Letter 14012: The letters which you sent us a little time ago from the Genoese parts have made us partakers of your joy on account of our learning that by the favour of Almighty God a son has been given you, and, as is greatly to your Excellency's credit, has been received into the fellowship of the Catholic faith . Nor indeed was anything else to be supposed...

Pope Gregory the GreatTheodelinda|c. 604 AD|gregory great
barbarian invasiondiplomaticgrief deathimperial politicsmonasticismpapal authoritywomen
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Church council

Gregory to Queen Theodelinda of the Lombards.

The letters you sent us from Genoa have made us share in your joy. By the favor of Almighty God, a son has been given to you -- and, as is greatly to your Excellency's credit, he has been received into the fellowship of the Catholic faith [through baptism]. Nothing less was to be expected of your Christianity: that you would fortify the child God has given you with the armor of Catholic truth. Our Redeemer now acknowledges you as his devoted servant and will, I trust, raise up a new king for the nation of the Lombards in his holy fear.

I pray Almighty God to keep you in the way of his commandments and to cause our most excellent son Adulouvald [the newborn prince] to grow in his love, so that as he is great among men in this world, he may also be glorious before the eyes of God for his good deeds.

As for what your Excellency requested -- that I reply fully to what our most beloved son, the Abbot Secundus, has written -- who could think of refusing his petition or your wishes, knowing how profitable the answers would be to many? But illness stands in the way. I am so severely afflicted with gout that I can barely rise, not only for writing, but even for speaking -- as your ambassadors can confirm. They found me weak on arrival and left me in the utmost danger of my life.

If, by God's ordering, I recover, I will reply in full. In the meantime, I am sending through your envoys the records of the Synod held under the Emperor Justinian of pious memory, so that my most beloved son the Abbot may read for himself and understand that everything he has heard spoken against the Apostolic See or the Catholic Church was groundless.

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

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