Letter 1081

Gregory the Great (Wisigothic)Unknown|gregory great
From: Gregory the Great, Pope, in Rome
To: The clergy, order, and people of Bevagna
Date: ~591 AD
Context: Gregory urges the community of Bevagna to finally agree on the election of a bishop.

Gregory to the clergy, order, and people of Bevagna [a small town in Umbria].

It is reported to us that you have been unable to agree on the election of a bishop. This has been going on too long. A church without a bishop is like a ship without a captain — it can drift for a while, but it is not going anywhere useful, and eventually the situation becomes actively dangerous.

I urge you, indeed I direct you, to set aside whatever disagreements and personal preferences are preventing you from reaching agreement, and to elect a bishop. The criteria are clear: the man chosen should be of sound faith, blameless life, good judgment, and genuine pastoral concern for the people he will serve. Personal connections and factional loyalties should not enter into this; what matters is who will actually serve the church well.

Come to an agreement. Elect a bishop. Inform me of your choice so that the ordination can proceed.
Gregory

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