Letter 5052: Gregory to John, Archbishop of the Corinthians. The equity and solicitude of Secundinus our brother and fellow bishop, which had been well known to us of old, is shown also by the tenor of your letters. In this matter he has greatly pleased us, and made us glad, in that in the cause of Anastasius , once bishop, which we charged him to enquire in...

Pope Gregory the GreatJohn of Jerusalem|c. 594 AD|gregory great
church state conflictgrief deathproperty economics
Military conflict

Gregory to John, Archbishop of Corinth.

The fairness and diligence of our brother and fellow bishop Secundinus, already well known to us, is further confirmed by the contents of your letters. In this matter he has greatly pleased and gladdened us: in the case of the former bishop Anastasius, which we charged him to investigate, he exercised his vigilance with thoroughness, and judged the crimes that were uncovered as justice required and as was right.

In all this we give thanks to Almighty God that, when certain accusers held back, He brought the truth to light through other means, so that the perpetrator of such grave crimes would not escape undetected. But since, in the sentence by which the above-named Anastasius was justly condemned and deposed, our brother bishop handled the offenses of certain persons in such a way as to reserve them for our judgment, we have thought it right to state by this letter what is to be observed regarding them.

As for Paul the deacon, the bearer of this letter: although his fault is deeply disgraceful -- namely, that he was lured by promises into withholding his accusation against his recently deposed bishop, and in his greed for gain consented to keep silent rather than declare the truth -- yet since it befits us to be more merciful than severe, we pardon him this offense and rule that he is to be restored to his rank and position. We believe that the suffering he has endured since the pronouncement of the sentence may suffice as punishment for this fault.

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

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