Letter 50029: A letter from Augustine, presbyter of the district of Hippo, to Alypius, Bishop of Thagaste, concerning the...

Augustine of HippoAlypius|c. 405 AD|Augustine of Hippo
barbarian invasiondonatismgrief deathproperty economicsslavery captivity

A letter from Augustine, presbyter of the district of Hippo, to Alypius, Bishop of Thagaste, concerning the anniversary celebration for the late Bishop Leontius.

1. In the absence of our brother Macharius, I have not been able to write anything definite about the matter that has been causing me anxiety. I am told, however, that he will return soon, and whatever can be done with God's help will be done. Although the brothers from your town who were with us could have assured you of our concern when they returned, the thing the Lord has granted me is worth sharing through the kind of correspondence that brings us both comfort. Moreover, I believe your own prayers on our behalf played a great part in obtaining it.

2. So let me not fail to tell you what has happened, so that having joined us in pouring out prayers for this mercy before it was received, you may now join us in giving thanks afterward.

When I learned after your departure that some people were becoming openly hostile, declaring they could not accept the prohibition (announced while you were here) of that feast they call the "Laetitia" -- vainly trying to disguise their revels behind a respectable name -- it happened most opportunely, by God's hidden providence, that the Gospel passage assigned for that day's reading contained these words: "Do not give what is holy to the dogs, neither cast your pearls before swine" (Matthew 7:6). I preached on dogs and swine in a way that forced those who bark obstinately against God's commands, and who have given themselves over to the abominations of sensual pleasure, to blush with shame. I followed up by pointing out how criminal it was to practice, under the name of religion and within the walls of the church, what -- if done in their own homes -- would have warranted their exclusion from holy things and the precious gifts of the Church.

3. Although these words were well received, the attendance had been small, and the crisis required more. When the discourse became known through those who had heard it, it met with many opponents. But when the morning of Quadragesima arrived and a great crowd had assembled, the Gospel reading was the passage where our Lord drove the sellers from the temple and overturned the money-changers' tables, declaring His Father's house had been made "a den of thieves instead of a house of prayer" (Matthew 21:12). After drawing attention to the problem of excessive drinking, I read this passage and argued that our Lord would drive drunken feasting from His temple with even greater anger than He showed toward legitimate commerce -- since what was sold there was required for the sacrifices of that dispensation. I asked them which more closely resembled a den of thieves: a place occupied by merchants selling what was needed, or a place used by people drinking to excess?

4. I went on to point out, with Scripture passages I had prepared, that the Jewish people, for all their earthly-mindedness in religion, never held feasts -- not even moderate ones, let alone drunken ones -- in their temple. In all of Jewish history, they are found carried away by wine on only one occasion bearing the name of worship: when they held a feast before the idol they had made (Exodus 32:6). Reminding them of the apostle's words -- that Christians are "his letter, written not on tablets of stone, but on the tablets of human hearts" (2 Corinthians 3:3) -- I asked, with the deepest sorrow, how it was that although Moses broke both tablets of stone because of those rulers of Israel, I could not break the hearts of those who, as people of the New Covenant, were eager to repeat again and again the public perpetration of drunken excess in their celebrations of saints' days.

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

Related Letters

Augustine of HippoAlypiusc. 423 · augustine hippo #227

Brother Paulus has arrived here safely: he reports that the pains devoted to the business which engaged him have been rewarded with success; the Lord will grant that with these his trouble in that matter may terminate. He salutes you warmly, and tells us tidings concerning Gabinianus which give us joy, namely, that having by God's mercy obtained...

Augustine of HippoAlypiusc. 399 · augustine hippo #83

1. The sorrow of the members of the Church at Thiave prevents my heart from having any rest until I hear that they have been brought again to be of the same mind towards you as they formerly were; which must be accomplished without delay. For if the apostle was concerned about one individual, lest perhaps such an one should be swallowed up with ...

Isidore of PelusiumAlypiusc. 400 · isidore pelusium #122

You seem not to realize that the same word, the same phrase, and the same statement, when spoken with a different...

Augustine of HippoAlypiusc. 391 · augustine hippo #29

A Letter from the Presbyter of the District of Hippo to Alypius the Bishop of Thagaste, Concerning the Anniversary of the Birth of Leontius, Formerly Bishop of Hippo. 1. In the absence of brother Macharius, I have not been able to write anything definite concerning a matter about which I could not feel otherwise than anxious: it is said, howeve...

Augustine of HippoAlypiusc. 405 · augustine hippo #50083

I am writing to you about the situation at the monastery, beloved brother, because I know you share my concern for...