Letter 81

Ambrose of MilanChurch of Neocaesarea|c. 385 AD|ambrose milan
From: Ambrose, Bishop of Milan
To: The Church at Milan
Date: ~395 AD
Context: The funeral oration for Emperor Theodosius I, who died in Milan on January 17, 395. One of Ambrose's last and most important public addresses, it is both a eulogy for a great emperor and a political statement about the meaning of Christian rulership.

Ambrose, Bishop, to the faithful — on the death of the Emperor Theodosius.

Forty days have passed since the death of the Emperor Theodosius [following the biblical pattern of forty-day mourning periods], and it is time to speak what is in our hearts.

We have lost the last great emperor. I say this knowing that his sons Arcadius and Honorius [who inherited the eastern and western halves of the empire respectively] now reign, and I pray for their success. But Theodosius was the last emperor who held the whole Roman world in one hand and the Christian faith in the other, and wielded both with equal conviction.

He was not a perfect man. I know his faults better than most — I confronted him with them publicly, at Thessalonica and at other times. He was capable of terrible anger, and that anger, when unchecked, produced terrible consequences. But he was also capable of something rarer: genuine repentance. The emperor who ordered the massacre at Thessalonica is the same emperor who stood in the church of Milan, stripped of the purple, weeping, and publicly confessing his sin before the congregation.

That act of repentance is worth more than all his military victories. Generals conquer nations; penitents conquer themselves. And the victory over self is the only victory that endures.

I commend his soul to God. I commend his example to his successors. And I commend to all of you the lesson of his life: that power without humility is tyranny, and humility without power is impotence, but the combination of the two — power exercised in humility before God — is the closest thing to just government that this fallen world can produce.

He was the emperor before whom I would not offer the sacrifice, and the emperor for whom I now offer it with joy. May the God he served receive him into the peace that no empire can provide.

Rest in Christ, Theodosius. The world will not see your like again soon.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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