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Epistle
XIV.
To the Count Narses1642
1642 On the case of John
of Chalcedon and Athanasius of Isaura, referred to in this and the
three following letters, see III. 53, note 9. | .
Gregory to Narses, &c.
Your Charity, being anxious to learn our opinion,
has been at the pains of writing to us to ask what we think of the book
against the presbyter Athanasius which was sent to us. Having
thoroughly perused some parts of it, we find that he has fallen into
the dogma of Manichæus. But he who has noted some places as
heretical by a mark set against them slips also himself into Pelagian
heresy; for he has marked certain places as heretical which are
catholicly expressed and entirely orthodox. For when this is
written; that when Adam sinned his soul died, the writer shews
afterwards how it is said to have died, namely that it lost the
blessedness of its condition. Whosoever denies this is not a
Catholic. For God had said, In the
hour ye eat thereof, in death ye shall die (Gen. ii. 17). When, therefore, Adam ate
of the forbidden tree, we know that he did not die in the body, seeing
that after this he begat children and lived many years. If, then,
he did not die in the soul, the impious conclusion follows that He
himself lied who foretold that in the day that he sinned he should
die. But it is to be understood that death takes place in two
ways; either from ceasing to live, or with respect to the mode of
living. When, then, man’s soul is said to have died in the
eating of the forbidden thing, it is meant, not in the sense of ceasing
to live, but with regard to the mode of living;—that he should
live afterwards in pain who had been created to live happily in
joy1643
1643 Cf. VII. 34 and
IX. 49, where the same argument, in nearly the same words, is set
forth. | . He, then, who has marked this
passage in the book sent to me by my brother the bishop John as
heretical is a Pelagian; for his view is evidently that of Pelagius,
which the apostle Paul plainly confutes in his epistles. The
particular passages in his epistle I need not quote, as I write to one
who knows. But Pelagius, who was condemned in the Ephesine synod,
maintained this view with the intention of shewing that we were
redeemed by Christ unreally. For, if we did not through Adam die
in the soul, we were redeemed unreally, which it were impious to
say. Further, having examined the acts of the synod of Ephesus,
we find nothing at all about Adelphius and Sava, and the others who are
said to have been condemned there, and we think that, as the synod of
Chalcedon was in one place falsified by the Constantinopolitan
Church,1644
1644 The reference may
be to Canon xxviii. of the Council of Chalcedon, assigning rank and
jurisdiction to the patriarchs of Constantinople, which was protested
against by the Roman legates at the Council and afterwards disallowed
by Pope Leo. It is omitted in the Latin version of the canons
published by Dionysius Exiguus about the beginning of the sixth
century, though it had been in the Prisca Versio which he
amended. It appears as if Gregory, not finding it in the Latin
version before him, supposed it to have been interpolated at
Constantinople; the fact being that it had been purposely omitted at
Rome, as not having the Pope’s sanction. If such is the
allusion, it may seem strange that Gregory did not know the
circumstances better. But this is not the only instance of his
imperfect knowledge of past events, even in ecclesiastical
matters. Cf. II. 51, note 2. | so something of
the kind has been done with regard to the synod of Ephesus.
Wherefore let your Charity make a thorough search for old copies
of the acts of this synod, and thus see whether anything of the kind is
found there, and send such copy as you may find to me, which I will
return as soon as I have read it. For recent copies are not
entirely to be trusted; and it is for this reason that I have been in
doubt, and have not wished as yet to reply in this case to my aforesaid
brother the bishop John. Further, the Roman copies are much more
correct than the Greek
ones,
since, as we have not your cleverness, so neither have we any
impostures.
Now concerning the presbyter John, know that his case
has been decided in synod, whereby I have clearly ascertained that his
adversaries have wished and long endeavoured to make him out a heretic,
but have entirely failed.
Salute in my name your friends, who are
ours: ours also, who are yours, salute you heartily through
me. May Almighty God protect thee with
His hand in the midst of so many thorns, that thou mayest, unhurt,
gather those flowers which the Lord hath
chosen. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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