Letter 72

Synesius of CyreneAvitus of Vienne|c. 411 AD|synesius cyrene
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To the Bishops.

Let Andronicus [a notoriously corrupt local official], who has made a mockery of the Church, now experience her justice. Just yesterday he sinned against God and insulted humanity. For this we closed the church against him and drafted a letter to your brotherhood announcing the sentence.

He anticipated the letter by pretending to be a suppliant and promising repentance. Everyone wanted me to admit him to penance — everyone except me, because I thought I knew the man too well. He is capable of saying and doing anything. I predicted he would revert to form at the first opportunity.

Still, I judged he would be less dangerous while under our sentence than if entirely free from suspicion. So I wanted to maintain the decree, aiming to be both pious toward God and useful to my fellow citizens.

But it is presumptuous to resist when you stand alone against many — a younger man against elders, someone not yet a year in office against men who have spent their lives in the priesthood. I yielded to their demand. I agreed not to circulate the letter yet and to receive Andronicus on his promise to stop mistreating his peers and to let reason guide his conduct henceforth.

"Within those limits you have set yourself, we will not only pray for the pardon of your sin, but we will pray in your company. However, if you break your word, the sentence stands and will be published for all to see. The punishment is merely postponed long enough for everyone to witness that your repentance was genuine — or that it was not."

[The letter continues with Synesius describing how Andronicus immediately reverted to his old behavior, proving Synesius's fears justified.]

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

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