Letter 22: St. Ambrose in a letter to his sister gives an account of the finding of the bodies of SS. Gervasius and Protasius, and of his addresses to the people on that occasion.

Ambrose of Milansister, dearer to him than eyes and life, Ambrose|c. 382 AD|ambrose milan
arianismeducation booksgrief deathillnessimperial politicsproperty economics
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Persecution or exile
From: Ambrose, Bishop of Milan
To: His sister Marcellina
Date: ~386 AD
Context: Ambrose reports the sensational discovery of the bodies of the martyrs Gervasius and Protasius — a politically charged event that provided miraculous vindication of his authority against the Arians and the imperial court.

To the lady my sister, dearer to me than my eyes and life — Ambrose, Bishop.

Since I want nothing that happens here in your absence to escape your knowledge, you must know that we have discovered the bodies of holy martyrs. After I dedicated the basilica, many people, as if with one voice, said: "Consecrate it as you did the Roman basilica!" I answered: "I will — if I find relics of martyrs." And at once, a kind of prophetic fervor seemed to enter my heart.

God favored us. Even the clergy were afraid when they were ordered to dig at the spot before the chancel screen of the church of Saints Felix and Nabor. But I found the signs I was looking for. We discovered two men of remarkable stature — bodies from the ancient days, with all the bones intact and a great quantity of blood still present. For two full days, enormous crowds came to see. We arranged everything in order, and as evening fell we transferred the relics to the basilica of Fausta, where a vigil was kept through the night. The next day we brought them to the basilica that bears my name [the Basilica Ambrosiana, now Sant'Ambrogio in Milan].

During the translation, a blind man was healed. His name is Severus, a butcher by trade, well known in the city. He touched the cloth covering the bier, and immediately his sight was restored. He is alive and can testify to this himself. Many others came forward with accounts of healing.

[The discovery of these relics was a political as well as a spiritual event. Ambrose was locked in a bitter struggle with the Arian empress Justina for control of Milan's churches. The miracles associated with Gervasius and Protasius served as dramatic public validation of his authority and his theology.]

I preached to the people. Taking my text from Psalm 19 — "The heavens declare the glory of God" — I explained that the "heavens" are the martyrs and apostles, and "the day" is their confession. These men were humbled by God and then raised up. Their blood, shed centuries ago, still speaks. The earth that held them could not contain their testimony.

The Arians denied the miracles. Of course they did. They denied them just as the Jews once denied the miracles of Christ. I said to the people: "The devils themselves confess the Trinity. They cry out when confronted with the relics of the martyrs: 'We know that you serve the one God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.' But the Arians deny the Trinity that the demons acknowledge. Who, then, has less faith — the demons or the heretics?"

The crowd roared its approval. The Arians had no answer. The bodies of Gervasius and Protasius lie now in the basilica — silent witnesses to the truth, more eloquent than any living preacher, and far more persuasive than anything the court or its Arian bishops can produce.

I report all this to you so that you may know: God defends his church not only through arguments and councils but through signs and wonders. When the living fail, the dead speak.

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

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