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| Innocent, Bishop, to Presbyters and Deacons, and to All the Clergy and People of the Church of Constantinople, the Brethren Beloved Who Are Subject to the Bishop John, Greeting. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
innocent,
bishop, to presbyters and deacons, and to all the clergy and people
of the church of constantinople, the brethren beloved who are
subject to the bishop john, greeting.
From the letters of your
love which ye have sent by the hands of Germanus the presbyter, and
Casianus the deacon, I have studied with anxious care the scene of
calamity which ye have placed before my eyes, and by repeated
perusal of your description I thoroughly perceived under what great
distress and toil your faith is labouring: and this is a matter
which can be cured only by the consolation of patience: for our God
will speedily grant an end to such great afflictions, and He will
aid you in your endurance of these things. Moreover whilst praising
the statement of your case which contains many testimonies
encouraging to patience I notice this necessary consolation placed
at the beginning of the epistle of your love: for the consolation
which we ought to have written to you, ye have anticipated by your
letter. For this is the kind of patience which our Master is wont
to supply to those who are in distress, in order that the servants
of Christ when they are in affliction may console themselves by
reflecting that the things which they themselves are suffering have
happened to the saints also in former times. And we also from your
letter shall be able to derive consolation: for we are not
estranged from sympathy with you, inasmuch as we also are chastised
in your persons. For who will be able to endure the offences
committed by those men who ought to be specially zealous promoters
of the tranquillity of the Church and of concord itself. At the
present time, by a perversion of custom, guiltless priests are
expelled from the presidency of their own
Churches. And this is what your chief
brother, and fellow minister, John, your bishop has unjustly
suffered, not having obtained any hearing: no crime is charged
against him, none is heard. And what is the object of this
iniquitous device? that no pretext for a trial may occur, or be
sought, other men are introduced into the places of living priests,
as if those who start from an offence of this description could be
judged by any one to have anything good or to have done anything
right.966
966 I have followed the Latin here. The Greek version
of the passage seems to me hopelessly confused. | For we
understand that such deeds have never been perpetrated by our
fathers; or rather that they were prevented by the fact that no one
had authority given him to ordain another to take the place of one
who was still living. For a spurious ordination cannot deprive the
priest of his rank: seeing that neither can he be a bishop who is
wrongfully substituted for another. And as regards the observance
of the canons we lay it down that we ought to follow those, which
were defined at Nicæa, to which alone the Catholic Church is bound
to pay obedience and recognition. And if others are brought forward
by certain men, which are at variance with the canons framed at
Nicæa, and are proved to have been composed by heretics, let them
be rejected by the Catholic bishops. For the inventions of heretics
ought not to be appended to the Catholic canons; for by their
adverse and unlawful decrees they are always intending to weaken
the design of the canons of Nicæa. Not only therefore do we say
that these ought not to be followed, but rather that they should be
condemned amongst heretical and schismatic decrees, as was formerly
done in the Council of Sardica by the bishops who were before us.967
967 The Council of Sardica was convened A.D. 343, (or
A.D. 344?) with a view of settling the Arian controversy. The
Oriental bishops, however, of whom the majority belonged to the
Arian faction, seceded from Sardica, and held a separate council at
Philippopolis, where they drew up a creed which was condemned by
the Western bishops as heretical. | For it were
more fitting, most honoured brethren, that good deeds should be
condemned than that things done in direct opposition to the canons
should have any validity. But what are we to do against such things
at the present time? A synodical decision of them is necessary, and
we have long declared that a synod ought to be convened, as it is
the only means of allaying the agitation of such tempests as these:
and if we obtain this it is expedient that the healing of these
evils should be committed to the will of the great God, and His
Christ our Lord. All the disturbances then which have been caused
by the envy of the devil for the probation of the faithful will be
mitigated; through the firmness of our faith we ought not to
despair of anything from the Lord. For we ourselves also are
considering much by what means the œcumenical synod may be brought
together in order that by the will of God these disturbing
movements may be brought to an end. Let us therefore endure for a
while, and fortified by the wall of patience let us hope that all
things may be restored to us by the assistance of our God. Moreover
all things which ye say ye have undergone we have learned by
accurate enquiry from our fellow bishops who have already taken
refuge in Rome, although for the most part at different times, that
is to say, Demetrius, Cyriacus, Eulysius and Palladius, who are
here with us.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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