Letter 8: 1. I have often been astonished at your feeling towards me as you do, and how it comes about that an individual so small and insignificant, and having, maybe, very little that is lovable about him, should have so won your allegiance. You remind me of the claims of friendship and of fatherland, and press me urgently in your attempt to make me co...

Basil of CaesareaCaesareans|c. 357 AD|basil caesarea
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Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Persecution or exile
From: Basil of Caesarea, in retreat in Pontus
To: The Christians of Caesarea [Basil's home city in Cappadocia, central Turkey]
Date: ~360 AD
Context: Basil defends his decision to withdraw from city life for monastic study, explains his faith, and warns against false teachers.

To the Caesareans: A defense of his withdrawal, and concerning the faith.

1. I have often been amazed that you feel about me as you do, and how it happens that someone so small and insignificant — someone with perhaps very little that is lovable about him — should have won your loyalty so completely. You remind me of the claims of friendship and homeland, and press me urgently to come back, as though I were a runaway from a father's heart and home. That I am a runaway, I admit. I would hate to deny it; since you are already missing me, you deserve to know the reason.

I was stunned, like a man hit by a sudden noise. I did not suppress my thoughts but dwelt on them as I fled, and now I have been away from you a considerable time. Then I began to long for divine teaching and the philosophy that concerns it. How, I asked myself, could I overcome the trouble that dwells among us? Who would be my Laban, freeing me from Esau and leading me to the highest philosophy? By God's help, I have — as far as I am able — achieved my goal. I have found a chosen vessel, a deep well: I mean Gregory [Gregory of Nazianzus, Basil's closest friend since their student days in Athens], the mouth of Christ. So give me a little more time, I beg you. I am not embracing city life. I am well aware of how the evil one uses such things to devise deception, but I do find the company of the saints enormously valuable. Through the constant exchange of ideas about divine teaching, I am building a lasting habit of contemplation. That is where things stand with me.

2. My dear friends in God, I urge you: beware of the shepherds of the Philistines. Do not let them choke your wells without your noticing. Do not let them corrupt the purity of your knowledge of the faith. Their constant goal is not to teach ordinary souls lessons from Holy Scripture but to corrupt the harmony of the truth with pagan philosophy.

3. The faith we hold is this. We believe in one God and Father Almighty, through whom are all things; and in one Lord Jesus Christ, through whom are all things; and in one Holy Spirit, in whom all things are. We do not place the Father and the Son side by side as though they were two Gods — we confess one God, through the Son in the Spirit, as we say above. This doctrine is the bedrock. Everything that departs from it, departs from the truth.

Do not let anyone lead you away from this foundation, and do not let the flattery or the threats of heretics move you. In the name of Christ, I ask you: stand firm.

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

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