Letter 9122: I cannot express in words, most excellent son, how much I am delighted with your work and your life. For on hearing of the power of a new miracle in our days, to wit that the whole nation of the Goths has through your Excellency been brought over from the error of Arian heresy to the firmness of a right faith, one is disposed to exclaim with the...

Pope Gregory the GreatRechared, of Visigoths|c. 599 AD|gregory great
arianismbarbarian invasiondiplomatichumorimperial politicsproperty economicsslavery captivitytravel mobility
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Imperial politics

Gregory to Rechared, King of the Visigoths.

I cannot express in words, most excellent son, how much I am delighted by your work and your life. When we hear of the remarkable miracle God has accomplished in our own time -- that the entire Gothic nation, through Your Excellency, has been brought from the error of Arian heresy to the firmness of the true faith -- we are moved to cry out with the prophet: "This is the change wrought by the right hand of the Most High" (Psalm 77:10).

Whose heart, even if it were stone, would not soften into praise of Almighty God and love for Your Excellency on hearing of so great a work? As for me, I tell my sons who come to me of what has been accomplished through you, and together with them I marvel at it often. And most of the time these reports stir me up against my own conscience -- for I lie here sluggish and useless in idle ease, while kings labor to gather souls for the treasures of the heavenly country.

What, then, shall I say to the coming Judge at that fearsome tribunal, if I arrive there empty-handed, while Your Excellency leads forward flocks of the faithful whom you have drawn to the grace of the true faith through your tireless and continual preaching? But this, good man, by the gift of God, gives me great comfort: that the holy work I do not find in myself, I love in you. And when I rejoice with deep exultation at what you have done, the fruits of your labor become mine through charity.

With regard, therefore, to the conversion of the Goths -- for your work and for our shared joy -- we may well proclaim with the angels: "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men of good will" (Luke 2:14). For we, I think, owe Almighty God all the more thanks because, although we have done nothing alongside you, we are nonetheless sharers in your work by rejoicing with you.

As for how gladly the blessed Peter, Prince of the Apostles, received the gifts Your Excellency sent him -- of this, the very results of the conversion bear witness.

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

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