. For we are sure, that if you live who fear the. Lord of heaven, you
will allow no proud doings to prevail against the truth.
EPISTLE XXXIV.
TO EULOGIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Eulogius, Bishop of Alexandria, and Anastasius, Bishop of Antioch
(6).
The charity wherewith I am greatly bound to you allows me by no means to keep
silence, that your Holiness may know all that is going on among us, and, deceived
by no false rumours, may keep more perfectly the way of your justice and rectitude,
as you have perfectly begun to do. Now the representatives (responsales) of
our brother and fellow-bishop Cyriacus came to me, bringing me his synodical
epistle. And indeed between us and him there is, as your Blessedness knows,
serious difference on account of the appellation of a profane name; but I thought
that his representatives sent in the cause of the faith ought to be received,
lest the sin of elation which has arisen in the Constantinopolitan Church almost
against all priests, might cause l a shaking of the faith and a breach in ecclesiastical
unity. I also caused the same representatives, inasmuch as they very humbly
requested it, to celebrate with me the solemnities of mass, because, as I have
taken care to intimate to the most serene lord the Emperor, it was right that
the representatives of our brother and fellow priest Cyriacus should communicate
with me, since by God's help I have not fallen into the error of elation. But
my deacon ought not to celebrate the solemnities of mass with our aforesaid-brother
Cyriacus, since, through a profane title, he has either committed or accedes
to the sin of pride; lest if he (my deacon) proceeds (7) with one who is in
such a position of elation, we might seem (which God forbid) to confirm the
vanity of that foolish name. But I have taken care to admonish our said brother
to correct himself of such elation, since, if he does not correct it, he will
in no way have peace with us.
Furthermore, our said brother in his synodical letters has by the grace of
God expressed himself in all respects as a Catholic. But he has condemned a
certain Eudoxius, whom we find neither condemned in synods, nor repudiated
by his predecessors in their synodical letters (8). It is true that the canons
of the council of Constantinople condemn the Eudoxiaus; but they say nothing
as to who their author Eudoxius was. But the Roman Church does not possess
so far these same canons, or the acts of that council, nor has it accepted
them, though it has accepted this same synod with regard to what was defined
by it against Macedonius. It does certainly repudiate the other heresies therein
spoken of, which had already been condemned by other Fathers: but so far it
knows nothing about the Eudoxians. Some things are indeed told in Sozomen's
history about a certain Eudoxius, who is said to have usurped the episcopate
of the Church of Constantinople. But this history itself the Apostolic See
refuses to accept, since it contains many false statements, and praises Theodore
of Mopsuestia too much, and says that he was a great doctor of the Church even
to the day of his death. It remains then that, if any one receives that history,
he contradicts the synod held in the times of Justinian of pious memory concerning
the three chapters. But one who cannot contradict this synod must needs reject
that history. Moreover in the Latin language we have so far found nothing about
this Eudoxius, either in Philaster or in the blessed Augustine, who wrote much
about heresies, Let therefore your Charity inform me in your letters if any
one of the approved Fathers among the Greeks has made mention of him.
Furthermore three years ago, with reference to the case of the monks of Isauria,
who were accused as being heretics (9), my brother and fellow-bishop the lord
John once sent me letters for my satisfaction, in which he attempted to shew
that they had contradicted the definitions of the synod of Ephesus; and he
forwarded to me certain chapters, purporting to be those of the same synod,
which they were said to oppose (1). Now among other things it was in these
chapters asserted concerning the soul of Adam, that by sin it did not die,
in that the devil does not enter into the heart of man; and that whoso said
it was so was anathema. When this was read to me I was much grieved. For if
the soul of Adam, who was the first to sin, did not die by sin, how was it
said to him concerning the forbidden tree, In the day that ye eat thereof ye
shall surely die (Gen. ii. 17)? And certainly Adam and Eve ate of the forbidden
tree, and yet in their flesh they lived afterwards more than nine hundred years.
It is therefore evident that in his flesh he did not die. If then he did not
die in his soul, the impious conclusion follows that God pronounced a false
sentence concerning him, when He said that in the day that he ate he should
die. But far be this error, far be it from the true faith. For what we say
is, that the first than died in soul in the day that he sinned, and that through
him the whole human race is condemned in this penalty of death and corruption.
But through the second man we trust that we can be freed, both now from the
death of the soul, and hereafter from all corruption of the flesh in the eternal
resurrection: -- as moreover we said to the aforesaid representatives; 'We
say that the soul of Adam died by sin, not from the substance of living, but
from the quality of living. For, inasmuch as substance is one thing, and quality
another, his soul did not so die as not to be, but so died as not to be blessed.
Yet this same Adam returned afterwards to life through penitence. (1)
But that the devil enters into the heart of man cannot be denied, if the Gospel
is believed. For it is there written, And after sop Satan entered into hint
(John xiii. 27). And again it is therein also said, When the devil had now
put himself into the heart of Judas, that Judas should betray Him (Ibid. 2).
He that denies this falls into Pelagian heresy. Seeing then that, having examined
the Ephesine synod, we found nothing of the kind to be contained therein, we
caused to be brought to us also a very old Codex of the same synod from the
Church of Ravenna, and we found it to agree with the report of the synod which
we have so as to differ in no respect, and to contain nothing else in its decree
of anathema and rejection, except that they reject the twelve chapters of Cyril
of blessed memory. But this whole argument we set forth much more fully and
particularly to his representatives when they were with us, and most fully
satisfied them. Wherefore lest either these or any like things should creep
in yonder, so as to cause offence to holy Church, it is necessary for us to
indicate these things to your Holiness. And, although we know our brother and
fellow-bishop Cyriacus to be orthodox, yet on account of others we ought to
be cautious, that the seeds of error may be trampled down before they spring
up to public view.
I received the letters of your Holiness on the arrival here of our common
son the deacon Sabinianus; but, as their bearer is already prepared for departure
and cannot be detained, I will reply when the deacon, my responsalis, comes.
EPISTLE XXXV.
TO DOMINICUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Dominicus, Bishop of Carthage.
Though we believe that thy Fraternity gives attention with pastoral vigilance
to the care of monasteries, yet we think it necessary to inform you of what
we have learnt about a monastery in the African province. Now the abbot Cumquodeus,
the bearer of these presents, complaints that, if at any, time he wishes to
restrain under regular discipline the monks over whom he presides, they at
once leave the monastery, and are allowed to wander wherever they will. Seeing,
then, that this is both altogether pernicious to themselves and also sets an
example of perdition to others, we exhort your Fraternity that, if it is so,
you should bring ecclesiastical censure to bear upon them, and withhold them
by suitable punishment from such undoubted presumption; and that you should
so bring them to obedience by salubrious provision, subduing their proud minds
to the yoke of discipline, that correction may recall from guilt others whom
their example might have provoked to similar transgression, and teach them
to obey their superiors, as is fit. But, since he tells us that stray monks
are defended by some bishops, let your Fraternity give careful attention to
this, and restrain them by your menaces in all ways from such defence. The
month of July, Indiction 15.
EPISTLE XXXVIII.
TO DONUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Donus, Bishop of Messana (Messene).
The ordinances both of the sacred canons and of the laws allow the utensils
of the Church to be sold for the redemption of captives. And so, seeing that
Faustinus, the bearer of these presents, is proved to have contracted a debt
of three hundred and thirty solidi for the purpose of redeeming his daughters
from the yoke of captivity, and that, thirty thereof having been repaid, it
is certain that he has not sufficient means for the repayment of the remaining
sum, we exhort thy Fraternity by this communication that thou by all means
give him fifteen pounds, taking his receipt for the same, out of the silver
in thy hands belonging to the Meriensian Church, of which he is known to be
a soldier; so that, it being sold, and the debt paid, he may be freed from
the bond of his obligation. But of this also your Fraternity should be careful,
that in case of the aforesaid Church having so much current coin, he should
receive from it the amount above-written; but otherwise you must needs supply
him for the purpose in view with the sum we have stated from the consecrated
vessels. For, as it is a very serious thing to sell idly ecclesiastical utensils,
so on the other hand it is wrong, under pressing necessity of this kind, for
an exceedingly desolated Church to prefer its property to its captives, or
to loiter in redeeming them.
EPISTLE XXXIX.
TO JOHN, BISHOP.
Gregory to John, Bishop of Syracuse.
Lest attention to secular affairs should disjoin the hearts of religious men
(which God forbid) from mutual charity, very earnest endeavour should be made
to bring any matter that has come into dispute to the easiest possible termination.
Since, then, from the information of Caesarius, abbot of St. Peter's monastery,
constituted in a place called Baias, we find that between him and John, abbot
of St. Lucia's monastery, constituted in the city of Syracuse, there has arisen
a serious question about certain boundaries, we, lest this contention should
be prolonged between them, have taken thought for their dispute being terminated
by the determination of a land-measurer. And accordingly we have written to
the defensor Fantinus, bidding him direct John the land-measurer, who has gone
from Rome to Panormus, to resort to your Fraternity.
We exhort, therefore, that you go with him to the places about which there
is contention, and, both parties having been brought together, cause the places
in dispute to have their boundaries defined in your presence, though still
with a claim of prescription for forty years preserved to either party. But,
whatever may be determined, let it be your Fraternity's anxious and studious
care to have it so observed that no strife may henceforth be stirred up anew,
nor any further complaint reach us.
We believe that it is not unknown to your Fraternity that the venerable abbot
Caesarius was formerly our friend; and therefore, saving equity, we commend
him to you in all respects, And, seeing that he is entirely inexperienced in
secular causes, it is needful for him to be aided by your solicitude; yet so
that, in this as in all cases, you observe, as is fit, reason and justice.
EPISTLE XL.
TO EULOGIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Eulogius, Bishop of Alexandria.
Your most sweet Holiness has spoken much in your letter to me about the chair
of Saint Peter, Prince of the apostles, saying that he himself now sits on
it in the persons of his successors. And indeed I acknowledge myself to be
unworthy, not only in the dignity of such as preside, but even in the number
of such as stand. But I gladly accepted all that has been said, in that he
has spoken to me about Peter's chair who occupies Peter's chair. And, though
special honour to myself in no wise delights me, yet I greatly rejoiced because
you, most holy ones, have given to yourselves what you have bestowed upon me.
For who can be ignorant that holy Church has been made firm in the solidity
of the Prince of the apostles, who derived his name from the firmness of his
mind, so as to be called Petrus from petra. And to him it is said by the voice
of the Truth, To thee I will give the keys of the kingdom of heaven (Matth.
xvi. 19). And again it is said to him, And when thou art converted, strengthen
thy brethren (xxii. 32). And once more, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me?
Feed my sheep (Joh. xxi. 17). Wherefore though there are many apostles, yet
with regard to the principality itself the See of the Prince of the apostles
alone has grown strong in authority, which in three places is the See of one[2].
For he himself exalted the See in which he deigned even to rest and end the
present life. He himself adorned the See to which he sent his disciple as evangelist.
He himself stablished the See in which, though he was to leave it, he sat for
seven years. Since then it is the See of one, and one See, over which by Divine
authority three bishops now preside, whatever good I hear of you, this I impute
to myself. If you believe anything good of me, impute this to your merits,
since we are one in Him Who says, That they all may be one, as Thou, Father,
art in me, and I in thee that they also may be one in us (Joh. xvii. 21). Moreover,
in paying you the debt of salutation which is due to you, I declare to you
that I exult with great joy from knowing that you labour assiduously against
the barkings of heretics; and I implore Almighty God that He would aid your
Blessedness with His protection, so as through your tongue. to uproot every
root of bitterness from the bosom of holy Church, lest it should germinate
again to the hindrance of many, and through it many should be defiled. For
having received your talent you think on the injunction, Trade till I come
(Luke xix. 13). I therefore, though unable to trade at all nevertheless rejoice
with you in the gains of your trade, inasmuch as I know this, that if operation
does not make me partaker, yet charity does make me a partaker in your labour.
For I reckon that the good of a neighbour is common to one that stands idle,
if he knows how to rejoice in common in the doings of the other.
Furthermore, I have wished to send you some timber: but your Blessedness has
not indicated whether you are in need of it: and we can send some of much larger
size, but no ship is sent hither capable of containing it: and I think shame
to send the smaller sort. Nevertheless let your Blessedness inform me by letter
what I should do.
I have however sent you, as a small blessing from the Church of Saint Peter
who loves you, six of the smaller sort of Aquitanian cloaks (pallia), and two
napkins (oraria); for, my affection being great, I presume on the acceptableness
of even little things. For affection itself has its own worth, and it is quite
certain that there will be no offence in what out of love one has presumed
to do.
Moreover I have received the blessing of the holy Evangelist Mark, according
to the note appended to your letter. But, since I do not drink colatum[3] and
viritheum[4] with pleasure, I venture to ask for cognidium[5], which last year,
after a long interval, your Holiness caused to be known in this city. For we
here get from the traders the name of cognidium, but not the thing itself.
Now I beg that the prayers of your Holiness may support me against all the
bitternesses which I suffer in this life, and defend me from them by your intercessions
with Almighty God.
EPISTLE XLII.
TO MARINIANUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Marinianus, Bishop of Ravenna.
We find from the information given in your Fraternity's letter that the sons
of the Church of Cornelium are continually supplicating you to consecrate a
bishop for them in place of their former bishop who has lapsed, and that you
are in doubt as to what should be done in the matter, and await our plain command.
Inasmuch, then, as no sort of reason allows any one who has departed criminally
to be recalled to the place from which he has lapsed, and as the ordinances
of the sacred canons allow not a Church to be without a bishop beyond three
months, lest (which God forbid) the ancient foe should lie in wait to tear
the Lord's flock, your Fraternity ought to comply with their entreaty, and
ordain a bishop in the place of the lapsed one. For, seeing that you ought
to have admonished them to this thing by your exhortations before they asked
you, you can have no excuse for refusing them when they demand it of you, since
a Church of God ought not to remain long widowed of a bishop of its own.
EPISTLE XLIII.
TO MARINIANUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Marinianus, Bishop of Ravenna.
It has for some time reached us from the report of many that the monasteries
constituted in the district of Ravenna are everywhere aggrieved by the domination
of your clergy; so that--grievous to be said--under the pretext of government
they take possession of them as if they were their own. Condoling in no small
degree with these monasteries, we sent letters to your predecessor bidding
him correct this evil. But, seeing that he was soon overtaken by the close
of life, we remember having written in like manner to your Fraternity, lest
this burden on the monasteries should continue. And because, as we have discovered,
there has been loitering so far in the correction of this thing, we have thought
fit to address you a second time by this letter. We exhort you, then, that,
putting aside all delay and all excuses, you so study to relieve these monasteries
from this kind of grievance that clerics, or such as are in sacred orders,
may henceforth have no leave of access to them on any other ground except only
for the purpose of praying, or if perchance they should be invited for solemnizing
the sacred mysteries of mass. But, lest haply the monasteries should sustain
a burden through the promotion of any monk or abbot, you must take care that,
if any of the abbots or monks of any monastery should accede to any clerical
office or sacred order, he shall have, as we have said, no power there any
longer, lest under cover of this occasion the monasteries should be compelled
to sustain the burdens which we prohibit. Let not your Holiness, then, after
this second admonition, delay correcting all this with vigilant care, lest,
if we should after this perceive you to be negligent (as we do not believe
will be the case), we be compelled to provide otherwise for the quiet of the
monasteries. For be it known to you that we will no longer suffer the congregations
of the servants of God to be subjected to such requirements. Lest, however,
any excuse should be put forward with regard to the monks, let your Fraternity
without fail send hither such person as you may see to be serviceable, and
we will depute monks to go with him to you, to provide for whom you must place
them in monasteries, if indeed there are among you places such as may afford
them a maintenance.