REGISTER OF THE EPISTLES OF SAINT GREGORY THE GREAT, BOOK V
BOOK V
EPISTLE II.
TO FELIX, BISHOP, AND CYRIACUS, ABBOT(1)
Gregory to Felix, &c.
The tenor of the report submitted to you sufficiently explains the
complaint of the religious lady Theodosia, in which we have found on reading it many
heads of accusation, not befitting priestly gentleness, against our brother and
fellow-bishop Januarius; so much so that, after the foundation by her of a
monastery for servants of God, all that pertains to avarice, turbulence, and wrong
is said to have been exhibited at the time of the very dedication of the
oratory. Wherefore, if the case is as we find in her aforesaid representation, and if
you are aware that anything at all unbecoming has been committed besides, we
exhort you that, all wrongs having first been redressed, you press upon Musicus,
the abbot of the monastery of Agilitanus(2), that he lose no time in giving
the greatest attention to his monks whom he had began to settle there, to the end
that, this venerable place being with the Lord's help set in order by you in a
decent and regular manner, neither may we be disturbed by the frequent
complaints of the aforesaid religious lady that her good desires are not fulfilled,
nor may it be to the detriment of your soul that so pious a design should
languish, as we do not believe it will, through any neglect of yours.
EPISTLE IV.
TO CONSTANTIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Constantius, Bishop of Mediolanum (Milan).
If licence to be restored to their rank be granted to the lapsed, the
force of ecclesiastical discipline is undoubtedly broken, while in the hope of
restoration each person fears not to give way to his evil inclinations. Your
Fraternity, for instance, has consulted us as to whether Amandinus, ex-presbyter and
ex-abbot, who was deposed by your predecessor for fault requiring it, should be
called back to his rank; which thing is not allowable; and we decree that it
cannot on any account be done. Yet, if it should be the case that his manner of
life deserves it, seeing that he has been deprived altogether of his sacred
office, assign him a place in a monastery, as you may see fit, before other monks.
Above all things, then, take care that no one's supplication persuade you in
any way to restore the lapsed to their sacred orders, lest such punishment
should be supposed not to be definitely ordained for them, but only a temporary
expedient.
As to Vitalianus the ex-presbyter, about whom you write that he should be
strictly guarded, we will cause him to be sent into Sicily, that, being
deprived of all hope of departure thence, he may then at least constrain himself to
penitential bewailing. Jobinus also, of Portus Veneris, once deacon and abbot, we
have decreed to be deprived of his office, and written that another should be
ordained in his place In like manner also we decree that the three subdeacons,
whom your Fraternity has notified to us as having lapsed, shall ever cease from
and stand deprived of their office, and that nothing beyond lay communion be
allowed them. Further, we have adjudged the ex-presbyter Saturninus to give
security that he will not ever presume to approach the ministry of his sacred
order. And we desire him to remain, with deprivation of his sacred order, in the
same island in which he was, permitting him to have and exercise care and
solicitude with respect to monasteries; for we believe that, his lapse having made him
more wary, he will now the more carefully keep guard over those who are
committed to him.
Further, concerning John, notary of your church, the charity wherewith we
love you and have long loved you warns us to write, lest you should order
anything with regard to him while you are still provoked by his fault. Guarding,
then, against this, enquire fully by all means in your power into the possessions
of your church; by which melons neither may you offend God, nor may lie be able
to find a ground for accusing you before men. For we write, not as defending
John or commending him personally without reason, but lest your soul should be
in any way burdened with sin under the incitement of anger. Whence it is
needful, as we have, before said, that you should by no means neglect to enquire, in
the fear of God, with a full investigation into the possessions of your church.
Furthermore, the epistle of your most dear Fraternity has caused us to
wonder much with respect to the person of Fortunatus(3). But either that letter
was not dictated by you, or certainly, if it is yours, we by no means recognize
in it our brother the lord Constantius. For you ought to have paid, and still
ought to pay, attention to the fact that it is in behalf of your reputation that
we write. For, when he asserts that he suffers wrong among you, and has been
unable to procure the guardian's (defensoris) aid, what else does he intimate but
ill-will on your part? Wherefore, that neither this affair may dim your
reputation in some quarters nor damage possibly ensue in any way with good cause to
your church, you ought to send hither a person instructed by you, that the
nature of the case may be examined, and the matter terminated, without ill-will on
your part. And for this reason especially, that if, after his complaint,
sentence should be pronounced among yourselves in your favour, he will be believed to
have been defeated, not reasonably, but by power alone. But we, out of the
charity wherewith we are bored to you, desist not from admonishing you to do what
will be for your good repute, knowing that, though this exhortation saddens you
for the time, it will afterwards cause you joy, when the animosity of
contention has passed away. In the month of September, Indiction 13. (In Vatic. The
month of December, Indict. 13.)
EPISTLE V.
TO DOMINICUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Dominicus, Bishop of Carthage.
Prosper your delegate (responsalis), the bearer of these presents, has
been with us, and after other expressions of your charity handed us your second
letters with an allegation of the imperial commands, and a paper giving an
account of the synod that has been held among you(4). Having read all, we rejoiced
for your pastoral zeal, and that our most pious lords had given no ear to the
calumnies of venal persons brought against you on the plea of religion; but
especially that your Fraternity has so taken pains to preserve the African province
as in no wise to neglect to restrain with priestly fervour the devious sects of
heretics; concerning the quieting of whom we remember having laid down the law
so fully, even before consulting the letters of your Charity, that we do not
believe that anything needs to be said again in reply to you about them.
Although, however, this is so, and though we desire all heretics to be repressed always
with vigour and reason by catholic priests, yet, on looking thoroughly into
what has been done among you, we are in fact apprehensive lest offence should
thereby be caused (which thing may the Lord avert) to the primates of other
councils. For at the conclusion of your acts you have promulged a sentence, in which,
while ordering the searching out of those heretics, you have brought in that
those who neglect the duty are to be punished by forfeiture of their possessions
and dignities. It is therefore best, most dear brother, that, in dealing with
matters outside ourselves that require correction, charity among ourselves
should first be preserved, and that we should be subject in mind (as I judge to be
peculiarly proper to your Gravity) even to persons below us in dignity. For you
will then more advantageously meet the errors of heretics with your whole
united powers when, as befits your priesthood, you study to keep ecclesiastical
concord among yourselves.
EPISTLE VIII.
TO CYPRIAN, DEACON.
Gregory to Cyprian, deacon and rector of the patrimony of Sicily.
Concerning the Manicheans who are on our possessions I have frequently
admonished thy Love to press them with the utmost diligence, and recall them to
the Catholic faith. If, then, the time requires it, make enquiries in person, or,
if other business does not allow this, through others. Further, it has come to
my ears that there are Hebrews on our possessions who will not by any means be
converted to God. But it seems to me that thou shouldest send letters through
all our possessions on which these Hebrews are known to be, promising them
particularly from me that whosoever of them shall have been converted to our true
Lord God Jesus Christ shall have the burdens of his holding lightened. And this
I wish to have done in such sort that, if one has a payment to make of one
solidus, a third should be remitted him; if of three or four, that one solidus
should be remitted; if of any more, the remission should still be made in the same
proportion, or at any rate according as thy Love sees fit, so that one who is
converted may have some relief of Iris burden, and the Church may not be put to
heavy expense. Nor shall we do this unprofitably, if by lightening the burdens
of their payments we bring them to the grace of Christ, since, though they
themselves came with little faith, yet those who may be born of them will now be
baptized with more faith: thus we gain either them or their children. And
whatever amount of payment we let them off for the sake of Christ is nothing serious.
Furthermore, some time ago, when John the deacon came, thy Love wrote something
to me, the whole of which I read at the time, but let many days intervene
before replying; and then, after such delay, replied to all particulars as I
recollected them. But now I think that one point escaped my memory, and suspect that
I gave no reply about it. For thou hadst written that loans were being advanced
to peasants (rusticis) through certain undertakers for their debt(5), lest in
borrowing from others they should be burdened either by exactions or by the
prices of things(6). This particular was to me most acceptable; and, if indeed I
have already written about it, observe what I wrote. But if, as I suspect, I
gave in my reply no definite direction on the subject, thou must not hesitate to
advance money for the advantage of the peasants, since the ecclesiastical
property will not thus be wasted, and out of it the peasants will derive advantage.
And, if there are other things which thou considerest to be advantageous, thou
must carry them out without any hesitation.
EPISTLE XI.
TO JOHN, BISHOP.
Gregory to John, Bishop of Ravenna.
I find that your Fraternity is greatly distressed on account of being
forbidden by the censure of reason to wear the pallium in litanies. But through the
most excellent Patrician, and through the most eminent Prefect, and through
other noble men of your city, you have urgently requested to have this allowed
you. Now we, having made careful enquiry of Adeodatus, some time thy Fraternity's
deacon, have ascertained that it was never the custom of thy predecessors to
use the pallium during litanies, except at the solemnities of the blessed John
the Baptist, the blessed Apostle Peter, and the blessed martyr Apollinaris. But
we were by no means bound to believe him, since many of our delegates have
often been at your Fraternity's city, who declare that they never saw anything of
the kind. And in this matter credence is rather to be given to many than to one,
who is attesting something in behalf of his own Church. But, since we do not
wish your Fraternity to be distressed, or the petition of our sons to be of no
avail with us, we concede the use of the pallium, until we shall gain some more
accurate knowledge, on the days of the Nativity of the Blessed John the
Baptist, of the blessed Apostle Peter, anti the blessed martyr Apollinaris, and on the
day of the celebration of your ordination. But in the sacristy, according to
former custom, after the sons of the Church have been received and dismissed,
your Fraternity may put on the pallium, and so proceed to the solemnization of
mass, arrogating to yourself nothing more in the daring of rash presumption;
lest, while something is snatched at out of order in exterior habiliment, what
might have been done in due order be neglected. Given in the month of October;
Indiction 13.
EPISTLE XV.
TO JOHN, BISHOP.
Gregory to John, Bishop of Ravenna.
In the first place this makes me sad; that thy Fraternity writes to me
with a double heart, exhibiting one sort of blandishment in letters, but another
sort with the tongue in secular intercourse. In the next place, it grieves me
that my brother John even to this day retains on his tongue those gibes which
notaries while still boys are wont to indulge in. He speaks bitingly, and seems to
delight in such pleasantry. He flatters his friends in their presence, and
maligns them in their absence. Thirdly, it is to me grievous and altogether
execrable, that he imputes shameful crimes to his servants(7), whatever the hour may
be, calling them "effeminate;" and, what is still more grievous, this is done
openly. Then there is this in addition that there is no discipline for keeping
guard over the life of the clergy, but that he exhibits himself only as their
lord. The last thing, but first in importance as evidence of elation, is about
his use of the pallium outside the church, which is a thing he never presumed to
do in the times of my predecessors, and what none of his predecessors ever
presumed to do, as our delegates testify (except it might be when relics were
deposited, though with regard to relics one person only could be found to say that
it was so); yet this in my days, in contempt of me, with extreme audacity, he
not only did, but even made a habit of doing.
From all these things I find that the dignity of the Episcopacy is with
him all in outside show, not in his mind. And indeed I return thanks to Almighty
God that at the time when this came to my knowledge, which had never; reached
the ears of my predecessors, the Lombards were posted between me and the city of
Ravenna. For perchance I had it in my mind to shew to men hour severe I can
be(8).
Lest, however, thou shouldest suppose that I wish thy church to be
depressed or lessened in dignity, remember where the deacon of Ravenna used to stand
in solemnization of mass at Rome, and enquire where he stands now; and thou wilt
recognize the fact that I desire to honour the church of Ravenna. But that any
one whatever should snatch at anything out of pride, this I cannot tolerate.
Nevertheless I have already written on this matter to our deacon at
Constantinople, that he should enquire of all who have under them even thirty or
forty bishops. And if there is anywhere this custom of their walking in litanies
wearing the pallium, God forbid that through me the dignity of the church of
Ravenna should seem to be in any way lessened.
Reflect, therefore, dearest brother, on all that I have said above: think
of the day of thy call: consider what account thou wilt render of the burden of
epi copacy. Amend those manners of a notary. See what becomes a bishop in
tongue and in deed. Be entirely sincere to thy brethren. Do not speak one thing,
and have another in thy heart. Do not desire to seem more than thou art, that so
thou mayest be able to be more than thou seemest. Believe me, when I came to my
present position, I had such consideration and charity towards thee that, if
thou hadst wished to keep hold of this my charity, thou still wouldest not have
ever found such a brother as myself, or one so sincerely loving thee, or so
concurring with thee in all devotion: but when I came to know of thy words and thy
manners, I confess I started back. I beseech thee, then, by Almighty God,
amend all that I have spoken of, and especially the vice of duplicity. Allow me to
love thee; and for the present and the future life it may be of advantage to
thee to be loved of thy brethren. Reply, however, to all this, not by words, but
by behaviour.
EPISTLE XVII.
TO CYPRIAN, DEACON(1).
Gregory to Cyprian, &c.
I received your letters of most bitter import about the death of the lord
Maximianus(2) in the month of NOvember. And he indeed has reached the rewards
he longed for, but the unhappy people of the city of Syracuse is to be
commiserated as not having been counted worthy to have such a pastor long. Accordingly
let thy Love take anxious heed that such a one may be chosen for ordination in
the same church as may not seem to obtain undeservedly the same place of rule
after the lord Maximianus. And indeed I believe that the majority would choose
the presbyter Trajan, who, as is said, is of a good disposition, but, as I
suspect, not fit for ruling in that place. Yet, if a better cannot be found, and if
there are no charges against him, he may be condescended to under stress of very
great necessity. But, if my wishes are asked with regard to this election, I
inform thee privately of what I do wish: for no one in this same church appears
to me so worthy after the lord Maximianus as John the archdeacon of the church
of Guiana. And, if his election can be brought about, I believe that he will be
found an exceedingly fit person. But he too must first be enquired about by
thee privately as to any charges against him that may stand in the way. If he
should be found free from any, he may be rightly chosen. Should this be done, our
brother and fellow-bishop Leo(3) will also have to give him leave to go, that
he may be found free to be ordained. These things, then, I have taken care to
intimate to thy Love; and it will now be thy concern to look round thee on all
sides carefully, and arrange what is pleasing to God.
EPISTLE XVIII.
TO JOHN, BISHOP.
Gregory to John, Bishop of Constantinople(4).
At the time when your Fraternity was advanced to Sacerdotal dignity, you
remember what peace and concord of the churches you found. But, with what daring
or with what swelling of pride I know not, you have attempted to seize upon a
new name, whereby the hearts of all your brethren might have come to take
offence. I wonder exceedingly at this, since I remember how thou wouldest fain have
fled from the episcopal office rather than attain it. And yet, now that thou
hast got it, thou desirest so to exercise it as if thou hadst run to it with
ambitious intent. For, having confessed thyself unworthy to be called a bishop,
thou hast at length been brought to such a pass as, despising thy brethren, to
covet to be named the only bishop. And indeed with regard to this matter, weighty
letters were addressed to your Holiness by my predecessor Pelagius of holy
memory; in which he annulled the acts of the synod, which had been assembled among
you in the case of our once brother and fellow-bishop Gregory, because of that
execrable title of pride, and forbade the archdeacon whom he had sent according
to custom to the threshold of our lord, to celebrate the solemnities of mass
with you. But after his death, when I, unworthy, succeeded to the government of
the Church, both through my other representatives and also through our common
son the deacon Sabinianus, I have taken care to address your Fraternity, not
indeed in writing, but by word of mouth, desiring you to restrain yourself from
such presumption. And, in case of your refusing to amend, I forbade his
celebrating the solemnities of mass with you; that so I might first appeal to your
Holiness through a certain sense of shame, to the end that, if the execrable and
profane assumption could not be corrected through shame, strict canonical measures
might be then resorted to. And, since sores that are to be cut away should
first be stroked with a gentle hand, I beg you, I beseech you, and with all the
sweetness in my power demand of you, that your Fraternity gainsay all who flatter
you and offer you this name of error, nor foolishly consent to be called by
the proud title. For truly I say it weeping, and out of inmost sorrow of heart
attribute it to my sins, that this my brother, who has been constituted in the
grade of episcopacy for the very end of bringing hack the souls of others to
humility, has up to the present time been incapable of being brought back to
humility; that he who teaches truth to others has not consented to teach himself,
even when I implore him.
Consider, I pray thee, that in this rash presumption the peace of the
whole Church is disturbed, and that it is in contradiction to the grace that is
poured out on all in common; in which grace doubtless thou thyself wilt have power
to grow so far as thou determinest with thyself to do so. And thou wilt become
by so much the greater as thou restrainest thyself from the usurpation of a
proud and foolish title: and thou wilt make advance in proportion as thou art not
bent on arrogation by derogation of thy brethren. Wherefore, dearest brother,
with all thy heart love humility, through which the concord of all the brethren
and the unity of the holy universal Church may be preserved. Certainly the
apostle Paul, when he heard some say, I am of Paul, I of Apollos, but I of Christ
(1 Cor. i. 13), regarded with the utmost horror such dilaceration of the
Lord's body, whereby they were joining themselves, as it were, to other heads, and
exclaimed, saying, Was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptized in the name
of Paul (ib.)? If then he shunned the subjecting of the members of Christ
partially to certain heads, as if beside Christ, though this were to the apostles
themselves, what wilt thou say to Christ, who is the Head of the universal
Church, in the scrutiny of the last judgment, having attempted to put all his members
under thyself by the appellation of Universal? Who, I ask, is proposed for
imitation in this wrongful title but he who, despising the legions of angels
constituted socially with himself, attempted to start up to an eminence of
singularity, that he might seem to be under none and to be alone above all? Who even
said, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the starts of
heaven: I will sit upon the mount of the testament, in the sides of the North: I will
ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the most High (Isai.
xiv. 13).
For what are all thy brethren, the bishops of the universal Church, but
stars of heaven, whose life and discourse shine together amid the sins and errors
of men, as if amid the shades of night? And when thou desirest to put thyself
above them by this proud title, and to tread down their name in comparison
with thine, what else dost thou say but I will ascend into heaven; I will exalt my
throne above the stars of heaven? Are not all the bishops together clouds, who
both rain in the words of preaching, and glitter in the light of good works?
And when your Fraternity despises them, and you would fain press them down under
yourself, what else say you but what is said by the ancient foe, I will ascend
above the heights of the clouds? All these things when I behold with tears,
and tremble at the hidden judgments of God, my fears are increased, and my heart
cannot contain its groans, for that this most holy man the lord John, of so
great abstinence and humility, has, through the seduction of familiar tongues,
broken out into such a pitch of pride as to attempt, in his coveting of that
wrongful name, to be like him who, while proudly wishing to be like God, lost even
the grace of the likeness granted him, and because he sought false glory,
thereby forfeited true blessedness. Certainly Peter, the first of the apostles,
himself a member of the holy and universal Church, Paul, Andrew, John,--what were
they but heads of particular communities? And yet all were members under one
Head. And (to bind all together in a short girth of speech) the saints before the
law, the saints under the law, the saints under grace, all these making up the
Lord's Body, were constituted as members of the Church, and not one of them has
wished himself to be called universal. Now let your Holiness acknowledge to
what extent you swell within yourself in desiring to be called by that name by
which no one presumed to be called who was truly holy.
Was it not the case, as your Fraternity! knows, that the prelates of this
Apostolic See which by the providence of God I serve, had the honour offered
them of being called universal by the venerable Council of Chalcedon(5). But yet
not one of them has ever wished to be called by such a title, or seized upon
this ill-advised name, lest if, in virtue of the rank of the pontificate, he took
to himself the glory of singularity, he might seem to have denied it to all
his brethren.
But I know that all arises from those who serve your Holiness on terms of
deceitful familiarity; against whom I beseech your Fraternity to be prudently
on your guard, and not to lay yourself open to be deceived by their words. For
they are to be accounted the greater enemies the more they flatter you with
praises. Forsake such; and, if they must needs deceive, let them at any rate
deceive the hearts of worldly men, and not of priests. Let the dead bury their dead
(Luke ix. 60). But say ye with the prophet, Let them be turned back and put to
shame that say unto me, Aha, Aha (Ps. lxix. 4). And again, But let not the oil
of the sinner lard my head (Ps. cxl. 5).
Whence also the wise man admonishes well, Be in peace with many: but have
but one counsellor of a thousand (Ecclus. vi. 6). For Evil communications
corrupt good manners (1 Cor. xv. 33). For the ancient foe, when unable to break into
strong hearts, looks out for weak persons who are associated with them, and,
as it were, scales lofty walls by ladders set against them. So he deceived Adam
through the woman who was associated with him. So, when he slew the sons of the
blessed Job, he left the weak woman, that, being unable of himself to
penetrate his heart, he might at any rate be able to do so through the woman's words.
Whatever weak and secular persons, then, are near you, let them be shattered in
their own persuasive words and flattery, since they procure to themselves the
eternal enmity of God from their very frowardness in being seeming lovers.
Of a truth it was proclaimed of old through the Apostle John, Little
children, it is the last hour (1 John ii. 18), according as the Truth foretold. And
now pestilence and sword rage through the world, nations rise against nations,
the globe of the earth is shaken, the gaping earth with its inhabitants is
dissolved. For all that was foretold is come to pass. The king of pride is near,
and (awful to be said l) there is an army of priests in course of preparation for
him, inasmuch as they who bad been appointed to be leaders in humility enlist
themselves under the neck of pride. But in this matter, even though our tongue
protested not at all, the power of Him who in His own person peculiarly opposes
the vice of pride is lifted up for vengeance against elation. For hence it is
written, God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble (Jam. iv.
6). Hence, again, it is said, Whoso exalteth his heart is unclean before God
(Prov. xvi. 5). Hence, against the man that is proud it is written, Why is earth
and ashes proud (Ecclus. x. 9)? Hence the Truth in person says, Whosoever
exalteth himself shall be abased (Luke xiv. 11). And, that he might bring us back to
the way of life through humility, He deigned to exhibit in Himself what He
teaches us, saying, Learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart (Matth. xi. 29).
For to this end the only begotten Son of God took upon Himself the form of our
weakness; to this end the Invisible appeared not only as visible but even as
despised; to this end He endured the mocks of contumely, the reproaches of
derision, the torments of suffering; that God in His humility might teach man not to
be proud. How great, then, is the virtue of humility for the sake of teaching
which alone He who is great beyond compare became little even unto the
suffering of death! For, since the pride of the devil was the origin of our perdition,
the humility of God has been found the means of our redemption. That is to say,
our enemy, having been created among all things, desired to appear exalted
above all things; but our Redeemer remaining great above all things, deigned to
become little among all things.
What, then, can we bishops say for ourselves, who have received a place of
honour from the humility of our Redeemer, and yet imitate the pride of the
enemy himself? Lo, we know our Creator to have descended from the summit of His
loftiness that He might give glory to the human race, and we, created of the
lowest, glory in the lessening of our brethren. God humbled Himself even to our
dust; and human dust sets his face as high as heaven, and with his tongue passes
above the earth, and blushes not, neither is afraid to be lifted up: even man
who is rottenness, and the son of man that is a worm.
Let us recall to mind, most dear brother, this which is said by the most
wise Solomon. Before thunder shall go lightning, and before ruin shall the heart
be exalted (Ecclus. xxxii. 10); where, on the other hand it is subjoined,
Before glory it shall be humbled. Let us then be humbled in mind, if we are
striving to attain to real loftiness. By no means let the eyes of our heart be
darkened by the smoke of elation, which the more it rises the more rapidly vanishes
away. Let us consider how we are admonished by the precepts of our Redeemer, who
says, Blessed are the poor in spirit; for theirs is the kingdom of heaven
(Matth. v. 3). Hence, also, he says by the prophet, On whom shall my Spirit rest,
but on him that is humble, and quiet, and that trembleth at my words (Isai. lxvi.
2)? Of a truth, when the Lord would bring back the hearts of His disciples,
still beset with infirmity, to the way of humility, He said, Whosoever will be
chief among you shall be least of all (Matth. xx.27). Whereby it is plainly seen
how he is truly exalted on high who in his thoughts is humbled. Let us,
therefore, fear to be numbered among those who seek the first seats in the synagogues,
and greetings in the market, and to be called of men Rabbi. For, contrariwise,
the Lord says to His disciples, But be not ye called Rabbi: for one is your
master; and all ye are brethren. And call no man your Father upon the earth, far
one is your Father (Matth. xxiii. 7, 8).
What then, dearest brother, wilt thou say in that terrible scrutiny of the
coming judgment, if thou covetest to be called in the world not only father,
but even general father? Let, then, the bad suggestion of evil men be guarded
against; let all instigation to offence be fled from. It must needs be (indeed)
that offences come; nevertheless, woe to that man by whom the offence cometh
(Matth. xviii. 7). Lo, by reason of this execrable title of pride the Church is
rent asunder, the hearts of all the brethren are provoked to offence. What! Has
it escaped your memory how the Truth says, Whoso shall offend one of these
little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a mill stone were
hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea (Ib. v. 6)?
But it is written, Charity seeketh not her own (1 Cor. xiii. 4). Lo, your
Fraternity arrogates to itself even what is not its own. Again it is written, In
honour preferring one another (Row. xii. 10). And thou attemptest to take the
honour away from all which thou desirest unlawfully to usurp to thyself singularly.
Where, dearest brother, is that which is written, Have peace with all men, and
holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord (Heb. xii. 14)? Where is
that which is written, Blessed are the peacemakers; for they shall be called the
children of God (Matth. v. 9)?
It becomes you to consider, lest any root of bitterness springing up
trouble you, and thereby many be defiled. But still, though we neglect to consider,
supernal judgment will be on the watch against the swelling of so great
elation. And we indeed, against whom such and so great a fault is committed by this
nefarious attempt,--we, I say, are observing what the Truth enjoins when it says,
If thy brother shall sin against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee
and him alone. If he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. But if he
will not hear thee, take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of one or
two witnesses every word may be established. But if he will not hear them, tell
it unto the Church. But if he will not hear the Church, let hint be to thee as
an heathen man and a publican (Matth. xviii. 15). I therefore have once and
again through my representatives taken care to reprove in humble words this sin
against the whole Church; and now I write myself. Whatever it was my duty to do
in the way of humility I have not omitted. But, if I am despised in my reproof,
it remains that I must have recourse to the Church.
Wherefore may Almighty God show your Fraternity how great love for you
constrains me when I thus speak, and how much I grieve in this case, not against
you, but for you. But the case is such that in it I must prefer the precepts of
the Gospel, the ordinances of the Canons, and the welfare of the brethren to
the person even of him whom I greatly love.
I have received the most sweet and pleasant letter of your Holiness with
respect to the case of the presbyters John and Athanasius about which, the Lord
helping me, I will reply to you in another letter; for, being surrounded by the
swords of barbarians, I am now oppressed by such great tribulations that it is
not allowed me, I will not say to treat of many things, but hardly even to
breathe. Given in the Kalends of January; Indiction
EPISTLE XIX.
TO SABINIANUS, DEACON (7)
Gregory to Sabinianus, &c.
In the cause of our brother the most reverend John, bishop of
Constantinople, I have been unwilling to write two letter. But one I have drawn up briefly,
which may seem to combine both requisites; that is to say, both honesty and
kindness.
Let therefore thy Love take care to give him this letter which I have now
addressed to him in compliance with the wish of the Emperor. For in the sequel
another will be sent him such as his pride will not rejoice in. For he has come
even to this; that, taking occasion of the case of John the presbyter, he
transmitted hither the acts, wherein almost in every line he called himself
<greek>oikoumenikon</greek> (aecumenical) patriarch. But I hope in Almighty God that
the Supernal Majesty will confound his hypocrisy. But I wonder how he could so
deceive thy Love as that thou shouldest allow the Lord Emperor to be persuaded
to write to me himself concerning this matter, admonishing me to have peace with
him. For, if the Lord Emperor wishes to observe justice, he ought to have
admonished him to refrain from the proud title, and then at once there would be
peace between us. I suspect, however, that thou hast not all considered with what
cunningness this has been done by our aforesaid brother John. For it is for
this purpose that he has done it; that the Lord Emperor might be obeyed, and so he
himself might seem to be confirmed in his vanity, or that I might not obey
him, and so his mind might be irritated against me. But we will keep to the right
way, fearing nothing in this cause except the Almighty Lord. Wherefore let thy
Love be in nothing afraid. All things that you see to be lofty in this world
against the truth in behalf of the truth despise; trust in the grace of Almighty
God, and the help of the blessed Apostle Peter. Remember the voice of the
Truth, which says, Greater is he that is in you than he that is in the world (1 John
iv. 4); and in this cause whatever has to be done, do it with the utmost
authority. For now that we can in no wise be protected from the swords of our
enemies, now that for love of the republic we have lost silver, gold, slaves and
clothing, it is too ignominious that through those men we should lose even the
faith. For to assent to that atrocious title is nothing else than to lose the
faith. Wherefore, as I have written to thee already in former letters, never do thou
presume to proceed with him (8).
EPISTLE XX.
TO MAURICIUS AUGUSTUS.
Gregory to Mauricius, &c.
Our most pious and God-appointed lord, among his other august cares and
burdens, watches also in the uprightness of spiritual zeal over the preservation
of peace among the priesthood, inasmuch as he piously and truly considers that
no one can govern earthly things aright unless he knows how to deal with divine
things, and that the peace of the republic hangs on the peace of the universal
Church. For, most serene lord, what human power, and what strength of fleshly
arm would presume to lift irreligious hands against the lofty height of your
most Christian Empire, if the concordant hearts of priests were studious to
implore their Redeemer for you with the tongue, and also, as they ought to do, by
their deservings? Or what sword of a most savage race would advance with so great
cruelty to the slaughter of the faithful, unless the life of us, who are
called priests but are not, were weighed down by works most wicked. But while we
neglect the things that concern us, and think of those that concern us not, we
associate our sins with the barbaric forces and our fault, which weighs down the
forces of the republic, sharpens the swords of the enemy. But what shall we say
for ourselves, who press down the people of God which we are unworthily set
over with the loads of our sins; who destroy by example what we preach with the
tongue; who by our works teach unrighteous things, and with our voice only set
forth the things that are righteous? Our bones are worn down by fasts, and in our
mind we swell. Our body is covered with vile raiment, and ill elation of heart
we surpass the purple. We lie in ashes, and look down upon loftiness. Teachers
of humility, we are chiefs of pride; behind the faces of sheep we hide the
teeth of wolves (9). But what is the end of these things except that we persuade
men, but are manifest to God? Wherefore most providently for restraining warlike
movements does the most pious Lord seek the peace of the Church, and, for
compacting it, deigns to bring back the hearts of its priests to concord. And this
indeed is what I wish; and, as far as I am concerned, I render obedience to his
most serene commands. But since it is not my cause, but God's, since the pious
laws, since the venerable synods, since the very commands of our Lord Jesus
Christ are disturbed by the invention of a certain proud and pompous phrase, let
the most pious Lord cut the place of the sore, and bind the resisting patient
in the chains of august authority. For in binding up these things tightly you
relieve the republic; and while you cut off such things, you provide for the
lengthening of your reign.
For to all who know the Gospel it is apparent that by the Lord's voice the
care of the whole Church was committed to the holy Apostle and Prince of all
the Apostles, Peter. For to him it is said, Peter, lovest thou Me? Feed My
sheep (John xxi. 17). To him it is said, Behold Satan hath desired to sift you as
wheat; and I have prayed for thee, Peter, that they faith fail not. And thou,
when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren (Luke xxii. 31). To him it is
said, Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church, and the gates
of hell shall not prevail against it. And I will give unto thee the keys of
the kingdom of heaven and whatsoever thou shalt bind an earth shall be bound
also in heaven; and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed also in
heaven (Matth. xvi. 18).
Lo, he received the keys of the heavenly kingdom, and power to bind and
loose is given him, the care and principality of the whole Church is committed to
him, and yet he is not called the universal apostle; while the most holy man,
my fellow-priest John, attempts to be called universal bishop. I am compelled
to cry out and say, O tempora, O mores!
Lo, all things in the regions of Europe are given up into the power of
barbarians, cities are destroyed, camps overthrown, provinces depopulated, no
cultivator inhabits the land, worshippers of idols rage and dominate daily for the
slaughter of the faithful, and yet priests, who ought to lie weeping on the
ground and in ashes, seek for themselves names of vanity, and glory in new and
profane titles.
Do I in this matter, most pious Lord, defend my own cause? Do I resent my
own special wrong? Nay, the cause of Almighty God, the cause of the Universal
Church.
Who is this that, against the evangelical ordinances, against the decrees
of canons, presumes to usurp to himself a new name? Would indeed that one by
himself he were, if he could be without any lessening of others,--he that covets
to be universal.
And certainly we know that many priests of the Constantinopolitan Church
have fallen into the whirlpool of heresy, and have become not only heretics, but
even heresiarchs. For thence came Nestorius, who, thinking Jesus Christ, the
Mediator of God and men, to be two persons, because he did not believe that God
could be made man, broke out even into Jewish perfidy. Thence came Macedonius,
who denied that God the Holy Spirit was consubstantial with the Father and the
Son. If then any one in that Church takes to himself that name, whereby he
makes himself the head of all the good, it follows that the Universal Church falls
from its standing (which God forbid), when he who is called Universal falls.
But far from Christian hearts be that name of blasphemy, in which the honour of
all priests is taken away, while it is madly arrogated to himself by one.
Certainly, in honour of Peter, Prince of the apostles, it was offered by
the venerable synod of Chalcedon to the Roman pontiff (1). But none of them has
ever consented to use this name of singularity, lest, by something being given
peculiarly to one, priests in general should be deprived of the honour due to
them. How is it then that we do not seek the glory of this title even when
offered, and another presumes to seize it for himself though not offered?
He, then, is rather to be bent by the mandate of our most pious Lords, who
scorns to render obedience to canonical injunctions. He is to be coerced, who
does wrong to the holy Universal Church, who swells in heart, who covets
rejoicing in a name of singularity, who also puts himself above the dignity of your
Empire through a title peculiar to himself.
Behold, we all suffer offence for this thing. Let then the author of the
offence be brought back to a right way of life; and all quarrels of priests will
cease. For I for my part am the servant of all priests, so long as they live
as becomes priests. For whosoever, through the swelling of vain glory, lifts up
his neck against Almighty Gold and against the statutes of the Fathers, I trust
in Almighty God that he will not bend my neck to himself, not even with swords.
Moreover what has been done in this city on our hearing of this title, I
have indicated in full to my deacon and responsalis Sabinianus. Let then the
piety of my Lords think of me as their own, whom they have always cherished and
countenanced beyond others, and who desire to render obedience to you and yet
fear to be found guilty in the heavenly and tremendous judgment, and, according to
the petition of the aforesaid deacon Sabinianus, let my most pious Lord either
deign to judge this business, or to move the often before mentioned man to
desist at length from this attempt. If then through the most just judgment of your
Piety he should comply with your orders, even though they be mild ones, we
shall return thanks to Almighty God, and rejoice for the peace granted through you
to all the Church. But should he persist any longer in his present contention,
we hold this sentence of the Truth to be already made good; Every one that
exalteth himself shall be humbled (Luke xiv. 11; xviii. 14). And again it is
written, Before a fall the heart is lifted up (Prov. xvi. 18). I however, rendering
obedience to the commands of my Lords, have both Written sweetly to my
aforesaid fellow-priest, and humbly admonished him to amend himself of this coveting of
empty glory. If therefore he be willing to hear me, he has a devoted brother.
But, if he persists in pride, I already see what will follow:--that he will
find Him as his adversary of whom it is written, God resisteth the proud, but
giveth grace unto the humble (Jam. iv. 6).
EPISTLE XXI.
TO CONSTANTINA AUGUSTA (2).
Gregory to Constantina, &c.
Almighty God, who holds in His right hand the heart of your Piety, both
protects us through you and prepares for you rewards of eternal remuneration for
temporal deeds. For I have learnt from the letters of the deacon Sabinianus my
responsalis with what justice your Serenity is interested in the cause of the
blessed Prince of the apostles Peter against certain persons who are proudly
humble and feignedly kind. And I trust in the bounty of our Redeemer that for
these your good offices with the most serene Lord and his most pious sons you will
receive retribution also in the heavenly country. Nor is there any doubt that
you will receive eternal benefits, being loosed from the chains of your sins, if
in the cause of his Church you have made him your debtor to whom the power of
binding and of loosing has been given. Wherefore I still beg you to allow no
man's hypocrisy to prevail against the truth, since there are some who, according
to the saying of the excellent preacher, by sweet words and fair speeches
seduce the hearts of the innocent,--men who are vile in raiment, but puffed up in
heart. And they affect to despise all things in this world, and yet seek to
acquire for themselves all the things that are of this world. They confess
themselves unworthy before all men, but cannot be content with private titles, since
they covet that whereby they may seem to be more worthy than all. Let therefore
your Piety, whom Almighty God has appointed with our most serene Lord to be
over the whole world, through your favouring of justice render service to Him from
whom you have received your right to so great a dominion, that you may rule
over the world that is committed to you so much the more securely as you more
truly serve the Author of all things in the execution of truth.
Furthermore, I inform you that I have received a letter from the most
pious Lord desiring me to be pacific towards my brother and fellow-priest John. And
indeed so it became the religious Lord to give injunctions to priests. But,
when this my brother with new presumption and pride calls himself universal
bishop, having caused himself in the time of our predecessor of holy memory to be
designated in synod by this so proud a title, though all the acts of that synod
were abrogated, being disallowed by the Apostolic See,--the most serene Lord
gives me a somewhat distressing intimation, in that he has not rebuked him who is
acting proudly, but endeavours to bend me from my purpose, who in this cause of
defending the truth of the Gospels and Canons, of humility and rectitude;
whereas my aforesaid brother and fellow-priest is acting against evangelical
principles and also against the blessed Apostle Peter, and against all the churches,
and against the ordinances of the Canons. But the Lord, in whose hands are all
things, is almighty; of Him it is written, There is no wisdom nor prudence nor
counsel against the Lord (Prov. xxi. 30). And indeed my often before mentioned
most holy brother endeavours to persuade my most serene Lord of many things:
but well I know that all those prayers of his and all those tears will not allow
my Lord to be in any thing cajoled by any one against reason or his own soul.
Still it is very distressing, and hard to be borne with patience, that my
aforesaid brother and fellow-bishop, despising all others, should attempt to be
called sole bishop. But in this pride of his what else is denoted than that
the times of Antichrist are already near at hand? For in truth he is imitating
him who, scorning social joy with the legions of angels, attempted to start up to
a summit of singular eminence, saying, I will exalt my throne above the stars
of heaven, I will sit upon the mount of the testament, in the sides of the
North, and will ascend above the heights of the clouds, and I will be like the most
High (Isai. xiv. 13). Wherefore I beseech you by Almighty God not to allow the
times of your Piety to be polluted by the elation of one man, nor in any way
to give any assent to so perverse a title, and that in this case your Piety may
by no means despise me; since, though the sins of Gregory are so great that he
ought to suffer such things, yet there are no sins of the Apostle Peter that he
should deserve in your times to suffer thus. Wherefore again and again I
beseech you by Almighty God that, as the princes your ancestors have sought the
favour of the holy Apostle Peter, so you also take heed both to seek it for
yourselves and to keep it, and that his honour among you be in no degree lessened on
account of our sins who unworthily serve him, seeing that he is able both to be
your helper now in all things and hereafter to remit your sins.
Moreover, it is now even seven years that we have been living in this city
among the swords of the Lombards. How much is expended on them daily by this
Church, that we may be able to live among them, is not to be t told. But I
briefly indicate that, as in the regions of Ravenna the Piety of my Lords has for
the first army of Italy a treasurer (sacellarium) to defray the daily expenses
for recurring needs, so I also in this city am their treasurer for such purposes
And yet this Church, which at one and the same time unceasingly expends so much
on clergy, monasteries, the poor, the people, and in addition on the Lombards,
lo it is still pressed down by the affliction of all the Churches, which groan
much for this pride of one man, though they do not presume to say anything.
Further, a bishop of the city of Salona has been ordained without the
knowledge of me and my responsalis, and a thing has been done which never happened
under any former princes. When I heard of this, I at once sent word to that
prevaricator, who had been irregularly ordained, that he must not presume by any
means to celebrate the solemnities of mass, unless we should have first
ascertained from our most serene Lords that they had ordered this to be done; and this
I commanded him under pain of excommunication. And yet, scorning and despising
me, supported by the audacity of certain secular persons, to whom he is said to
give many bribes so as to impoverish his Church, he presumes up to this time
to celebrate mass, and has refused to come to me according to the order of my
Lords. Now I, obeying the injunction of their Piety, have from my heart forgiven
this same Maximus, who had been ordained without my knowledge, his presumption
in passing over me and my responsalis in his ordination, even as though he had
been ordained with my authority. But his other wrong doings--to wit his bodily
transgressions, which I have heard of, and his having been elected through
bribery, and his having presumed to celebrate mass while excommunicated--these
things, for the sake of God, I cannot pass over without enquiry. But I hope, and
implore the Lord, that no fault may be found in him with respect to these things
that are reported, and that his case may be term hated without peril to my
soul. Nevertheless, before this has been ascertained, my most serene Lord, in the
order that has been despatched, has enjoined me to receive him with honour when
he comes. And it is a very serious thing that a man of whom so many things of
such a nature are reported should be honoured before such things have been
enquired into and sifted, as they ought in the first place to be. And, if the causes
of the bishops who are committed to me are settled before my most pious Lords
under the patronage of others, what shall I do, unhappy hat I am, in this
Church? But that my bishops despise me, and have recourse to secular Judges against
me, I give thanks to Almighty God that I attribute it to my sins. This however
I briefly intimate, because I am waiting for a little while; and, if he should
long delay coming to me, I shall in no wise hesitate to exercise strict
canonical discipline in his case. But I trust in Almighty God, that He will give long
life to our most pious Lords, and order things for us under your hand, not
according to our sins, but according to the gifts of His grace. These things, then,
I suggest to my most tranquil lady, since I am not ignorant with how great
zeal for rectitude the most pure conscience of her Serenity is moved.
EPISTLE XXIII.
TO CASTORIUS, NOTARY.
Gregory to Castorius, &c.
Our hearing of the death of our brother and fellow-bishop John (3) has
greatly saddened us especially as that city at this time has lost the solace of
pastoral care. Wherefore, since very many advantages to the Church itself demand
that, under the guidance of Christ, a priest should be ordained without delay,
we accordingly charge thy Experience to exhort the clergy and people with all
urgency that they delay not to elect for themselves a priest to be consecrated.
This however, and before all things, we desire thee to press upon them, that in
the general cause they regard not their own private interests. Let there be no
venality, then, in this election, lest, while they covet rewards, they lose
their discrimination of choice and think that man worthy for this office who may
have pleased them, not by his merits, but by his gifts. For let them especially
and absolutely know this, that he is not only unworthy of the priesthood, but
will also certainly become further culpable, whosoever may presume to make
merchandise of the gift of God by thinking to purchase it for a price. Wherefore
let not him that is liberal in bribes, but him that is worthy for his merits, be
chosen. For the penalty will affect both the elected and the electors, if they
attempt with sacrilegious mind to violate the purity of the priesthood.
Moreover, whether one or two may have been elected, by all means warn five of the
senior presbyters and five of the leading people (4) to come to us together. But
with respect to the clergy, if, besides those who determine to come, you are of
opinion that the presence of any others is necessary, send them to us without
delay, that there may be no plea of excuse, nor any delay ensue, in setting the
Church in order.
EPISTLE XXV.
TO SEVERUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Severus, Bishop of Ficulum.
The report that has been sent to us has informed us of the death of the
bishop John (5). Wherefore we solemnly delegate to thy Fraternity the work of the
visitation of the bereaved Church: which work it becomes thee so to execute
that no one may presume to interfere with respect to the promotions of the
clergy, the revenues, ornaments, ministrations, or whatever else belongs to the
patrimony of the same Church. According to custom.
EPISTLE XXVI.
TO THE PEOPLE OF RAVENNA.
Gregory to the clergy, gentry, and common people of Ravenna (6).
Having been informed of the death of your bishop, we have taken care to
delegate to our brother and fellow-bishop Severus of Ficulum the visitation of
the bereaved Church, to whom we have given in charge to allow nothing with
respect to the promotions of the clergy, the revenues, ornaments, and ministrations,
to be usurped by any one. It is for you to render obedience to his assiduous
exhortations.According to custom.
EPISTLE XXIX.
TO VINCOMALUS, GUARDIAN (Defensorem) (7).
Gregory to Vincomalus, &c.
With a view to the advantage of the Church it is our will and pleasure,
that, if thou art held bound by no condition of, or liability to, bodily service,
and hast not been a cleric of any other city, and if there is no canonical
objection to thee, thou take the office of guardian of the Church, that thou
mayest execute incorruptly and with alacrity whatever may be enjoined thee by us for
the benefit of the poor, using this privilege which after deliberation we have
conferred upon thee, so as to do thy diligence faithfully in accomplishing all
that may be enjoined on thee by us, as having to render an account of thy
doings under the judgment of our God. This epistle we have dictated, to be
committed to writing, to Paterius, notary of our Church; In the month of March,
Indiction 13.
EPISTLE XXX.
TO MAURICIUS AUGUSTUS.
Gregory to Mauricius, &c.
The Piety of my Lords, which has been wont mercifully to sustain your
servants, has shone forth here in so kind a supply that the need of all the feeble
has been relieved by the succour of your bounty. On this account we all with
prayers and tears beseech Almighty God, who has moved the heart of your Clemency
to do this thing, that He would preserve the empire of our Lords safe in His
unfailing love, and by the aid of His own majesty extend their victories in all
nations. The thirty pounds of gold which my fellow-servant Busa brought, Scribo
(8) has distributed faithfully to priests, persons in need, and others. And,
since certain females devoted to a religious life (sanctimoniales foeminae) have
come to this city from divers provinces, having fled hither after captivity, of
whom some, so far as there was room for them, have been placed in monasteries,
but others, who could not be taken in, lead a life of singular destitution, it
has been thought good that what Could be spared from the relief of the blind
maimed and feeble should be distributed to them, so that not only needy natives,
but also strangers who arrive here, might receive of the compassion of our
Lords. Hence it has been brought about that all alike with one accord pray for the
life of our lords, that so Almighty God may give you a long and quiet life,
and grant to the most happy offspring of your Piety to flourish long in the Roman
republic. The pay also of the soldiers has been so distributed by my aforesaid
fellow-servant Scribo (8), in the presence also of the glorious Castus,
magister militum, that all received with thanks the gifts of our lords under due
discipline, and abstained from all murmuring such as was formerly wont to prevail
among them.
EPISTLE XXXVI.
TO SEVERUS, Scholasticus.
Gregory to Severus, Scholasticus to the Exarch (9).
Those who assist judges and are bound to them by sincere attachment ought
to-advise them and suggest to them what may both save their souls and not
derogate from their reputation. This being so, since we know with what sincere
loyalty you love the most excellent Exarch, we have been careful to inform your
Greatness of the things that have been done, that, being aware of them, you may
move him to assent to them reasonably.
Know then that Agilulph, King of the Lombards, is not unwilling to
conclude a general peace, if only the lord Patricius will consent to an arbitration.
For he complains that many acts of violence were committed in his regions during
the time of peace. And since, if reasonable grounds for arbitration should be
found, he desires to have satisfaction made to himself, he also himself
promises to make satisfaction in all ways, if it should appear that any wrong was
committed on his side during the peace. Since then it is no doubt reasonable to
agree to what he asks, there ought to be an arbitration, that, if any wrongs have
been done on either side, they may be adjusted; so that it may i be possible,
with the protection of Cool, to establish a general peace; for how necessary for
us all this is you well know. Act therefore wisely as you have been wont to
do, that the most excellent Exarch may consent to this without delay, lest peace
should appear to be refused by him, as should not be. For, should he be
unwilling to consent, he indeed [Agilulph] again promises to conclude a special peace
with us; but we know that divers islands and other places would undoubtedly in
that case be ruined. However, let him [the Exarch] consider these things, and
hasten to make peace, to the end that at any rate during this cessation of
hostilities we may have some degree of quiet, and the forces of the republic may
with the help of God be the better repaired for resistance.
EPISTLE XXXIX.
TO ANASTASIUS, BISHOP (1).
Gregory to Anastasius, Bishop of Antioch.
Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace to men of good will (Luke
ii. 14), because that great river which once had left the rocks of Antioch dry
has returned at length to its proper channel, and waters the subject valleys
that are near, so as also to bring forth fruit, some thirty-fold, some sixty-fold,
and some an hundred-fold. For now there is no doubt that many flowers of souls
are growing up in its valleys, and that they will come even to ripe fruit
through the streams of your tongue. Wherefore with voice of heart and mouth from
our inmost soul we render due praise to Almighty God, and rejoice in your
Blessedness, not with you only, but with all who are subject to you. I have received
the letters of your Holiness, to me most sweet and pleasant, while we ourselves,
if I may so speak, are sweating under the same toil with you. And indeed I
know how heavy must be to thee the burden of external cares after those heights of
rest, wherein with the hand of the heart thou wert touching heavenly secrets.
But remember that thou rules an Apostolic See, and assuagest sorrow the more
readily from being, made all things to all men. In the Books of Kings, as your
accomplished Holiness knows, a certain man is described who used either hand for
the right hand (1 Chron. xii. 2). And, with regard to this, I am not doubtful
about tile lord Anastasius, of old my most sweet and most holy patron, that,
while he draws earthly works to heavenly profit, he turns the left band to the
right hand's use; so that his heavenly intentness may accomplish its work, so to
speak, with the right hand, and also, when he is led in his care of temporal
things towards the interests of justice, the left hand may acquire the strength of
the right.
And indeed these things cannot be without heavy labour and trouble. But
let us remember the labours of those who went before us; and what we endure will
not be hard. For We must through many tribulations enter into the kingdom of
God (Acts xiv. 22). And, We were pressed out of measure, yea and above strength,
insomuch that we were weary even of life. But we ourselves, too had the answer
of death in ourselves, that we should not trust in ourselves (2 Cor. i. 8, 9).
And yet The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with
the supervening glory which shall be revealed in us (Rom. viii. 18). How then
can we that are weak sheep pass without labour through the heat of this world
wherein we know that even rams have suffered under heavy toil?
Further, what tribulations I suffer in this land from the swords of the
Lombards, from the iniquities of judges, from the press of business, from the
care of subjects, and also from bodily affliction, I am unable to express either
by pen or tongue. Concerning which things even though I might say something
briefly, I hesitate, lest to your most holy Charity, while afflicted by your own
tribulations, I should add mine also. But may Almighty God both in the abundance
of His loving-kindness fill the mind of your most holy Blessedness with all
comfort, and grant at sortie time, on account of your intercession, to unworthy me
to rest from these evils which I suffer. Amen. Grace. These words, as you see,
taken from what you had written, I insert in my epistles, that your
Blessedness may perceive with regard to Saint Ignatius that he is not only yours, but
also ours(2). For, as we have his master, the Prince of the apostles in common, so
also no one of us ought to have to himself alone the disciple of this same
Prince(3). Moreover, we have received your blessing(4), which is of sweet smell
and of a good savour, with the feelings that were due to it. And we give thanks
to Almighty God that what you do, what you say, and what you give, is fragrant
and savoury. For your life therefore let us say together, let us say all, Glory
to God in the highest, and an earth peace to men of good will.
EPISTLE XL.
TO MAURICIUS AUGUSTUS.
Gregory to Mauricius, &c.
The Piety of my Lords in their most serene commands, while set on refuting
me on certain matters, in sparing me has by no means spared me. For by the use
therein of the term simplicity they politely call me silly. It is true indeed
that in Holy Scripture, when simplicity is spoken of in a good sense, it is
often carefully associated with prudence and uprightness. Hence it is written of
the blessed Job, The man was simple and upright (Job i. 1). And the blessed
Apostle Paul admonishes saying Be ye simple in evil and prudent in good Rom. xvi.
19). And the Truth in person) admonishes saying, Be ye prudent as serpents, and
simple as doves (Matth. x. 16); thus shewing it to be very unprofitable if
either prudence should be wanting to simplicity, or simplicity to prudence. In
order, then, to make His servants instructed for all things He desired them to be
both simple as doves, and prudent as serpents, that so both the cunning of the
serpent might sharpen in them the simplicity of the dove, and the simplicity of
the dove temper the cunning of the serpent.
I therefore, who am denounced in the most serene commands of my Lords as
simple without tile addition of prudence, as having been deceived by the cunning
of Ariulph, am plainly and undoubtedly called silly; which I also myself
acknowledge to be the case. For, though your Piety were silent, the facts cry out.
For, if I had not been silly, I should by no means have come to endure what l
suffer in this place among the swords of the Lombards. Moreover, in what I stated
about Ariulph, that he was prepared with all his heart to come to terms with
the republic, seeing that I am not believed, I am reproved also as having lied.
But, although I am not a priest(3), I know it to be a grave injury to a priest
that, being a servant of the truth, he should be believed to be deceitful. And
I have been for some time aware that Nordulph is believed before me, and Leo
before me, and that now easy credence is given to those who seem to be in your
confidence more than to my assertions.
And indeed if the captivity of my land were not increasing day by day, I
would gladly pass over in silence contempt and ridicule of myself. But this does
afflict me exceedingly, that from my bearing the charge of falsehood it ensues
also that Italy is daily led captive under the yoke of the Lombards. And,
while my representations are in no wise believed, the strength of the enemy is
increasing hugely. This however I suggest to my most pious Lord, that he would
think anything that is bad of me, but, with regard to the advantage of the republic
and the cause of the rescue of Italy, not easily lend his pious ears to any
one, but believe facts rather than words. Moreover, let not our Lord, in virtue
of his earthly power, too hastily disdain priests, but with excellent
consideration, on account of Him whose servants they are, so rule over them as also to
pay the reverence that is due to them. For in Holy Writ priests are sometimes
called gods, and sometimes angels. For even through Moses it is said of him who is
to be put upon his oath, Bring him unto the gods (Exod. xxii. 8); that is unto
the priests. And again it is written, Than shall not revile the gods (Ib. 28),
to wit, the priests. And the prophet says, The priest's lips shall keep
knowledge, and they skull seek the law at his mouth; for he is the angel of the Lord
of hosts (Malach. ii. 7), Why, then, should it be strange if your Piety were
to condescend to honour those to whom even God Himself in His word gives honour,
calling them angels or gods?
Ecclesiastical history also testifies that, when accusations in writing
against bishops had been offered to the Prince Constantine of pious: memory, he
received indeed the bills of accusation, but, calling together the bishops who
had been accused, he burnt before their eyes the bills which he had received,
saying, Ye are gods, constituted by the true God. Go, and settle your causes
among you,for it is not fit that we should judge gods. Yet in this sentence, my
pious Lord, he conferred more on himself by his humility than on them by the
reverence paid to them. For before him there were pagan princes in the republic,
who knew not the true God, but worshipped gods of wood and stone; and yet they
paid the greatest honour to their priests. What wonder then if a Christian
emperor should condescend to honour the priests of the true God, when pagan princes,
as we have already said, knew how to bestow honour on priests who served gods
of wood and stone? These things, then, I suggest to the piety of my Lords, not
in my own behalf, but in behalf of all priests. For I am a man that is a sinner.
And, since I offend against Almighty God incessantly every day, I surmise that
it will be some amends for this at the tremendous judgment, that I am smitten
incessantly every day by blows. And I believe that you appease the same
Almighty God all the more as you more severely afflict me who serve Him badly. For I
had already received many blows, and when the commands of my Lords came in
addition, I found consolations that I was not hoping for. For, if I can, I will
briefly enumerate these blows.
First, that the peace which without any cost to the republic I had made
with the Lore bards who were in Tuscany was withdrawn from me. Then, the peace
having been broken, the soldiers were removed from the Roman city. And some
indeed were slain by the enemy, but others were placed at Narnii and Perusium
(Perugia); and Rome was left, that Perusium might be held. After this a still heavier
blow was the arrival of Agilulph, so that I saw with my own eyes Romans tied
by the neck with ropes like dogs, to be taken to France for sale. And, because
we who were within the city under the protection of God escaped his hands, a
ground was thence sought for making us appear culpable; to wit, because corn ran
short, which cannot by any means be kept in large quantities for long in this
city; as I have shewn more fully in another representation. On my own account
indeed I was in no wise disturbed, since I declare, my conscience bearing me
witness, that I was prepared to suffer any adversity whatever, so long as I came out
of all these things with the safety of my soul. But for the glorious men,
Gregory the praefect, and Castorius the military commander. (magistro militum), I
have been distressed in no small degree, seeing that they n no way neglected to
do all that could be done, and endured most severe toil in watching and
guarding the city during the siege, and, after all this, were smitten by the heavy
indignation of my Lords. As to them, I clearly understand that it is not their
conduct, but my person, that goes against them. For, having with me alike laboured
in trouble, they are alike troubled after labour.
Now as to the Piety of my Lords holding out over me the formidable and
terrible judgment of Almighty God, I beseech you by the same Almighty God to do
this no more. For as yet we know not how any of us will stand there. And Paul,
the excellent preacher, says, Judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come,
who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make
manifest the counsels of the hearts (1 Cor. iv. 5). Yet this I briefly say, that,
unworthy sinner as I am, I rely more on the mercy of Jesus when He comes than on
the justice of your Piety. And there are many things that men are ignorant of
with regard to this judgment; for perhaps He will blame what you praise, and
praise what you blame. Wherefore among all these uncertainties I return to tears
only, praying that the same Almighty God may both direct our most pious Lord
with His hand and in that terrible judgment find him free from all defaults. And
may He make me so to please men, if need be, as not to offend against His
eternal grace(6).
EPISTLE XLI.
TO CONSTANTINA AUGUSTA.
Gregory to Constantina, &c.
Knowing how my most serene Lady thinks about the heavenly country and the
life of her soul, I consider that I should be greatly in fault were I to keep
silence on matters that ought to be represented to her for the fear of God.
Having ascertained that there are many of the natives in the island of
Sardinia who still, after the evil custom of their race, practise sacrifices to
idols, and that the priests of the same island are sluggish in preaching our
Redeemer, I sent thither one of the bishops of Italy, who with the co-operation of
the Lord has brought many of the natives to the faith. But he has reported to
me a sacrilegious proceeding, namely, that those in the island who sacrifice to
idols pay a bribe to the judge for license to do this. And, when some of them
had been baptized and had ceased sacrificing to idols, the same payment had been
exacted by this same judge of the island, even after their baptism, which they
had been previously accustomed to make for leave to sacrifice to idols. And,
when the aforesaid bishop found fault with him, he replied that he had promised
so large a suffragium(7) that he could not make it up except by aid from cases
of this kind. But the island of Corsica is oppressed by such an excessive
number of exactors and such a burden of exactions, that those who are in it are
hardly able to make up what is exacted except by selling their children. Hence it
ensues that the proprietors of this island, deserting the pious republic, are
forced to take refuge with that most wicked nation of the Lombards. For what can
they suffer from barbarians harder or more cruel than being so straitened and
squeezed as to be compelled to sell their children? Moreover, in the island of
Sicily one Stephen, chartularius of the maritime parts, is said to practise such
illegalities and such oppressions, invading places that belong to various
persons, and without any legal process putting up titles(8) on properties and
houses, that, if I wished to tell every one of his doings that have come to my ears,
I could not accomplish the task in a large volume.
Let my most serene Lady look to all these things wisely, and assuage the
groans of the oppressed. For I suspect that these things have not come to your
most pious ears. For if they could have reached them, they would by no means
have continued until now. But they should be represented now at a suitable time to
our most pious Lord, that he may remove such and so great a burden of sin from
his own soul, from the empire, and from his sons. I know he will say that
whatever is collected from the aforesaid islands is transmitted to us for the
expenses of Italy. But in reply to this I suggest that, even though less expenditure
were bestowed on Italy, he should still rid his empire of the tears of the
oppressed. For perhaps, too, such great expenditure in this land profits less than
it might do because the money for it is collected with some admixture of sin.
Let therefore our most serene Lords give orders that nothing be collected with
sin. And I know that, though less is given for the advantage of the republic,
the republic is thereby much aided. And though perhaps it may be less aided by a
less expenditure, yet it is better that we should not live temporally, than
that you should find any hindrance in the way of eternal life. For consider what
must be the feelings, what the state of heart of parents, when they part with
their children lest they should be tormented. But how one ought to feel for the
children of others is well known to those who have children of their own. Let
it then suffice for me to have briefly represented these things, lest, if your
Piety were not to know what is being done in these parts, I should suffer for
the guilt of my silence before the strict judge.
EPISTLE XLII.
TO SEBASTIAN, BISHOP.
Gregory to Sebastian, Bishop of Sirmium.
I have received the most sweet and pleasant letter of thy Fraternity,
which, though you are never absent from my heart, has nevertheless made your
Holiness as it were present with me bodily. But I beseech Almighty God to protect you
with His right hand, and to grant you a tranquil life here, and, when it shall
please Him, eternal rewards. But I beg you, if you love me with that love
wherewith you always loved me when we were together, to pray for me more earnestly,
that so Almighty God may loose me from the bands of my sins, and make me to
stand free in His sight, released from the burden of this corruption. For,
however inestimable be the sweetness of the heavenly country for drawing one towards
it, yet there are many sorrows in this life to impel us daily to the love of
heavenly things. And these only please me exceedingly from the very fact that
they do not allow anything to please me in this world.
For we can by no means describe, most holy brother, what we suffer in this
land at the hands of your friend, the lord Romanus(9). Yet I may briefly say
that his malice towards us has surpassed the swords of the Lombards; so that the
enemies who kill us seem kinder than the judges of the republic, who by their
malice, rapines, and deceits wear us out with anxiety. And to bear at the same
time the charge of bishops and clergy, and also of monasteries and people, and
to watch anxiously against the plots of the enemy, and to be ever suspicious of
the deceitfulness and malice of the dukes; what labours and what Sorrows all
this involves, your Fraternity may the more truly estimate as you more purely
love me who suffer these things
Furthermore, while addressing you with the greeting that I owe you, I
inform you that it has come to my knowledge from the report Boniface the defensor,
that our brother the most holy lord Anastasius the patriarch(1) has wished to
commit to you the government of the Church in one of his cities, and that you
have refused your assent. This your feeling and your wisdom I most gladly approve
of, and strongly commend; and I account you happy, and myself unhappy in
having consented at such a time as this to undertake the government of the Church.
If, however, by any chance, in condescension to your brethren, and as being
intent on works of mercy, you should ever decide to consent to such a proposal, I
beg you by no means to prefer any one else's love to mine. For there are in the
island of Sicily Churches without bishops, and, if by the guidance of God you
are pleased to take the government of a Church, you will be able to do this
better near the threshold of the blessed apostle Peter, with his aid. But if you
are not so pleased, remain happily as you are, that this resolution may continue
in you; and pray for us unhappy ones. Now may Almighty God keep you under His
protection, in whatever place it be His will that you should be, and bring you
to heavenly rewards.
EPISTLE XLIII.
TO EULOGIUS AND ANASTASIUS, BISHOPS.
Gregory to Eulogius, Bishop of Alexandria, and Anastasius, Bishop of
Antioch.
When the excellent preacher says, As long as I am the apostle of the
Gentiles I will honour my ministry (Rom. xi. 13); saying again in another place, We
became as babes among you (1 Thess. ii. 7), he undoubtedly shews an example to
us who come after him, that we should retain humility in our minds, and yet
keep in honour the dignity of our order, so that neither should our humility be
timid nor our elevation proud. Now eight years ago, in the time of my predecessor
of holy memory Pelagius, our brother and fellow-bishop John in the city of
Constantinople, seeking occasion from another cause, held a synod in which he
attempted to call himself Universal Bishop. Which as soon as my said predecessor
knew, he despatched letters annulling by the authority of the holy apostle Peter
the acts of the said synod; of which letters I have taken care to send copies
to your Holiness. Moreover he forbade the deacon who attended us the most pious
Lords for the business of the Church to celebrate the solemnities of mass with
our aforesaid fellow-priest. I also, being of the same mind with him, have sent
similar letters to our aforesaid fellow-priest, copies of which I have thought
it right to send to your Blessedness, with this especial purpose, hat we may
first assail with moderate force he mind of our before-named brother concerning
this matter, wherein by a new act of pride, all the bowels of the Universal
Church are disturbed. But, if he should altogether refuse to be bent from the
stiffness of his elation, then, with the succour of Almighty God, we may consider
more particularly what ought to be done.
For, as your venerable Holiness knows, this name of Universality was
offered by the holy synod of Chalcedon to the pontiff of the Apostolic See which by
the providence of God I serve(2). But no one of my predecessors has ever
consented to use this so profane a title; since, forsooth, if one Patriarch is called
Universal, the name of Patriarch in the case of the rest is derogated. But far
be this, far be it from the mind of a Christian, that any one should wish to
seize for himself that whereby he might seem in the least degree to lessen the
honour of his brethren. While, then, we are unwilling to receive this honour
when offered to us, think how disgraceful it is for any one to have wished to
usurp it to himself perforce.
Wherefore let not your Holiness in your epistles ever call any one
Universal, lest you detract from the honour due to yourself in offering to another
what is not due. Nor let any sinister suspicion make your mind uneasy with regard
to our most serene lords, inasmuch as he fears Almighty God, and will in no way
consent to do anything against the evangelical ordinances, against the most
sacred canons. As for me, though separated from you by long spaces of land and
sea, I am nevertheless entirely conjoined with you in heart. And I trust that it
is so in all respects with your Blessedness towards me; since, when you love me
in return, you are not far from me. Hence we give thanks the more to that
grain of mustard seed (Matth. xiii. 31, 32), for that from what appeared a small
and despicable seed it has been so spread abroad everywhere by branches rising
and extending themselves from the same root that all the birds of heaven may make
their nests in them. And thanks be to that leaven which, in three measures of
meal, has leavened in unity the mass of the whole human race (Matth. xiii. 33);
and to the little stone, which, cut out of the mountain without hands, has
occupied the whole face of the earth (Dan. ii. 35), and which to this end
everywhere distends itself, that from the human race reduced to unity the body of the
whole Church might be perfected, and so this distinction between the several
members might serve for the benefit of the compacted whole.
Hence also we are not far from you, since in Him who is everywhere we are
one. Let us then give thanks to Him who, having abolished enmities, has caused
that in His flesh there should be in the whole world one flock, and one
sheepfold under Himself the one shepherd; and let us be ever mindful how the preacher
of truth admonishes us, saying, Be careful to keep the unity of the spirit in
the bond of peace (Ephes. iv. 3), and, Follow peace with all men, and holiness,
without which no man shall see God (Hebr. xii. 14). And he says also to other
disciples, If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, having peace with all
men (Rom. xii. 18) For he sees that the good cannot have peace with the bad; and
therefore, as ye know, he premised, If it be possible.
But, because peace cannot be established except on two sides, when the bad
fly from it, the good ought to keep it in their inmost hearts. Whence also it
is admirably said, As much as lieth in you; meaning that it should remain in us
even when it is repelled from the hearts of evil men. And such peace we truly
keep, when we treat the faults of the proud at once with charity and with
persistent justice, when we love them and hate their vices. For man is the work of
God; but vice is the work of man. Let us then distinguish between what God and
what man has made, and neither hate the man on account of his error nor love the
error on account of the man.
Let us then with united mind attack the evil of pride in the man, that
from his enemy, that is to say his error, the man himself may first be freed. Our
Almighty Redeemer will supply strength to charity and justice; He will supply
to us, though placed far from each other, the unity of His Spirit; even He by
whose workmanship the Church, having been constructed as it were after the manner
of the ark with the four sides of the world, and bound together with the
compacture of incorruptible planks and the pitch of charity, is disturbed by no
opposing winds, by the swelling of no billow coming from without.
But inasmuch as, with His grace steering us, we ought to seek that no wave
coming upon us from without may throw us into confusion, so ought we to pray
with all our hearts, dearest brethren, that the right hand of His providence may
draw out the accumulation of internal bilgewater within us. For indeed our
adversary the devil, who, in his rage against the humble, as a roaring lion
walketh about seeking whom he may devour (1 Pet. v. 8), no longer, as we perceive,
walks about the folds but so resolutely fixes his teeth in certain necessary
members of the Church that, unless with the favour of the Lord, the heedful crowd
of shepherds unanimously run to the rescue, no one can doubt that he will soon
tear all the sheepfold; which God forbid. Consider, dearest brethren, who it is
that follows close at hand, of whose approach such perverse beginnings are
breaking out even in priests. For it is because he is near of whom it is written,
He is king over all the sons of pride (Job xli. 25)--not without sore grief I am
compelled to say it--that our brother and fellow-bishop John, despising the
Lord's commands, apostolical precepts, and rules of Fathers, attempts through
elation to be his forerunner in name.
But may Almighty God make known to your Blessedness with what sore
groaning I am tormented by this consideration; that he, the once to me most modest
man, he who was beloved of all, he who seemed to be occupied in alms, deeds,
prayers, and fastings, out of the ashes he sat in, out of the humility he preached,
has grown so boastful as to attempt to claim all to himself, and through the
elation of a pompous expression to aim at subjugating to himself all the members
of Christ, which cohere to one Head only, that is to Christ. Nor is it
surprising that the same tempter who knows pride to be the beginning of all sin, who
used it formerly before all else in the case of the first man, should now also
put it before some men at the end of virtues, so as to lay it as a snare for
those who to some extent seemed to be escaping his most cruel hands by the good
aims of their life, at the very goal of good work, and as it were in the very
conclusion of perfection.
Wherefore we ought to pray earnestly, and implore Almighty God with
continual supplications, that He would avert this error from that man's soul, anti
remove this mischief of pride and confusion from the unity and humility of the
Church. And with the favour of the Lord we ought to concur, and make provision
with all our powers, lest in the poison of one expression the living members in
the body of Christ should die. For, if this expression is suffered to be
allowably used, the honour of all patriarchs is denied: and while he that is called
Universal perishes per chance in his error, no bishop will be found to have
remained in a state of truth.
It is for you then, firmly and without prejudice, to keep the Churches as
you have received them, and not to let this attempt at a diabolical usurpation
have any countenance from you. Stand firm; stand secure; presume not ever to
issue or to receive writings with the falsity of the name Universal in them. Bid
all the bishops subject to your care abstain from the defilement of this
elation, that the Universal Church may acknowledge you as Patriarchs not only in good
works but also in the authority of truth. But, if perchance adversity is the
consequence, we ought to persist unanimously, and show even by dying that in
case of harm to the generality we do not love anything of our own especially. Let
us say with Paul, To me to live is Christ, and to die is gain (Philip. i. 21).
Let us hear what the first of all pastors says; If ye suffer anything for
righteousness' sake, happy are ye (1 Pet. iii. 14). For believe me that the dignity
which we have received for the preaching of the truth we shall more safely
relinquish than retain in behalf of the same truth, should case of necessity
require it. Finally, pray for me, as becomes your most dear Blessedness, that I may
shew forth in works what I am thus bold to say to you.
EPISTLE XLVIII.
TO ANDREW, SCHOLASTICUS(3).
Gregory to Andrew, &c.
We have been desirous of carrying out the wish of the most excellent the
lord Patrician as to the person of Donatus, the archdeacon; but, seeing that it
is very dangerous to the soul to lay hands on any one rashly, we took care to
examine by a thorough investigation into his life and deeds. And, since many
things have been discovered, as we have written to the said lord Patrician, which
remove him far from the episcopate, we, fearing the judgment of God, have not
thought fit to consent to his ordination. But neither have we presumed to ordain
John, the presbyter, who is ignorant of the psalms, since this circumstance
certainly shewed him to be too little in earnest about himself. These, then,
being excluded, when we had urged the parties to choose some one from among their
own people(4), and they declared that they had no one fit for this office, and
when we together with them were the more distressed, they at length, with one
common voice and consent, repeatedly solicited our venerable brother the
presbyter Marinianus, who they learns had been associated with me for a long time in a
monastery. He, shrinking from the office, was at last, by various means, with
difficulty persuaded to give assent to their petition. And, since we were well
acquainted with his life, and knew him to be solicitous in winning souls, we did
not delay his ordination. Let, therefore, your Glory receive him as is
becoming, and extend to his newness the aid of your succour. For to all, as you know,
newness in any office whatever is very trying. But I have great confidence
that Almighty God, who has vouchsafed to put him over His flock, will both
stimulate him to give heed to what is inward, and comfort him with the
loving-kindness of His grace for administering what is outward. But, inasmuch as, after his
long enjoyment of quiet, his newness, as we have before said, will without doubt
expose him to perturbation, I beg that, when he shall come to you flying from
the whirlwinds of secular storms, he may always find in your heart a haven of
rest, and be cheered by the boon of your charity. But you will soon learn how
much you will find yourselves able to agree; for he comes unwillingly to the
episcopate(5).
EPISTLE XLIX.
TO LEANDER, BISHOP.
Gregory to Leander, Bishop of Hispalis (Seville).
With what ardour I am athirst to see thee thou readest in the tables of
thine own heart, since thou lovest me exceedingly. But since I cannot see thee,
separated as thou art from me by long tracts of country, I have done what
charity towards thee dictated, namely to transmit to thy Holiness, on the arrival
here of our common son Probinus the presbyter, the book of Pastoral Rule, which I
wrote at the commencement of my episcopate, and the books which thou knewest I
had already composed on the exposition of the blessed Job. Some sheets indeed
of the third and fourth parts of that work I have not sent to thy Charity,
having already given those sheets only of the said parts to monasteries. These,
then, which I send let thy Holiness earnestly peruse, and more earnestly deplore my
sins, lest it be to my more serious blame that I am seen as it were to know
what I omit to do. But with how great tumults of business I am oppressed in this
Church the very brevity of my epistle will signify to thy Charity, seeing that
I say so little to him whom more than all I love.
EPISTLE LII.
TO JOHN, ARCHBISHOP.
Gregory to John, Archbishop of the Corinthians.
The equity and solicitude of Secundinus our brother and fellow-bishop,
which had been well known to us of old, is shewn also by the tenor of your
letters. In this matter he has greatly pleased us, and made us glad, in that in the
cause of Anastasius(6), once bishop, which we charged him to enquire into, he has
both exercised his vigilance diligently and judged the crimes that were
discovered as justice required, and as was fight. But in all these things we return
thanks to Almighty God for that, when certain accusers held back, He brought the
truth to his knowledge, lest the originator of such great crimes should escape
detection. But seeing that, in the sentence wherein it is evident that the
above-named Anastasius has been justly condemned and deposed, our above-named
brother and fellow-bishop has visited the offence of certain persons in such a
manner as to reserve them for our judgment, we therefore have seen fit to signify
by this present epistle what is to be held to and observed concerning them.
As to Paul the deacon then, the bearer of these presents, although his
fault is exceedingly to his shame and discredit--namely, that deluded by promises,
he held back from accusation of his late bishop who has been lately deposed,
and that, in the eagerness of cupidity, he consented, against his own soul, to
keep silence rather than declare the truth--yet, since it befits us to be more
kind than strict, we pardon him this fault, and decide that he is to be received
again into his rank and position. For we believe that the affliction which he
has endured since the time of the sentence being pronounced may suffice for the
punishment of this fault. But as to Euphemius and Thomas, who received sacred
orders for relinquishing their accusation, it is our will that they be deprived
of these sacred orders, and, having been deposed from them, so continue; and
we decree that they shall never, under any pretext or excuse, be restored to
sacred orders. For it is in the highest degree improper, and contrary to the rule
of ecclesiastical discipline, that they should enjoy the dignity which they
have received, not for their merits, but as the reward of wickedness. Yet,
inasmuch as it is fit for us to incline to mercy more than to strict justice, it is
our will that the same Euphemius and Thomas be restored to the rank and position,
but to that only, from which they had been promoted to sacred orders, and
receive during all the days of their life the stipends of these positions, as they
had been before accustomed. Further, as to Clematius the reader, I appoint,
from a like motive of benignity, that he is to be restored to his rank and
position. To all these also that is, to Paul the deacon, to Euphemius, Thomas, and
Clematius, let your Fraternity take care to supply their emoluments, according to
the rank and position in which each of them is, as each has been accustomed to
receive them, from this present thirteenth indiction without any diminution.
Inasmuch, therefore, as the above-named Paul the deacon asserts that he expended
much for the advantage of your Church, and desires to be aided by the succour
of your Fraternity for recovery of the same, we exhort that, if this is so, you
should concur with him in all possible ways, and support him with your aid, for
recovering what he has given, since no reason allows that he should unjustly
suffer loss in what he has expended for the advantage of the generality.
Furthermore, let your Fraternity restore without delay the three pounds of gold which,
at the instance of our above-named brother and fellow-bishop Secundinus, it
appears that the said Paul the deacon gave for the benefit of your Church, lest
(which God forbid) you should seem to burden him, not reasonably, but out of
mere caprice.
EPISTLE LIII.
TO VIRGILIUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Virgilius, Bishop of Arelate (Arles).
O how good is charity, which through an image in the mind exhibits what is
absent as present to ourselves, through love unites what is divided, settles
what is confused, associates things that are unequal, completes things that are
imperfect! Rightly does the excellent preacher call it the bond of perfectness;
since, though the other virtues indeed produce perfectness, yet still charity
binds them together so that they can no longer be loosened from the heart of
one who loves. Of this virtue, then, most dear brother, i find thee to be full,
as both those who came from the Gallican parts and the words also of thy letter
addressed to me testify to me of thee.
Now as to thy having asked therein, according to ancient custom, for the
use of the pallium and the vicariate of the Apostolic See, far be it from me to
suspect that thou hast sought eminence of transitory power, or the adornment of
external worship, in our vicariate and in the pallium. But, since it is well
known to all whence the holy faith proceeded in the regions of Gaul, when your
Fraternity asks for a repetition of the old custom of the Apostolic See, what is
it but that a good offspring reverts to the bosom of its mother?(7) With
willing mind therefore we grant what has been asked for, lest we should seem either
to withdraw from you anything of the honour due to you, or to have despised the
petition of our most excellent son king Childebert. But the present state of
things requires the greater earnestness, that with increase of dignity
solicitude also may advance, and watchfulness in the custody of others may grow, and the
merits of your life may serve as an example to your subjects, and that your
Fraternity may never seek your own through the dignity accorded you, but the
gains of the heavenly country. For you know what the blessed apostle says,
groaning, For all seek their own, not the things which are Jesus Christ's (Philip. ii.
21).
For I have learnt from information given me by certain persons that in the
parts of Gaul and Germany no one attains to holy orders except for a
consideration given. If this is so, I say it with tears, I declare it with groans, that,
when the priestly order has fallen inwardly, neither will it be able to stand
outwardly for long. For we know from the Gospel what our Redeemer in person
did; how He went into the temple, and overthrew the seats of them that sold doves
(Matth. xxi. 12). For to sell doves is to receive a temporal consideration for
the Holy Spirit, whom, being consubstantial with Himself, God Almighty gives to
men through the imposition of hands. From which evil what follows is already
intimated. For of those who presumed to sell doves in the temple of God the
seats fell by God's judgment.
And in truth this transgression is propagated with increase among
subordinates. For he who is promoted to any sacred order for a price, being already
corrupted in the very root of his advancement, is the more ready to sell to others
what he has bought. And where is that which is written, Freely ye have
received, freely give (Matth. x. 8)?
And, seeing that the simoniacal heresy was the first to arise against the
holy Church, why is it not considered, why is it not seen, that whoso ordains
any one for money, causes him in advancing him, to become a heretic?
Another very detestable thing has also been reported to us; that some
persons, being laymen, through desire of temporal glory, are tonsured on the death
of bishops, and all at once are made priests. In such cases it is already known
what manner of man he is who attains to priesthood, passing suddenly from a
lay estate to sacred leadership. And one who has never served as a soldier fears
not to become a leader of the religious(8). How is that man to preach who has
perhaps never heard any one else preach? Or bow shall he correct the ills of
others who has never yet bewailed his own? And, where Paul the apostle prohibits a
neophyte from coming to sacred orders, we are to understand that, as one was
then called a neophyte who had been newly planted in the faith, so we now reckon
among neophytes one who is still new in holy conversation.
Moreover, we know that walls after being built, are not made to carry a
weight of timber till they are dried of the moisture of their newness, lest, if a
weight be put on them before they are settled, it bear down the whole fabric
together to the ground. And, when we cut trees for a building, we wait for the
moisture of their greenness to be first dried out, lest, if the weight of the
fabric is imposed on them while still fresh, they be bent from their very
newness, and be the sooner broken and fall down from having been elevated prematurely.
Why, then, is not this scrupulously seen to among men, which is so carefully
considered even in the case of timber and stones?
On this account your Fraternity must needs take care to admonish our most
excellent son king Childebert that he remove entirely the stain of this sin
from his kingdom, to the end that Almighty God may give him the greater recompense
with Himself as He sees him both love what He loves and shun what He hates.
And so we commit to your Fraternity, according to ancient custom, under
God, our vicariate in the Churches which are under the dominion of our most
excellent son Childebert(9), with the understanding that their proper dignity,
according to primitive usage, be preserved to the several metropolitans. We have
also sent a pallium for thy Fraternity to use within the Church for the
solemnization of mass only. Further, if any one of the bishops should by any chance wish
to travel to any considerable distance, let it not be lawful for him to remove
to other places without the authority of thy Holiness. If any question of
faith, or it may be relating to other matters, should have arisen among the bishops,
which cannot easily be settled, let it be ventilated and decided in an
assembly of twelve bishops. But, if it cannot be decided after the truth has been
investigated, let it be referred to our judgment.
Now may Almighty God keep you under His protection, and grant unto you to
preserve by your behaviour the dignity that you have received. Given the 12th
day of August, Indiction 13.
EPISTLE LIV.
TO ALL THE BISHOPS OF THE KINGDOM OF CHILDEBERT.
Gregory to all the Bishops of Gaul who are under the kingdom of
Childebert(1).
To this end has the provision of the divine dispensation appointed that
there should be diverse degrees and distinct orders, that, while the inferiors
shew reverence to the more powerful and the more powerful bestow love on the
inferiors, one contexture of concord may ensue of diversity, and the administration
of all several offices may be properly borne. Nor indeed could the whole
otherwise subsist; unless, that is, a great order of differences of this kind kept
it together. Further, that creation cannot be governed, or live, in a state of
absolute equality we are taught by the example of the heavenly hosts, since,
there being angels and also archangels, it is manifest that they are not equal;
but in power and rank, as you know, one differs from another. If then among these
who are without sin there is evidently this distinction, who of men can refuse
to submit himself willingly to this order of things which he knows that even
angels obey? For hence peace and charity embrace each other mutually, and the
sincerity of concord remains firm in the reciprocal love which is well pleasing
to God.
Since, then each single duty is then salubriously fulfilled when there is
one president who may be referred to, we have therefore perceived it to be
opportune, in the Churches that are under the dominion of our most excellent son
king Childebert, to give our vicariate jurisdiction, according to ancient custom,
to our brother Virgilius, bishop of the city of Arelate, to the end that the
integrity of the catholic faith, that is of the four holy synods, may be
preserved under the protection of God with attentive devotion, and that, if any
contention should by chance arise among our brethren and fellow-priests, he may allay
it by the rigour of his authority with discreet moderation, as representing
the Apostolic See. We have also charged him that, if such a dispute should arise
in any cases as to require the presence of others, he should assemble our
brethren and fellow-bishops in competent number, and discuss the matter salubriously
with due regard to equity, and decide it with canonical integrity. But if a
contention (which may the Divine power avert) should happen to arise on matters
of faith, or any business come up about which there may perchance be serious
doubt, and he should be in need of the judgment of the Apostolic See in place of
his own greatness, we have directed him that, having diligently enquired into
the truth, he should take care to bring the question under our cognizance by a
report from himself, to the end that it may be terminated by a suitable sentence
so as to remove all doubt.
And, since it is necessary that the bishops should assemble at suitable
times for conference before him to whom we have granted our vicariate
jurisdiction as often as he may think it, we exhort that none of you presume to be
disobedient to his orders, or defer attending the general conclave, unless perchance
bodily infirmity should prevent any one, or a just excuse in any case should
allow his absence. Yet let such as are unavoidably prevented from attending the
synod send a presbyter or a deacon in their stead, to the end that the things
that, with the help of God, may be decided by our vicar, may come to the knowledge
of him who is absent by a faithful report through the person whom he had sent,
and be observed with unshaken steadfastness, and that there be no occasion of
excuse for daring to violate them.
About this also we take the precaution of warning you, that none of you
may attempt in any way to depart to places at any great distance without the
authority of our aforesaid brother and fellow-bishop Virgilius, knowing that the
orders of our predecessors, who granted vicariate jurisdiction to his
predecessors, undoubtedly lay this down.
Furthermore, we exhort that each one of you give careful attention to his
own office, so that he who desires to receive the reward promised for feeding
the sheep may guard the flock committed to him with carefulness and prayer, lest
the prowling wolf should invade and tear the sheep entrusted to him, and there
should be in the retribution punishment instead of reward. We hope, therefore,
most dear brethren, and we entreat Almighty God with all our prayers, that He
would make you to be fervent more and more in the constancy of His love, and
grant you especially to be retained in the peace of the Church, and in agreement
together.
It has been reported to us that some are promoted to sacred orders through
simoniacal heresy; and we have ordered our above-written brother and
fellow-bishop Virgilius that this must be altogether prohibited; and, that your
Fraternity may know and studiously observe this, our letter to him is to be read in
your presence. Given the 12th day of August, Indiction 13.
EPISTLE LV.
TO KING CHILDEBERT.
Gregory to Childebert, king of the Franks(2).
The letter of your Excellency has made us exceedingly glad, testifying as
it does that you are careful, with pious affection, of the honour and reverence
due to priests. For you thus shew to all that you are faithful worshippers of
God, while you love His priests with the acceptable veneration that is due to
them, and hasten with Christian devotion to do whatever may advance their
position. Whence also we have received with pleasure what you have written, and grant
what you desire with willing mind; and accordingly we have committed, with the
favour of God, our vicariate jurisdiction to our brother Virgilius, bishop of
the city of Arelate, according to ancient custom and your Excellency's desire;
and have also granted him the use of the pallium, as has been the custom of old.
But, inasmuch as some things have been reported to us which greatly offend
Almighty God, and confound the honour and reverence due to the priesthood, we
beg that they may be in every way amended with the support of the censure of
your power, lest, while headstrong and perverse doings run counter to your
devotion, your kingdom, or your soul (which God forbid) be burdened by the guilt of
others.
Further, it has come to our knowledge that on the death of bishops some
persons from being laymen are tonsured, and mount to the episcopate by a sudden
leap. And thus one who has not been a disciple is in his inconsiderate ambition
made a master. And, since he has not learned what to teach, he bears the office
of priesthood only in name; for he continues to be a layman in speech and
action as before. How, then, is he to intercede for the sins of others, not having
in the first place bewailed his own? For such a shepherd does not defend, but
deceives, the flock; since, while he cannot for very shame try to persuade
others to do what he does not do himself, what else is it but that the Lord's
people remains a prey to robbers, and catches destruction from the source whence it
ought to have had a great support of wholesome protection? How bad and how
perverse a proceeding this is let your Excellency's Highness consider even from
your own administration of things. For it is certain that you do not put a leader
over an army unless his work and his fidelity have first been apparent; unless
the virtue and industry of his previous life have shewn him to be a fit person.
But, if the command of an army is not committed to any but men of this kind,
it is easily gathered from this comparison of what sort a leader of souls ought
to be. But it is a reproach to us, and we are ashamed to say it, that priests
snatch at leadership who have not seen the very beginning of religious warfare.
But this also, a thing most execrable, has been reported to us as well:
that sacred orders are conferred through simoniacal heresy, that is for bribes
received. And, seeing that it is exceedingly pestiferous, and contrary to the
Universal Church, that one be promoted to any sacred order not for merit but for a
price, we exhort your Excellency to order so detestable a wickedness to be
banished from your kingdom For that man shows himself to be thoroughly unworthy of
this office, who fears not to buy the gift of God with money, and presumes to
try to get by payment what he deserves not to have through grace.
These things, then, most excellent son, I admonish you about for this
reason, that I desire your soul to be saved. And I should have written about them
before now, had not innumerable occupations stood in the way of my will. But now
that a suitable time for answering your letter has offered itself, I have not
omitted what it was my duty to do. Wherefore, greeting your Excellency with the
affection of paternal charity, we beg that all things which we have enjoined
on our above-named brother and fellow-bishop to be done and observed, may be
carried out under the protection of your favour, and that you allow them not to be
in any way upset by the elation or pride of any one. But, as they were
observed by his predecessor under the reign of your glorious father, so let them be
observed now also, by your aid, with zealous devotion. It is right, then, that we
should thus have a return made to us; and that, as we have not deferred
fulfilling your will, so you too, for the sake of God and the blessed Peter, Prince
of the apostles, should cause our ordinances to be observed in all respects;
that so your Excellency's reputation, praiseworthy and well-pleasing to God, may
extend itself all around. Given the 12th day of August, Indiction 13.
EPISTLE LVI.
TO MARINIANUS, BISHOP.
Gregory to Marinianus, Bishop of Ravenna.
Moved by the benevolence of the Apostolical See and the order of ancient
custom, we have thought fit to grant the use of the pallium to thy Fraternity,
who art known to have undertaken the office of government in the Church of
Ravenna(3). And remember thou to use it in no other way but in the proper Church of
thy city, when the sons (i.e. laity) have been already dismissed, as thou art
proceeding from the audience chamber(4) to celebrate the sacred solemnities of
mass; but, when mass is finished, thou wilt take care to lay it by again in the
audience chamber. But outside the Church, we do not allow thee to use it any
more, except four times in the year, in the litanies which we named to thy
predecessor John; giving thee at the same time this admonition; that, as through the
Lord's bounty thou hast obtained from us the use of an adornment of this kind
to the honour of the priestly office, so thou strive to adorn also the office
undertaken by thee to the glory of Christ with probity of manners and of deeds.
For thus wilt thou be conspicuous for two adornments answering to each other, if
with such a vesture of the body as this the good qualities also of thy soul
agree. For all privileges also which appear evidently to have been formerly
granted to thy Church we confirm by our authority, and decree that they continue
inviolate.
EPISTLE LVII.
TO JOHN, BISHOP.
Gregory to John, Bishop of the Corinthians
Now that our God, from whom nothing is hidden, having cast out an
atrocious plague of pollution from the government of His Church(5), has been pleased to
advance you to the rule thereof, there is need of anxious precaution on your
part that the Lord's flock, after the wounds and various evils inflicted by its
former shepherd, may find consolation and wholesome medicine in your
Fraternity. Thus, then, let the hand of your action wipe away the stain of the previous
contagion, so as tO suffer no traces even to remain of that execrable wickedness.
Let, therefore, your solicitude towards your subjects be worthy of praise.
Let discipline be exhibited with gentleness. Let rebuke be with discernment.
Let kindness mitigate wrath; let zeal sharpen kindness: and let one be so
seasoned with the other that neither immoderate punishment afflict more than it
ought, nor again laxity impair the rectitude of discipline. Let the conduct of your
Fraternity be a lesson to the people committed to you. Let them see in you what
to love, and perceive what to make haste to imitate. Let them be taught how to
live by your example. Let them not deviate from the straight course through
your leading; let them find their way to God by following you; that so thou
mayest receive as many rewards from the Saviour of the human race as thou shalt have
won souls for Him. Labour therefore, most dear brother, and so direct the
whole activity of thy heart and soul, that thou mayest hereafter be counted worthy
to hear, Well done, thou goad and faithful servant: enter thou into the joy of
thy Lord (Matth. xxv. 21).
As you requested in your letter which we received through our brother and
fellow-bishop Andrew, we have sent you the pallium, which it is necessary that
you should so use as your predecessors, by the allowance of our predecessors,
are proved to have used it.
Furthermore, it has come to our ears that in those parts no one attains to
any sacred order without the giving of a consideration. If this, is so, I say
with tears, I declare with groans, that, when the priestly order has fallen
inwardly, neither will it stand long outwardly. For we know from the Gospel what
our Redeemer in person did; how He went into the temple, and overthrew the seats
of them that sold, doves (Matth. xxi. 12). For to sell cloves is to receive a
temporal consideration for the Holy Spirit, whom, being consubstantial with
Himself, Almighty God gives to men through imposition of hands. And what follows
from this evil, as I have said before, is intimated; for the seats of those who
presumed to sell doves in the temple of God fell by the judgment of God. And in
truth this transgression is propagated with increase among subordinates. For
one who attains to a sacred dignity tainted in the very root of his promotion is
himself the more prepared to sell to others what he has bought. And where then
is that which is written, Freely ye have received; freely give (Matth. x. 8)?
And, since the simoniacal heresy was the first to arise against holy Church,
why is it not considered, why is it not seen, that whosoever ordains any one for
a price in promoting him causes him to become a heretic? Seeing, then, that the
holy universal Church utterly condemns this most atrocious wickedness, we
exhort your Fraternity in all ways to repress, with all the urgency of your
solicitude, this so detestable and so huge a sin in all places that are under you.
For, if we shall perceive anything of the kind to be done henceforth, we will
correct it, not with words, but with canonical punishment; and we shall begin to
have a different opinion of you; which ought not so to be.
Further, your Fraternity knows that formerly the pallium was not given
except for a consideration received. But, since this was incongruous, we held a
council before the body of the blessed Peter, Prince of the apostles, and forbade
under a strict interdiction the receiving of anything, as well for this as for
ordinations.
It is your duty then, that neither for a consideration, nor for favour or
the solicitation of certain persons, you consent to any persons being advanced
to sacred orders. For it is a grave sin, as we have said, and we cannot suffer
it to continue without reproof.
I delayed receiving the above named Andrew, our brother and fellow-bishop,
because by the report of our brother and fellow-bishop Secundinus we learnt
that he had forged letters, as to himself from us, in the proceedings against
John of Larissa(6). And, unless your goodness had induced us, we would on no
account have received him. Given the 15th day of the month of August, Indiction 13.
EPISTLE LVIII.
TO ALL THE BISHOPS THROUGHOUT HELLADIA(7).
Gregory to all bishops constituted in the province of Helladia.
I return thanks with you, dearest brethren, to Almighty God, who has
caused the hidden sore which the ancient enemy had introduced to come to the
knowledge of all, and has cut it away by a wholesome incision from the body of His
Church. Herein we have cause both to rejoice and to mourn; to rejoice, that is,
for the correction of a crime, but to mourn for the fall of a brother. But, since
for the most part the fall of one is wont to be the safeguard of another,
whosoever fears to fall, let him give heed to this, that he afford no way of
approach to the enemy, nor think that deeds done lie hidden. For the Truth proclaims,
There is nothing hidden that shall not be revealed(Matth. x. 26). For this
voice is already the herald of our doings, and He himself, being witness, brings
in all ways to public view what is done in secret. And who may strive to hide
his deeds before Him Who is both their witness and their judge? But, since
sometimes, when one thing is attended to, another is not guarded against, it behoves
every one to be watchful against all the snares of the enemy, lest, while he
conquers in one point he be vanquished in another. For an earthly enemy too, when
he desires to invade fortified places, thus employs the art of warfare. For
indeed he lays ambushes latently; but shews himself as though entirely bent on
the storming of one place, so that, while there is a running together for defence
of that place where the danger is imminent, other places about which there is
no suspicion may be taken. And the result is, that he who, when perceived, was
repulsed by the valour of his opponent, obtains by stealth what he could not
obtain by fighting. But, since in all these things there is need of the aid of
divine protection, let every one of us cry to the Lord with the voice of the
heart, saying, Lord, remove not Thy help far from me; Look Thou to my defence(Ps.
xxi. 20)[8]. For it is manifest that, unless He Himself should help, and defend
those who cry to Him, our enemy cannot be vanquished.
Furthermore, know ye that, having received the letter of your Charity
through Andrew our brother and fellow-bishop, we have transmitted the pallium to
John our brother, the bishop of the Corinthians; whom it is by all means fitting
that you should obey, especially as the order of ancient custom claims this,
and his good qualities, to which you yourselves bear testimony, invite it. For
from the account given me by certain persons I have learnt that in those parts no
one attains to any sacred order without the giving of a consideration. If this
is so, I say with tears, I declare with groans, that, when the priestly order
has fallen inwardly, neither will it be able to stand long outwardly. For we
know from the Gospel what our Redeemer did in person; how He went into the
temple, and overthrew the seats of them that sold doves. For in truth to sell doves
is to receive a temporal consideration for the Holy Spirit, whom, being
consubstantial with Himself, Almighty God gives to men through imposition of hands.
And, as I have said before, what follows from this evil is intimated; for the
seats of them that presumed to sell doves in the temple of God fell by God's
judgment And in truth this transgression is propagated with increase among
subordinates. For he who is advanced to a sacred order already tainted in the very root
of his promotion is himself more prepared to sell to others what he has bought.
And where is that which is Written, Freely ye have received; freely give(Matth.
x. 8)? And, since the simoniacal heresy was the first to arise against the
holy Church, why is it not considered, why is it not seen, that whosoever ordains
any one for a price in promoting him causes him to become a heretic? And so we
exhort that none of you suffer this to be done any more; or dare to promote any
to sacred orders for the favour or supplication of any person, except such a
one as the character of his life and actions has shewn to be worthy. For, if we
should perceive the contrary in future, know ye that it will be repressed with
strict and canonical punishment. Given on the 15th day of the month of August,
Indiction 13.