Letter 211: In This Letter Augustine Rebukes the Nuns of the Monastery in Which His Sister Had Been Prioress, for Certain Turbulent Manifestations of Dissatisfaction with Her Successor, and Lays Down General Rules for Their Guidance. 1. As severity is ready to punish the faults which it may discover, so charity is reluctant to discover the faults which it m...

Augustine of HippoUnknown|c. 420 AD|augustine hippo
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Augustine to the community of religious women at Hippo, greetings.

Since the troubles I addressed in my recent letter have made it clear that a written rule is needed — one that can be read, studied, and referred to when disputes arise — I set down here the principles by which your community should be governed.

The first and fundamental rule is this: the reason you have come together is to live in harmony, of one mind and one heart, on the way to God. Hold all things in common. Let nothing be called your own. "The community of believers was of one heart and one soul, and no one said that any of the things which he possessed was his own, but they had everything in common" [Acts 4:32].

Do not say that you have given up your possessions — as if the sacrifice entitles you to special treatment. The rich woman who gave up much has no more claim on the community's resources than the poor woman who gave up little. Both come empty-handed. What matters is not what you gave up but what you gain together.

Regarding prayer: observe the established hours faithfully. Let the oratory be used for nothing but prayer. Those who have time between the scheduled hours should pray whenever the spirit moves them. When you pray, let your hearts correspond to your voices. Singing is appropriate — but only what is designated for singing. And do not read for pleasure what was not meant for singing.

Regarding dress and appearance: do not seek to attract attention by your clothing. Dress modestly and practically, as befits women who have renounced the vanity of the world. Do not take pride in plain dress any more than in fine dress. Pride in humility is still pride.

Regarding correction: when you see a sister in error, correct her privately first. If she does not listen, bring one or two others. If she still refuses, bring the matter to the superior. Do this not out of spite but out of love — because a wound left untreated becomes gangrenous, and a sin left uncorrected spreads.

Above all: love one another. Not with the possessive love that clings and demands, not with the partial love that favors friends over strangers, but with the generous, outpouring love that seeks the good of the other before its own. This love is not natural — it is supernatural. You cannot produce it by effort alone. It is a gift of God, poured into your hearts by the Holy Spirit. Ask for it constantly. It is the one thing you truly need.

Farewell, beloved sisters.

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

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