Letter 1027: In proportion as the judgments of God are unsearchable ought they to be an object of fear to human apprehension; so that mortal reason, being unable to comprehend them, may of necessity bow under them the neck of a humble heart, to the end that it may follow with the mind's obedient steps where the will of the Ruler may lead. I, then, considerin...

Pope Gregory the GreatAnastasius|c. 590 AD|gregory great
illnessimperial politicspapal authorityproperty economicstravel mobility
Travel & mobility; Personal friendship; Economic matters

Book I, Letter 27

To Anastasius, Archbishop of Corinth [a major city in Greece].

Gregory to Anastasius.

The more God's judgments exceed our understanding, the more they ought to inspire something like awe. When reason can't follow, the only honest response is to lower your head and go where the will of our Ruler leads.

I knew my own limitations were no match for the demands of the apostolic See [the papacy]. I would rather have refused this. I was afraid that in accepting pastoral authority I'd only fail in it. But there's no arguing with God's will, so I followed the path that opened in front of me.

You should have heard this news from me regardless, but since an occasion has presented itself — I'm sending Boniface the defensor [a church legal advocate] as my representative — I'm glad to not only pass along the fraternal greetings I owe you, but to formally inform you of my ordination, which I know you'd want to know.

Write back. Tell me how things stand with you and with the Church's unity — the physical distance between us doesn't need to mean silence. And since I'm dispatching Boniface on urgent business to the Emperor in Constantinople, and travel these days is full of complications, I'm asking you to give him whatever he needs — supplies for the road, help arranging sea passage — so he can get there and back as quickly as possible.

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

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