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| To the Bishop of Aquileia. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Letters.
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Letter I.
To the Bishop of Aquileia.
I. Through the negligence of the
authorities the Pelagian heresy has been spreading in his
province.
From the account of our holy brother and
fellow-bishop Septimus which is contained in the subjoined
letter16
16 It is to be supposed that
the letter of Septimus, bp. of Altinum, was sent with this
letter. See Lett. XVIII. n. 3. | , we have understood that certain priests and
deacons and clergy of various orders17
17 Viz. members of the
minor order as they are now called, subdeacons, exorcists, &c. | in your province
who have been drawn in by the Pelagian or Cælestian heresy, have
attained to catholic communion without any recantation of their
peculiar error being required of them; and that, whilst the shepherds
set to watch were fast asleep, wolves clothed in sheep-skins but
without laying aside their bestial minds have entered into the
Lord’s sheep-fold: and that they
make a practice of what is not allowed even to non-offenders by the
injunctions of our canons and decrees18
18 It has been the rule at
least since the council of Nicæa (325) that the clergy should stay
in the church (or “diocese” as we should call it) of their
ordination, cf. Canons of Nicæa xxi. de his qui Ecclesias
deserunt et ad alias transeunt, and xxii. de non suscipiendis
alterius Ecclesiæ clericis. And we often find Leo
insisting on the observance of the rule. | : to wit
that they should leave the churches in which they received or regained
their office and carry their uncertainty in all directions, loving to
continue wandering and never to remain on the foundations of the
Apostles. For without being sifted by any test or bound by any
previous confession of faith, they make a great point of their right to
the privilege of going to one house after another under cover of their
being in communion with the Church, and corrupting the hearts of many
through men’s ignorance19
19 Inscientiam:
the general reading being scientiam, the sense of which is
not clear. | of their false
name. And yet I am sure they could not do this, if the rulers of
the churches had exercised their rightful diligence in the matter of
receiving such, and had not allowed any of them to wander from place to
place.
II. He orders a provincial synod to be
convened to receive the recantation of the heretics in express
terms.
Accordingly, lest this should be attempted any
further, and lest this pernicious habit, which owes its introduction to
certain persons’ negligence, should result in the overthrow of
many souls, by this our authoritative injunction we charge you,
brother, to give diligence that a synod of the clergy20
20 Sacerdotum: I
am in doubt as to what this term here includes, but think it probable
that all ranks of the clergy were to be summoned. The words
sacerdos and antistes in early ecclesiastical Latin very
often mean the bishop (episcopus) specifically
rather than the presbyter (sacerdos secundi
ordinis), because it was the bishop who offered the
“sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving” (i.e. the
Eucharist), and the presbyter only in his default; but the term
sacerdos does certainly often include the presbyters and also
the deacons (sacerdotes tertii ordinis) when in connexion with
the priests and bishops, and it seems likely that the whole body of the
clergy of the province would be summoned to the synod: see
Bright’s note 110: also Bingham, Antiq., Bk. II., chap.
xix., §§ 14, 15. | of
your province be convened, and all, whether priests or deacons or
clerics of any rank who have been re-admitted from their alliance with
the Pelagians and the Cælestians into catholic communion with such
precipitation that they were not first constrained to recant their
error, be now at least forced to a true correction, which can advantage
themselves and hurt no one, since their deceitfulness has in part been
disclosed. Let them by their public confession condemn the
authors of this presumptuous21
21 Superbi
(proud): the epithet is well chosen and not a random one:
for pride and presumption are at the root of the Pelagian views as
birth-sin and baptismal grace: perfectionism is little in
accordance with Christian humility. | error and renounce all
that the universal Church has repudiated in their doctrine: and
let them announce by full and open statements, signed by their own
hand, that they embrace and entirely approve of all the synodal decrees
which the authority of the Apostolic See has ratified to the rooting
out of this heresy. Let nothing obscure, nothing ambiguous be
found in their words. For we know that their cunning is such that
they reckon that the meaning of any particular clause of their
execrable doctrine can be defended if they only keep it distinct from
the main body of their damnable views22
22 For the same sentiment
cf. Prosper, de ingratis, v. 188. | .
III.
The Pelagian view of God’s grace is
unscriptural.
And when they pretend to disapprove of and give up
all their definitions to facilitate evasion through their complete art
of deception, unless their meaning is detected, they make exception of
the dogma that the grace of God is given
according to the merits of the recipient. And yet surely, unless
it is given freely, it is not a gift23
23 The reader need hardly
be reminded that in the New Testament “grace” (Lat.
gratia, Gk. χάρις) signifies “a free
gift.” | , but a price
and compensation for merits: for the blessed Apostle says,
“by grace ye have been saved through faith, and that not of
yourselves but it is the gift of God; not of
works lest any should perchance be exalted. For we are His
workmanship created in Christ Jesus in good works, which God prepared that we should walk in them24 .” Thus every bestowal of good
works is of God’s preparing:
because a man is justified by grace rather than by his own
excellence: for grace is to every one the source of
righteousness, the source of good and the fountain of merit. But
these heretics say it is anticipated by men’s natural goodness
for this reason, that that nature which (in their view) is before grace
conspicuous for good desires of its own, may not seem marred by any
stain of original sin, and that what the Truth says may be
falsified: “For the Son of Man came to seek and to save
that which was lost25
25 S. Luke ix. 10. Between this and the next
chapter some of the mss. and the earlier
editions insert a passage from Augustine’s Enchiridion, which
thus formed chapter iv. | .”
IV. Prompt measures are
essential.
You must take heed, therefore, beloved, and with great
diligence make provision that offences which have long been removed be
not set up again through such men and that no seed of the same evil
spring up in your province from a doctrine which has once been
uprooted: for not only will it take root and grow, but also will
taint the future generations of the Church with its poisonous
exhalations. Those who wish to appear corrected must purge
themselves of all suspicion: and by obeying us, prove themselves
ours. And if any of them decline to satisfy our wholesome
injunctions, be he cleric or layman, he must be driven from the society
of the Church lest he deal treacherously by others’ safety as
well as forfeit his own soul.
V. The canons must be enforced against
clerics who wander from one church to another.
We admonish you also to restore to full working
that part of the discipline of the Church whereby the holy Fathers and
we have often in former times decreed that neither in the grade of the
priesthood nor in the order of the diaconate nor in the lower ranks of
the clergy, is any one at liberty to migrate from church to
church: to the end that each one may persevere where he was
ordained without being enticed by ambition, or led astray by greed, or
corrupted by men’s evil beliefs: and thus that if any one,
seeking his own interests, not those of Jesus Christ26 ,
neglect to return to his own people27
27 Plebem:
this being the regular term for the “Laity” in early
Christian Latin. | and church, he
may be reckoned out of the pale both in respect of promotion and of the
bond of communion. But do not doubt, beloved, that we must be
somewhat sorely moved if, as we think not, our decrees for the
maintenance of the canons and the integrity of the faith be
neglected: because the short-comings of the lower orders28 are to be laid at the door of none so much
as of those slothful and remiss rulers who often foster much pestilence
by shrinking from the application of a stringent
remedy.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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