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SAINT GREGORY THE GREAT
EPISTLES
BOOK X
EPISTLE X.
TO ROMANUS, GUARDIAN (Defensorem).
Gregory to Romanus, our guardian in Sicily.
It has been reported to us that our most reverend brother the bishop Basilius
is occupied in legasuits as though he were one of the last of the people, and
unprofitably attends the courts. Now, since this thing both renders the man
himself vile and does away with the reverence due to priests, let thy Experience,
immediately on receiving this order, so compel him by strict execution of it
to return to his duty that, through thy insistency, a delay five days be not
under any excuse allowed him; lest, if thou shouldest in any way permit him
to make such delay, thou with him shouldest come to be gravely culpable before
us. Given in the month of December, Indiction(3).
EPISTLE XV.
TO CLEMENTINA, PATRICIAN(1).
Gregory
to Clementina, &c.
It has reached us by the report of a certain Abbot that your Glory has been
told by certain evil-speakers that we have a pique against you. If this is
so, whosoever have made up this story have been double towards you under a
shew of sincerity, so as to shew themselves off as faithful, and wickedly cause
you to doubt us. But I, glorious daughter, knowing thy good qualities of old,
and especially the chastity which has been thy companion from youth, have ever
regarded thee with great respect and affection. But, lest even now your Glory
should suspect that my heart is changed, I declare that there is not in me
a scruple of ill-feeling or anger towards you; but be assured that I evince
paternal affection for you. One thing, however, that has been told me I ought.
not to pass over in silence, lest there should begin to be a diminution of
charity, if what needs to be said for amendment were suppressed.
For indeed it has been reported to me that, when any one has offended you,
you retain soreness unremittingly. Now, if this is true, since the more I love
you the more grieved I am, I beg that you would nobly rid yourself of this
fault, and not suffer the seed of the enemy to grow to the detriment of your
crop of well-doing. Let the words of the Lord's Prayer be brought back to your
memory, and let not blame prevail with you over pardon. Let the goodness of
your Glory get the better of transgressions, and by salubriously pardoning
make the offender devoted to you more than persistent asperity can make him
unde-voted. Let there be left to him what may make him ashamed, and not kept
up what may grieve him. For usually discreet remission has more effect for
correction than strictness in executing vengeance; so much so that sometimes
the one makes a man more faithful and subdued, while the other makes him obstinate
and spiteful. And indeed we do not say this to you in order that you should
abate your zeal for righteousness, but lest you should be in the least things
such as you ought to be in the greatest. For, if ever the quality of a transgression
requires severity, it should be so dealt with that both vengeance may correct
the fault and grace not be denied afterwards to those that have been corrected.
Seeing, then, that we warn you under the dictates of paternal affection for
your soul's good, receive our words with the charity wherewith they are spoken,
and take them to yourself for the advantage of your Glory, so that your good
qualities may become clearer before men and very pure before Almighty God.
But count on us, dearest daughter, confidently in all things, as indeed you
may; and, since we always desire to hear of your prosperity, refresh us often
by your letters.
EPISTLE XVIII.
TO CLEMENTINA, PATRICIAN(2).
Gregory
to Clementina, &c.
Know, glorious daughter, that the presbyter Amandus has been elected to the
episcopate by the people of Surrentum. And, we having written for him to be
sent hither, you ought not to be saddened for his absence, seeing that one
who is with you in heart should not even be believed to be departing from you.
And, since he who once pleased you is acceptable to those who want a bishop,
bless Almighty God for this, and with Christian devotion rejoice the more;
and gladly do your best to further his coming to us for the advantage of others
speedily, since it is the part of sincere charity to exalt when one who is
loved is called that he may grow.
EPISTLE XIX.
TO ANTHEMIUS, SUBDEACON.
Gregory to Anthemius, Subdeacon of Campania.
After he who had been elected to the episcopate of the city of Surrentum had
appeared to us to be unfit, they elected Amandus, presbyter of the oratory
of Saint Severinus, which is in the Lucullan camp. Wherefore we enjoin on thy
Experience, laying aside excuses, to take care to send the said presbyter to
us with all speed, to the end that, if there is nothing to hinder him from
coming, the desires of the petitioners may with the help of Christ be fulfilled.
As to his life and deeds, seeing that they can be better known where he has
long lived, let it be thy care, together with our brother and fellow-bishop,
Fortunatus(3), to make diligent enquiry. And if there is nothing in the way
of his promotion to the sacred order, he should be sent to us without any delay.
But, lest our glorious daughter Clementina should take this amiss, let thy
Experience go to her, and do this thing with her consent. If, however, she
should be disposed to resist, let thy Experience still send him hither without
delay, since we ought so to pacify the minds of our children as still not to
obstruct benefit to souls.
EPISTLE XXIII.
TO ADRIAN, NOTARY OF SICILY(4).
Gregory
to Adrian, &c.
A thing to us altogether detestable infamous has come to our ears, and we
wonder why, if it is true, thou hast not taken notice of it. For Martianus,
a monk of the monastery of Saint Vitus, situate on Mount AEtna, has come to
us, and presented a petition, complaining among other things that the monks
of this monastery live so perversely and wickedly as to dare to have women
living with them, which is a thing atrocious to be spoken of. And, seeing that
we have written on this matter to our brother and fellow-bishop Leo(5), in
order that, having enquired into the truth, he may, if he should find it to
be so, be at pains to correct it with the strictest severity, it is necessary
for thy Experience also to shew thyself in all respects solicitous for investigation
of the truth, and punishment of so great a wickedness; so that nothing may
be found to be done remissly or negligently. Further, for the interests in
other respects of the same monastery, lend thy assistance so far as equity
may require, to the end that if, as is said, there has been any invasion of
it, it may be redressed according to justice, and that for the future nothing
prejudicial may in any way arise there contrary to the fear of God and the
order of law.
EPISTLE XXIV.
TO FORTUNATUS, BISHOP OF NEAPOLIS (Naples).
Gregory
to Fortunatus, &c.
When your Fraternity pays too little attention to the monasteries that are
under you, you both lay yourself open to reproof, and make us sorry for your
laxity. Now it has come to our ears that one Mauricius, who lately became a
monk in the monastery of Barbacianus, has fled from the same monastery, taking
other monks with him. In this case the hastiness of the aforesaid Barbacianus
inculpates him exceedingly in our sight, in that he rashly tonsured a secular
person without even previous probation. Did we not write to you that you should
prove him first, and then, if he were fit, should make him abbot? Even now,
then, look well after him whom you chose. For you are delinquent in his delinquency,
if he has begun so to demean himself as to shew himself unfit to have the government
of brethren.
Further, let your Fraternity more strictly interdict all monasteries from
venturing by any means to tonsure those whom they may have received for monastic
profession before they have completed two years in monastic life. But in this
space of time let their life and manners be carefully proved, lest any one
of them should either not be content with what he had desired or not keep firm
to what he had chosen. For, it being a serious matter that untried men should
be associated under obedience to any master, how much more serious is it that
any who have not been proved should be attached to the service of God?
Further, if a soldier should wish to become a monk, let no one for any cause
whatever presume to receive him(6) without our consent, or before it has been
reported to us. If this rule is not diligently observed, know that all the
guilt of those that are under thee redounds on thyself, seeing that thou provest
thyself by the very facts of the case to be too little anxious about them.
EPISTLE XXXI.
TO LIBERTINUS, EX-PRAETOR.
Gregory
to Libertinus, &c.
What straits you are in with regard to the things of this world is not unknown
to us. But, since to those who are placed in the utmost tribulation the only
comfort is the mercy of the Creator, rest your hope on Him, and turn to Him
with your whole heart, Who both justly allows whom He will to be afflicted
and will mercifully deliver one who trusts in Him. To Him, then, give thanks,
and patiently endure what has been brought upon you. For it is the part of
a right mind not only to bless God in prosperity, but also in adversities to
join in praising Him. In these things therefore that you are suffering let
no murmur against God creep into your heart, since for what purpose our Creator
thus works is unknown. For perchance, magnificent son, thou didst offend Him
in something when in a state of prosperity, from which He would purge thee
by kindly bitterness. And so neither let temporal affliction break thee down
nor losses of thy goods distract thee, since if, returning thanks in adversity,
thou make God propitious to thee by thy patience, both the things that were
lost are multiplied, and in addition to this, eternal joys held out to thee.
I beg thee, however, not to take it amiss that we have written through Romanus
the guardian to order twenty suits of clothing to be supplied from us to your
servants, seeing that things, however small, which are offered from the goods
of the blessed Apostle Peter are always to be taken for a great blessing, since
he will have power both to bestow on you greater things, and to hold out to
you eternal benefits with Almighty God. The month of June, Indiction(3).
EPISTLE XXXV.
TO EULOGIUS, PATRIARCH OF ALEXANDRIA
Gregory
to Eulogius, &c.
In the past year I received the letters of your most sweet Holiness; but on
account of the extreme severity of my sickness have been unable to reply to
them until now. For lo, it is now almost full two years that I have been confined
to my bed, afflicted with such pains of gout that I have hardly been able to
rise on feast-days for as much as three hours space to solemnize mass. And
I am soon compelled by severe pain to lie down, that I may be able to bear
my torment with intervening groans. This pain of mine is sometimes moderate,
and sometimes excessive: but neither so moderate as to depart, nor so excessive
as to kill me. Hence it comes to pass that, being daily in death, I am daily
debarred from death. Nor it is surprising that, grievous sinner as I am, I
am long kept confined in the prison of such corruption. Whence I am compelled
to exclaim, Bring my soul out of prison, that I may confess thy name (Ps. cxli.
8). But, since I am not yet worthy to obtain this by my prayers, I beg that
the prayer of your Holiness may afford me the aid of its intercession, and
deliver me from the weight of sin and corruption into that liberty, which you
know well, of the glory of the children of God.
Your to me most sweet and ever to be honoured Blessedness has informed me
in your letter that our common son Anatolius, deacon of the city of Constantinople,
had written to you to say that certain monks from the parts about Jerusalem
had come to me to make some enquiry concerning the error of the Angoitae(7),
and you say that he begged your Holiness to write to me to express your opinion
with respect to this enquiry. But neither have monks come to me from the parts
about Jerusalem to make any enquiry, nor do I think that the said our common
son can have told you in Iris letters what was not the case; but I suspect
that the interpreter has mistaken the meaning of his letters. For the same
deacon, now more than two years ago, wrote to me that monks had come from the
aforesaid parts to the city of Constantinople making such enquiries, and he
desired to ask me what I thought. To him, long before I received your letters,
I made the very same reply against that same heresy as I found afterwards in
the epistle of your Holiness: and I returned great thanks to Almighty God that
concerning all questions the Fathers of the Romans and of the Greeks, whose
followers we are, have spoken with one spirit. For in many parts I found this
your epistle to be as though I had been reading the writings of the Latin Fathers
against the aforesaid heresy. And consider how much I must love and praise
the excellence of my most holy brother, in whose mouth I recognised the venerable
Fathers, whom I love so much. Praise therefore be to Him, to Him be glory in
the highest, of whose gift the voice of Mark still cries aloud in the See of
Peter(8); from the effusion of whose spirit, when the priest enters into the
Holy of Holies for searching into mysteries, spiritual bells resound in holy
Church, as in the tabernacle, from the words of preaching. Right, then, and
highly to be praised is your preaching. But we implore the Almighty Lord to
keep you long even in this life, that from the organ of God, which you are,
the voice of truth may in this world sound more widely. And for me, I pray
you, intercede, that the way of this pilgrimage, which has become too rough
for me may with speed be finished, to the end that I, who cannot by my own
merits, may by yours be able to attain to the promises of the eternal country,
and to rejoice with the citizens of heaven.
EPISTLE XXXVI.
TO MAXIMUS, BISHOP OF SALONA(9).
Gregory
to Maximus, &c.
When our common son the presbyter Veteranus came to the Roman city, he found
me so weak from the pains of gout as to be quite unable to answer thy Fraternity's
letters myself. And indeed with regard to the nation of the Sclaves (1), from
which you are in great danger, I am exceedingly afflicted and disturbed. I
am afflicted as suffering already in your suffering: I am disturbed, because
they have already begun to enter Italy by way of Istria. Further, of Julian
the scribo(2), what shall I say, seeing that I see everywhere how our sins
find us out, so as to cause us to be disturbed by the nations from without
and by judges from within? But be not at all saddened by such things, since
those who shall live after us will see worse times; so much so, that they will
regard us as having toad happy days in comparison with their own. But, so far
as thy Fraternity has power, thou oughtest to oppose thyself in behalf of the
poor, in behalf of the oppressed. And, even if thou shouldest be unable to
do any good, the very devotion of thy heart, which Almighty God has given,
is enough for Him. For it is written, Rescue them that are drawn unto death,
and forbear not to deliver them that are ready to be slain (Prov. xxiv. 11).
But if thou shouldest say, My powers are insufficient, He who sees into the
heart understands. In all that thou doest, then, desire to have Him Who sees
into the heart well-pleased with thee. But whatever there is whereby He may
be pleased omit not thou to do. For human terrors and favours are like smoke,
which is snatched by a light breeze and vanishes away. Know this most assuredly,
that no one can please God and bad men. Let, therefore, thy Fraternity esteem
thyself to have pleased Almighty God in such degree as thou knowest thyself
to have displeased froward men. Yet let thy defence of the poor itself be moderate
and grave, lest, if anything be done too rigidly, men should think you actuated
by the pride of youth. But our defence of the poor must needs be found of such
sort that both the humble may feel protection and oppressors may not easily
find what out of a malevolent disposition they may blame. Attend, then, to
what is said to Ezekiel, Son of man, unbelievers and destroyers are with thee,
and than dost dwell among scorpions (Ezek. ii. 6). And the blessed Job says,
I have been a brother of dragons, and a companion of owls (Job xxx. 29). And
Paul says to his disciples, In the midst of a crooked and perverse nation,
among whom ye shine as lights in the world (Philip. ii. 15). We ought, then,
to walk all the more cautiously as we know that we are living among the enemies
of God. Further, with regard to the Photinianists, let thy Fraternity pay the
utmost attention; and, as thou hast begun, study how to recall them to the
bosom of holy Church. But, if any should wish to come to me, and to receive
an explanation, let them first make oath that they will not permit their followers
to persist in their error even after an explanation has been received. And
then let thy Holiness promise them that they will suffer no wrong from me,
but that I will give them an explanation. If they should acknowledge the truth,
let them accept it; if they should not acknowledge it, I will dismiss them
unharmed. But, if any of them should wish to come to us against you, let thy
Fraternity by no means detain them; for, when they come, they shall either
accept an explanation, or assuredly they will not see that land any more.
EPISTLE XXXVII.
TO INNOCENT, PRAEFECT OF AFRICA.
Gregory
to Innocent, &c.
The lucid eloquence of your Eminence, seasoned with the honey of the heart,
has so infused its savour into our inmost soul, and ravished us with love of
it, that both what you write sounds sweet, and what you do has a pleasant savour;
nor this without good cause, since one who is accomplished in good studies
is great in the eye of judgment, and not of partiality. Further, as we understand
that you have taken upon you the belts(3) of the prefecture, sadness is mingled
with our joy. For on the one hand we are rejoiced for the promotion of our
most sweet son, but are saddened on the other, because we feel in fact from
our own sorrow how heavy a burden it is in times of confusion to be advanced
to high positions. Wherefore all pains ought to be taken that troublesome circumstances
may become an occasion of reward. For, as you know, corn springs from land
that is full of thistles, and the rose is produced from thorns. While, then,
you have a time given you meet for sowing, delay not to sow the seed of good
works, that in the day of harvest you may carry home the greater armfuls of
joy, and from good service in a transitory dignity may come to eternal glory.
Knowing, then, of the pains you have taken in the preparation of swift-sailing
vessels(4), we relieve your anxiety by wished for news, informing you that,
by the mercy of God, we have come to terms about peace with the king of the
Lombards until the month of March in the coming fourth Indiction. Whether it
will hold or not we know not, since the said king is reported to have died
since, though the fact so far is held to be uncertain(5).
We have done what you wrote to ask us to do about Anamundarus, and would that
the result might answer to our wish; for, as far as we are concerned, we do
not deny the succour of our intercession to the afflicted.
As to your wishing the book on the exposition of holy Job to be sent to you,
we altogether rejoice at your earnest desire; since we see that your Eminence
earnestly desires what may both prevent you from going entirely outside yourself,
and bring your heart back to itself after being distracted by secular cares.
But, if you desire to be satiated with delicious food, read the works of the
blessed Augustine, your countryman, and seek not our chaff in comparison with
his fine wheat.
Furthermore, we have learnt from the testimony of Hilarius our Chartularius
what patronage and what kindness your Glory has bestowed in the interests of
the poor of the blessed Peter, Prince of the apostles, who loves you. On this
account, returning you abundant thanks, we implore the mercy of Almighty God,
that He would defend you with the protection of His grace, and permit neither
bad men to prevail against you without, nor malignant spirits within; but that
He would of His mercy so order your doings in His fear that, as He has made
you glorious among men, He may also make you so after the course of a long
life in the number of His saints.
EPISTLE XXXIX.
TO EULOGIUS, PATRIARCH OF ALEXANDRIA.
Gregory
to Eulogius, &c.
As cold water to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far country (Prov.
xxv. 25). But what can be good news to me, so far as concerns the behoof of
holy Church, but to hear of the health and safety of your to me most sweet
Holiness, who, from your perception of the light of truth, both illuminate
the same Church with the word of preaching, and mould it to a better way by
the example of your manners? As often, too, as I recall in my heart your oneness
of mind with me, and feel that I remain fixed in your heart, I give thanks
to Almighty God that charity cannot be divided by distance of place. For, though
in body we are far disjoined, yet in soul we are indivisible.
Our common son Anatolius the deacon(6) has notified to me in his letters that
in the royal city nothing ecclesiastical has at any time been disturbed from
earthly causes. But I believe that he had before announced to me how your Blessedness
had spoken in the cause of the Church And I rejoice to think that, I where
you chanced to be present, I do not consider that there was any want of me.
For I know that you, as a minister of the truth, a follower of Peter, and a
preacher of Holy Church, would speak what ought to have been heard through
the mouth of a teacher from the Apostle Peter's See(7).
Moreover, before these days, when Abramius of Alexandria came to me. I had
written in reply to your Holiness both what I thought of your writings which
you issued against the Agnoite heretics(8), and why I had been so late in replying.
But the said Abramius, compelled by difficulties of navigation, is reported
to have delayed long in the city of Naples; and so I write again in the same
sense in which I had formerly written, since in your teaching against the heretics
that are called Agnoitae there was much for us to admire; but to displease
us there was nothing. And in the same sense I had already written at length
to our son Anatolius the deacon. Moreover, your doctrine so agreed in all respects
with the Latin Fathers that I find, not to my surprise, that in diverse languages
the Spirit has not been diverse.
For, as
to what you have said about the fig-tree, Augustine speaks aptly in the same
sense; for, when
the evangelist
subjoined, For the time of figs was
not yet (Mark xi. 13), it is plainly shown that the figs which the Lord had
sough: were fruit in the synagogue, which had the leaves of the Law, but not
the fruit of works. For the Creator of all things could not be ignorant that
the fig-tree had no fruit; which was a thing that all might know, since it
was not the time of figs. But concerning what is written, That the day and
hour neither the Son nor the angels know (Mark xiii. 32), your Holiness has
quite tightly perceived that this is most certainly to be referred, not to
the said Son with respect to His being the Head, but with respect to His body,
which we are With regard to which matter, the same blessed Augustine in many
places adopts this sense (Quoest. lib. lxxxiii. q. 6o; lib.(1) de Trinit.,
c. 12; in psalm vi., init.; in ps. xxxiv. serm.(2)). He mentions also another
thing that may be understood of the same Son, namely that Almighty God sometimes
speaks in a human manner, even as He says to Abraham, Now I know that thou
fearest God (Genes. xxii. 12) It was not that God then came to know that He
was feared, but that He then made Abraham know that he feared God. For, as
we speak of a glad day, not meaning that the day itself is glad, but that it
makes us glad, so also the Almighty Son says that He does not know the day
which He causes not to be known; not that He Himself does not know it, but
that He does not allow it to be known. Whence also the Father alone is said
to know it, because the Son Who is consubstantial with Him has His knowledge
of what the angels are ignorant of from His divine nature, whereby He is above
the angels. Whence also it may be more nicely understood thus; that the Only-begotten,
being incarnate and made for us a perfect man, knew indeed in the nature of
His humanity the day and hour of the judgment, but still it was not from the
nature of His humanity that He knew it. What then He knew in it He knew not
from it, because God, made man, knew the day and hour of the judgment through
the power of His Deity: as also at the marriage, when the Virgin Mother said
that wine was wanting, He replied, Woman, what have to do with thee? Mine hour
is not yet come (Joh. ii. 4). For it was not that the Lord of the angels was
subject to the hour, having, among all things which He had created, made hours
and times; but, because the Virgin Mother, when wine was wanting, wished a
miracle to be done by Him, it was at once answered her, Woman, what have I
to do with thee? As if to say plainly, That I can do a miracle comes to me
of my Father, not of my Mother. For He who of the nature of His Father did
miracles had it of His mother that He could die. Whence also, when He was on
the cross, in dying He acknowledged His mother, whom He commended to the disciple,
saying, Behold thy mother (Joh. xix. 27). He says, then, l, Woman, what have
I to do with thee? Mine hour is not yet came.--That is, "In the miracle,
which I have not of thy nature, I do not acknowledge thee. When the hour of
death shall come, I shall acknowledge thee as my mother, since I have it of
thee that I can die." And thus the knowledge, which He had not of the
nature of humanity whereby He was with the angels a creature, this He denied
that He had with the angels, who are creatures. The day, then, and the hour
of the judgment He knows as God and man, but for this reason, that God is man.
It is moreover a thing quite manifest, that whoso is not a Nestorian cannot
in any wise be an Agnoite. For with what meaning can one that confesses that
the very Wisdom of God was incarnate say that there is anything that the Wisdom
of God is ignorant of? It is written, In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God. All things were made by him (Joh.
i. 1). If all things, then without doubt the day and hour of the judgment.
Who then can be so senseless as to presume to say that the Word of the Father
made what He is ignorant of? It is written also, Jesus knowing that the Father
had given all things into his hands (Job xxii. 3). If all things, certainly
both the day and the hour of the judgment. Who, then, is so foolish as to say
that the Son received into His hands what He knows not?
But, with respect to the passage in which He says to the women about Lazarus,
Where have ye laid him (Job. xi. 34), I felt exactly as you felt. that, if
they say that the Lord did not know where Lazarus had been buried, and for
that reason enquired, they will undoubtedly be compelled to acknowledge that
the Lord did not know in what places Adam and Eve had hidden themselves after
their sin, when He said in Paradise, Adam, where art thou (Gen. iii. 9)? or
when lie chides Cain saying, Where is Abel thy brother (Gen. iv. 9)? But, if
He did not know, why did lie forthwith add, Thy brother's blood crieth unto
me from the ground? However, on this passage Severianus Gabalensis speaks differently,
saying that the Lord spoke thus to the women as it were in the way of rebuke,
in that He enquired where they had laid the dead Lazarus; as if with plain
reference to the sin of Eve He had said, I placed the man in Paradise, whom
you have placed in the sepulchre.
But to these things our said common son Anatolius the deacon has replied by
putting another question:--What if it should be objected to me that, even as
He who is immortal vouchsafed to die that He might deliver us from death, and
He who is eternal before all time willed to become subject to time, so the
Wisdom of God vouchsafed to take upon Himself our ignorance that He might deliver
us from ignorance? But I have not yet given him any reply to this, having been
confined until now by grievous sickness. Now, however, through your players
I have already begun to recover; and, if I should so recover as to be able
to dictate, with the help of the Lord I will reply to him. To you it is not
for me to say anything on this subject, lest I should seem to teach you what
you know, seeing that even medicines lose their power of healing, if applied
to sound and strong members.
Furthermore, we apprize you that in this place we suffer from serious difficulty
for want of good interpreters. For there are none who can express the sense,
while all ever try to translate the words exactly: and so they confuse the
whole sense of what has been said. Whence it comes to pass that we are by no
means able without severe labour to understand what has been translated.
I have received the blessing of Saint Mark the Evangelist and of your Blessedness.
And I have been desirous of sending you some timber; but the ship which came
was too small to carry it. And yet even that which the Alexandrians saw when
they came is of small size. For I had prepared some that is much larger for
you, which has not yet been conveyed to the Roman city: for I waited for it
to be conveyed when the Alexandrian ship should arrive; and it has remained
in the place where it was felled.
May Almighty God long guard your life for the edification of Holy Church,
and inspire you to pray earnestly for me; that, being pressed down by my own
sins, I may be lifted up before Almighty God by your prayers.
EPISTLE XLII.
TO EUSEBIUS. ARCHBISHOP OF THESSALONICA.
Gregory
to Eusebius, &c.
If, most dear brother, we consider attentively how great is the excellence
of peace, we shall recognize with what earnestness it should be cultivated
by us. For indeed our Lord and Redeemer vouchsafed to leave and give it as
a great boon to His disciples, that He might thereby make those who were united
to Him in firmness of faith His associates in loving participation with Himself.
For it is written, Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the
children of God (Matth. v. 9). Whosoever, then, desires to be the father's
heir, let him, by keeping peace, not refuse to be his child. For he who gives
place to discord surely makes himself to be without lot in so great a gift.
Seeing then that by the mercy of God the purity of thy faith has been declared
to us, as was meet, with catholic rectitude, we are taken up with great surprise
that thou shouldest suffer those whom thou knowest to believe well and to think
aright to be needlessly scandalised by the fault of certain persons, so that
the reputation of thy Fraternity is clouded by the guilt of others. For how
can one avoid suspicion of error who extends sufferance to them that are in
error? Or what estimate of himself can he expect, if he provides not for purging
by open satisfaction what fervour of faith requires to be purged?
For indeed it is said that Luke thy presbyter and Peter refuse to receive
the Chalcedonian synod, and that on this account the hearts of thy orthodox
children are perturbed with no slight offence[9]. And, since their zeal is
not only to be praised but also to be altogether cherished, we exhort that
the care of thy Fraternity hesitate not to investigate the matter with all
activity and solicitude. And, if those persons should be found innocent of
that pravity, remove offence from the minds of thy children by giving them
satisfaction, and among all heresies anathematise especially Severus and Nestorius,
so that purification may engender charity among those with whom a sinister
suspicion concerning those heretics has, out of love of the faith, produced
dissension; and that one feeling of concord may salubriously knit together
those whom a pure and single confession of catholic truth unites. Nor let the
doubters be thought unworthy of satisfaction, since we are instructed by the
Divine voice, Despise not one of these who are the least (Matth. xxviii. 18).
Whoso, then, desires not that he who instructs us should be despised, let him
not reject the words of the instructor; since he also of whom our Redeemer
testified that he was a vessel of election unto Himself admonishes us to keep
the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace (Ephes. iv.). Hence whosoever
refuses not to be held by this bond of salvation, let him study the things
that make for peace, and afford no place for the foe; so that, having been
enabled to advance by the fierce dissension of brethren, he may be more stoutly
trampled on, when unity is established.
If however, as we do not expect, they should be found to be wounded by the
dart of this error, the cure of ecclesiastical exhortation must be applied
to them, so that they may either remain among the Lord's sheep if healed, or
be cut off from the unity of the ecclesiastical body; to the end that from
a slight loss there may be a great gain, and that the removal of a part may
make the whole body free. For it is the care also of a provident shepherd not
to delay casting out from consort with his sound sheep a sickly one that admits
not of cure, lest it should contaminate others with the taint of its sickness,
knowing that he cannot preserve the soundness of the rest but by the ejection
of this one. Accordingly 1 once more warn you in brotherly charity to investigate
this matter with the utmost vigilance, and to observe what we have written
with the utmost care, lest by consort with others you should make the right
faith which you hold doubtful. For he who does not correct things that should
be cut off commits them. Wherefore you must take thought with great solicitude
and with great provision in all ways, that the persons of those men be not
an offence to others, or common opinion injurious to you; that so a shepherd's
gains may accrue to your Fraternity from the sheep committed to you all the
more as both sincere love and approved care shall have made you solicitous
for their custody.
EPISTLE LXII.
TO THE NEAPOLITANS.
Gregory to the clergy and noble citizens of Naples.
It is not a new thing, nor is it reprehensible, that in the election of a
bishop the votes of the people should be divided between two parties: but it
is a serious matter when in cases of this kind the election goes not by judgment,
but by favour only. For before your letter reached us we had learnt from the
report of certain persons that the deacon John, who has been elected by the
other party, has a little daughter. Hence, if they had had a mind to attend
to reason, neither would others have elected him nor would he have consented.
For what presumption must his be who dares to approach the episcopate while
convicted by the evidence of the little girl, of not having had long control
over his own body! Moreover, Peter the deacon, who you say has been elected
by you, is, according to what is said, quite without astuteness. And you know
that at the present time the person to be constituted in the highest place
of government, should be one who knows how to be careful, not only for the
salvation of souls, but also with regard to the external advantage and safeguard
of his subjects. But know ye further that it has come to our ears concerning
him, that he has given money on usury; which thing you ought to enquire into
thoroughly, and, if it is so, elect another, and without delay hold yourselves
aloof from a person of this kind. For we will on no account lay hands on lovers
of usury. If, however, after accurate enquiry made, this should prove to be
false (since his person is unknown to us, and we know not whether what has
been reported to us of his simplicity be true), he must needs come to us with
your decree in his favour, that, having made careful enquiry into his life
and manners, we may at the same time become acquainted with his intelligence;
and thus, in case of his satisfying this enquiry, we may in him, with the Lord's
help, fulfil your desires. Further, let it be your care to look out also for
another person who may be suitable, so that, if this one should by any chance
appear unfit for appointment to this order, there may be some one else to whom
you may transfer your choice. For it will be a serious disgrace to your clergy,
in case of this man by any chance not being approved, if they should say that
they have no one else fit to be elected.
EPISTLE LXIII.
TO DOMINICUS, BISHOP OF CARTHAGE.
Gregory
to Dominicus, &c.
We have already learnt what great pestilence has invaded the African parts;
and, inasmuch as neither is Italy free from such affliction, doubled are the
groans of our sorrows. But amid these evils and other innumerable calamities
our heart, dearest brother, would fail from desperate distress, had not the
Lord's voice fortified our weakness beforehand. For long ago to the faithful
the trumpet of the Gospel lesson sounded, warning them that at the approach
of the end of the world wars and many other things, which, as you know, are
now feared, would come to pass (Matth. xxiv.; Luke xxi.). We ought not, then,
to be too much afflicted in suffering things that we knew of beforehand, as
though they had been unknown. Frequently also, in our consideration of another's
death, the kind of death may be an alleviation. For what manglings, what cruelties
have we seen, where death was the only remedy, and life was a torment! Did
not David, when a choice of deaths was offered him, refuse famine or the sword,
and choose that his people should fall under the hand of God? Gather ye from
this how great favour is granted to such as perish under Divine smiting, since
they die by the call that was offered to the holy prophet for a boon. Wherefore
let us return thanks to our Creator in all adversities, and, trusting in His
mercy, bear all things patiently, since we suffer much less than we deserve.
Since, however, we are so scourged temporally that we may not be left without
the consolation of life eternal, it is needful (since we are not ignorant,
through the announcements of these signs, that the Judge Who is to come is
at hand) that we should so much the more, by zeal for good works and the wailing
of penitence, make secure our accounts which we shall have to submit to His
scrutiny; so that such great smitings may be to us, by the favour of His grace,
not the beginning of damnation, but a purgation for our good.
Since, however, the nature of our infirmity is such that we cannot but grieve
for those who pass away, let the teaching of your Fraternity be a consolation
to the afflicted. Instil into them that the good things which are promised
will remain with them; so that, strengthened by a most sure hope, they may
learn not to grieve for the loss of temporal things in comparison with the
gift to come. Let your tongue, as indeed we believe it does, restrain them
more and more from the perpetration of evil deeds; let it announce the rewards
of the good, the punishments of the bad, so that those who have little love
for good things may at least be greatly afraid of bad things, and keep themselves
from the things which must be punished. For to commit things worthy of scourges
when placed in the midst of scourges is to be peculiarly proud against the
smiter, and provokes the incensed one to fiercer anger. And it is a prime kind
of madness for any one to be unwilling to desist justly from his own evil,
and to wish God to cease unjustly from His vengeance. But, since in all this
there is need of Divine help, let us, beloved brother, with united prayers
implore the clemency of Almighty God, that He would both grant unto us thus
to acquit ourselves worthily, and mercifully stir the hearts of the people
to perform such things; to the end that, while we order our actions wholesomely
in His fear, we may be counted worthy both to be delivered from impending evils,
and, by the leading of His grace, without which we can do nothing, to come
to supernal joys.
The month of August, Indiction 3.
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