Letter 188: Even a fool, it is said, when he asks questions, is counted wise. But when a wise man asks questions, he makes even a fool wise. And this, thank God, is my case, as often as I receive a letter from your industrious self.

Basil of CaesareaAmphilochius, of Iconium|c. 368 AD|basil caesarea
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Theological controversy; Natural disaster/crisis; Military conflict
From: Basil, Bishop of Caesarea
To: Amphilochius, Bishop of Iconium
Date: ~368 AD
Context: The first of Basil's three great canonical letters -- responses to Amphilochius's questions about church discipline that became foundational texts of Eastern canon law. This letter addresses the treatment of heretics, schismatics, the lapsed, and questions of marriage and penance.

(First Canonical Letter)

To Amphilochius, concerning the Canons:

"Even a fool, when he asks questions, is counted wise" -- but when a wise man asks questions, he makes even a fool wise. This, thank God, is my experience every time a letter arrives from you. We become more knowledgeable simply by engaging with your questions, because we are taught things we had not considered, and the effort of answering serves as a teacher in itself. At present, though I had never given close attention to the points you raise, I have been compelled to investigate carefully and to turn over in my mind both what I heard from the elders and everything I was taught in keeping with their instruction.

I. Regarding your inquiry about the Cathari [the "Pure Ones," a rigorist sect]: a ruling has already been made, and you rightly remind me that we should follow the custom prevailing in each region, since those who originally decided these matters held different views about the validity of their baptism. But the baptism of the Pepuzeni [followers of the Montanist heresy, named after their headquarters in Pepuza, Phrygia] seems to me to carry no authority at all, and I am astonished that this escaped Dionysius [Dionysius the Great of Alexandria], well-versed as he was in the canons.

The old authorities decided to accept only that baptism which in no way departs from the faith. They distinguished three categories: heresies, schisms, and unlawful assemblies. By "heresies" they meant those completely broken off and alienated in matters of actual faith. By "schisms" they meant those who had separated over ecclesiastical disputes that could be mutually resolved. By "unlawful assemblies" they meant gatherings held by disorderly presbyters, bishops, or undisciplined laymen -- as when a man convicted of an offense is barred from ministry but refuses to submit to the canons, instead claiming episcopal and ministerial authority for himself, and others leave the Catholic Church to follow him.

[This letter continues at great length with detailed canonical rulings on the rebaptism of various heretical groups, the treatment of those who have lapsed in persecution, categories of penance, regulations on marriage after divorce, and the proper handling of clergy who have fallen into sin. These rulings became authoritative in Eastern church law.]

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

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