Letter 141: 1. I have now received two letters from your divine and most excellent wisdom, whereof the one told me clearly how I had been expected by the laity under the jurisdiction of your holiness, and what disappointment I had caused by failing to attend the sacred synod. The other, which from the writing I conjecture to be of the earlier date, though i...

Basil of CaesareaEusebius, Archbishop of Thessalonica|c. 365 AD|basil caesarea
arianismillness
Church council; Personal friendship; Death & mourning

To Eusebius, Bishop of Samosata [a city on the Euphrates in southeastern Turkey, and one of Basil's closest allies in the fight against Arianism]

I've now received two letters from you. The first described how the people under your care had been expecting me at the synod [a regional church council], and how disappointed they were when I didn't show up. The second — which I think you actually wrote earlier, though it arrived later — urged me not to neglect the Churches or let control of affairs slowly slip into our opponents' hands. Good advice, and I needed to hear it.

I believe I answered both letters, but I'm not confident my replies ever reached you. So let me explain again.

As for my absence: I have a solid excuse. I've been seriously ill — at death's door, honestly. Even now, as I write this, I'm still not well. Another person might find the lingering symptoms unbearable.

As for the charge that I've let the Churches fall into our opponents' hands through neglect — I want you to understand the situation. The bishops who are supposedly in communion with me either lack the will to act, or they distrust me and won't speak openly, or the devil is simply doing what he does best: blocking every good effort. We used to be more united — the excellent Bosporius [bishop of Colonia in Cappadocia] among us — but now, on the things that matter most, they give me nothing.

The result is that my grief over the state of the Church is actually slowing my physical recovery. The stress brings back my worst symptoms. But what can I do alone? You know as well as I do that church law doesn't allow one bishop to settle these matters by himself. And yet I've tried everything — writing letters, visiting in person, making every argument I can think of.

Here's the frustrating part: they even came to the city when they heard I was dying. When they found me still alive, by God's mercy, I spoke to them plainly about what needed to be done. In my presence, they show respect and agree to everything. The moment they go home, they revert to their old positions.

I'm suffering through this like everyone else. The Lord has clearly stepped back from us — and who can blame him? Love has grown cold because wickedness is everywhere. [An echo of Matthew 24:12.]

So all I ask is this: pray for me with that great, powerful intercession of yours. Maybe we'll still accomplish something useful. And if we fail, perhaps we'll at least escape condemnation for not having tried.

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

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