Athanasius, Presbyter

The Athanasius who appears 20 times in this collection as a recipient of Basil of Caesarea's letters was a presbyter — not the famous Athanasius of Alexandria, but a trusted subordinate and correspondent who served as one of Basil's key contacts during the Arian controversy. Basil's letters to this Athanasius cover ecclesiastical politics, theological questions, and the practical management of the pro-Nicene coalition in the East. They reveal the layer of communication beneath the famous exchanges between bishops — the network of priests, deacons, and minor officials who kept the ecclesiastical machinery running. This Athanasius matters as a reminder that the great theological controversies of the fourth century were not just debates between titans — they were sustained by a much larger network of committed individuals whose names we barely know.
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Letters sent
20
Letters received
20
Total letters
4
Correspondents

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All letters (20)

From Isidore of Pelusium
isidore pelusium #1217
From Basil of Caesareac. 358

That one of the things hardest to achieve, if indeed it be not impossible, is to rise superior to calumny, I am myself fully persuaded, and so too, I presume, is your excellency. Yet not to give a handle by one's own conduct, either to inquisitive critics of society, or to mischief makers who lie in wait to catch us tripping, is not only possibl...

basil caesarea #24
From Basil of Caesareac. 358

1. I have received intelligence from those who come to me from Ancyra, and they are many and more than I can count, but they all agree in what they say, that you, a man very dear to me, (how can I speak so as to give no offense?) do not mention me in very pleasant terms, nor yet in such as your character would lead me to expect. I, however, lear...

basil caesarea #25
From Basil of Caesareac. 360

I have read the letter of your holiness, in which you have expressed your distress at the unhappy governor of Libya. I am grieved that my own country should have given birth to and nurtured such vices. I am grieved too that Libya, a neighbouring country, should suffer from our evils, and should have been delivered to the inhumanity of a man whos...

basil caesarea #61
From Basil of Caesareac. 361

No one, I feel sure, is more distressed at the present condition, or, rather to speak more truly, ill condition of the Churches than your excellency; for you compare the present with the past, and take into account how great a change has come about. You are well aware that if no check is put to the swift deterioration which we are witnessing, th...

basil caesarea #66
From Basil of Caesareac. 361

In my former letter it seemed to me sufficient to point out to your excellency, that all that portion of the people of the holy Church of Antioch who are sound in the faith, ought to be brought to concord and unity. My object was to make it plain that the sections, now divided into several parts, ought to be united under the God-beloved bishop M...

basil caesarea #67
From Basil of Caesareac. 361

1. As time moves on, it continually confirms the opinion which I have long held of your holiness; or rather that opinion is strengthened by the daily course of events. Most men are indeed satisfied with observing, each one, what lies especially within his own province; not thus is it with you, but your anxiety for all the Churches is no less tha...

basil caesarea #69
From Basil of Caesareac. 362

The worse the diseases of the Churches grow, the more do we all turn to your excellency, in the belief that your championship is the one consolation left to us in our troubles. By the power of your prayers, and your knowledge of what is the best course to suggest in the emergency, you are believed to be able to save us from this terrible tempest...

basil caesarea #80
From Basil of Caesareac. 362

When I turn my gaze upon the world, and perceive the difficulties by which every effort after good is obstructed, like those of a man walking in fetters, I am brought to despair of myself. But then I direct my gaze in the direction of your reverence; I remember that our Lord has appointed you to be physician of the diseases in the Churches; and ...

basil caesarea #82
From Basil of Caesareac. 365

You may conjecture from what it contains, what pleasure you have given me by your letter. The pureness of heart, from which such expressions sprang, was plainly signified by what you wrote. A streamlet tells of its own spring, and so the manner of speech marks the heart from which it came.

basil caesarea #134
From Basil of Caesareac. 366

1. So far from being impatient at the length of your letter, I assure you I thought it even short, from the pleasure it gave me when reading it. For is there anything more pleasing than the idea of peace?

basil caesarea #156
From Basil of Caesareac. 369

I took the earliest opportunity of writing to the most admirable Count Terentius, thinking it better to write to him on the subject in hand by means of strangers, and being anxious that our very dear brother Acacius shall not be inconvenienced by any delay. I have therefore given my letter to the government treasurer, who is travelling by the im...

basil caesarea #215
From Basil of Caesareac. 370

1. I have received your reverence's letter and I am delighted at the title which you have felicitously applied to the writing which they have composed in calling it a writing of divorcement. Matthew 19:7 What defense the writers will be able to make before the tribunal of Christ, where no excuse will avail, I am quite unable to conceive.

basil caesarea #224
From Theodoret of Cyrrhusc. 440
theodoret cyrrhus #19
From Theodoret of Cyrrhusc. 440
theodoret cyrrhus #20
From Theodoret of Cyrrhusc. 440
theodoret cyrrhus #51
From Theodoret of Cyrrhusc. 440
theodoret cyrrhus #61
From Theodoret of Cyrrhusc. 440
theodoret cyrrhus #62
From Theodoret of Cyrrhusc. 440
theodoret cyrrhus #107
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 595

Gregory to Athanasius, Presbyter of Isauria. As we are afflicted and mourn for those whom the error of heretical pravity has cut off from the unity of the Church, so we rejoice with those whom their profession of the Catholic faith retains within her bosom. And, as it is our duty to oppose the impiety of the former with pastoral solicitude, so i...

gregory great #6066