Letter 4030: The Serenity of your Piety, conspicuous for religious zeal and love of holiness, has charged me with your commands to send to you the head of Saint Paul, or some other part of his body, for the church which is being built in honour of the same Saint Paul in the palace. And, being desirous of receiving commands from you, by exhibiting the most re...

Pope Gregory the GreatConstantina Augusta|c. 593 AD|gregory great
grief deathimperial politicsmonasticismslavery captivity
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Imperial politics; Persecution or exile

Gregory to the Empress Constantina.

The serenity of your Piety, distinguished by religious devotion and love of holiness, has commanded me to send you the head of Saint Paul, or some other part of his body, for the church being built in his honor at the palace. I wish nothing more than to demonstrate my readiness to obey, so as to deserve your continued favor. But I am deeply distressed that I can neither do what you ask nor dare to do it.

The bodies of the Apostles Saint Peter and Saint Paul radiate such mighty miracles and such terrors in their churches that a person cannot even approach to pray without great awe. When my predecessor of blessed memory wished to replace the silver covering over the most sacred body of the blessed Apostle Peter — though standing nearly fifteen feet from the body — a sign of no small dreadfulness appeared to him. I too wished to make an alteration near the most sacred body of Saint Paul the Apostle. When digging was required near his tomb, the superintendent of that place found some bones not connected to the tomb itself. Because he presumed to lift and relocate them, terrible signs appeared, and he died suddenly.

Beyond this, when my predecessor of holy memory was making improvements near the body of Saint Lawrence the martyr, the exact location of the venerable body being unknown, workers began digging in search of it. The tomb was suddenly and unexpectedly uncovered. Those present — monks and caretakers who saw the body of the martyr, though they did not presume to touch it — all died within ten days, so that none who had looked upon the holy remains survived.

Your most pious Majesty should know, then, that it is not the custom of the Romans, when giving relics, to presume to touch any part of the body. Instead, a cloth is placed in a box and set near the most sacred bodies of the saints. When withdrawn, it is deposited with due reverence in the church that is to be dedicated, and miracles occur through it just as if the bodies themselves had been brought there.

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

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