Letter 50017: This Epistle was written when Symmachus sent his memorial to Valentinian II. St. Ambrose presses on the Emperor the consideration that it is his business to defend religion, and not superstition.

Ambrose of MilanEmperor Valentinian|c. 380 AD|Ambrose of Milan
grief deathillnessimperial politicsproperty economics
Imperial politics; Church council; Persecution or exile
From: Ambrose, Bishop of Milan
To: Emperor Valentinian II
Date: ~384 AD
Context: Written when Symmachus submitted his memorial requesting the restoration of the Altar of Victory — Ambrose warns the young emperor that funding pagan worship would betray the memory of his father and brother, and would earn the censure of the Church.

Ambrose, Bishop, to the most blessed prince and most Christian Emperor Valentinian.

All who live under Roman rule serve you, the emperors and princes of the world. But you yourselves serve Almighty God and the holy faith. There is no path to salvation unless everyone worships in truth the true God — the God of the Christians, who governs all things. He alone is the true God, to be worshipped from the depths of the heart, for "the gods of the nations are demons" [Psalm 96:5].

Whoever serves this true God offers him not pretense but genuine faith and devotion. At the very least, no one should lend support to idol-worship or profane ceremonies. No one deceives God, from whom all things — even the hidden things of the heart — lie open.

Since this is so, most Christian Emperor, I am at a loss to understand how anyone could have hoped that you would order the restoration of pagan altars or provide public funds for profane sacrifices. What has long been claimed by the treasury would now appear to be given from your own pocket, not returned from theirs.

They complain about their losses — these people who never spared our blood, who tore down the very buildings of our churches. They petition you for privileges — the same people who, under Julian's recent law, denied Christians the common right of speaking and teaching. Those privileges were traps: they used them to ensnare Christians, partly through carelessness and partly to help them escape the burden of public duties. Not everyone is strong, and even under Christian emperors many have fallen.

But these things have already been abolished. They have been forbidden by numerous emperors across nearly the whole world. Valentinian, your father of senior memory, did not remove them — but neither did he restore them. Your brother Gratian removed them by formal rescript. Will you now undo what your father allowed to stand and your brother actively abolished?

The petition claims to come from the Senate. But the Christian senators — who are the majority — did not consent to it. They did not sign it. They did not authorize it. A handful of pagans are using the Senate's name without the Senate's agreement. Shall the will of a pagan minority overrule the conscience of a Christian majority?

I say this to you plainly, Emperor: if you issue such a decree, I — as a bishop — may be able to overlook it as a private matter, but I cannot ignore it as a public act. If the altar is restored, you may enter the church — but you will find either no priest to receive you, or one who stands against you.

What will you answer when a priest says: "The church does not want your gifts, because you have adorned pagan temples. The altar of Christ refuses your offerings, because you have made offerings at the altar of idols"?

Imitate your father. Imitate your brother. If you want the counsel of a bishop, listen to me. If you would rather listen to those who advise you otherwise, I must say what I think — and leave the rest to God.

In matters of faith, bishops are the judges. In such matters, the emperor serves within the church, not above it.

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

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