Letter 10063: We have already learned what great pestilence has invaded the African parts; and, inasmuch as neither is Italy free from such affliction, doubled are the groans of our sorrows. But amid these evils and other innumerable calamities our heart, dearest brother, would fail from desperate distress, had not the Lord's voice fortified our weakness befo...

Pope Gregory the GreatDominicus|c. 600 AD|gregory great
famine plaguegrief deathillnessproperty economics
Natural disaster/crisis; Military conflict; Death & mourning

Gregory to Dominicus, Bishop of Carthage.

We have already learned of the devastating plague that has struck Africa, and since Italy is not free from the same affliction, our sorrows are doubled. Amid these evils and countless other calamities, dearest brother, our hearts would fail from sheer despair -- if the Lord's voice had not already strengthened our weakness. The trumpet of the Gospel long ago warned the faithful that as the end of the world approaches, there would be wars and many other things that we now see unfolding before our eyes (Matthew 24; Luke 21). We should not be too distressed by suffering what we already knew was coming, as though these things were unexpected.

Often, too, when we consider another's death, the manner of death itself can bring a kind of consolation. Think of the mutilations, the cruelties we have witnessed -- where death was the only relief, and life itself was the torment. Did not David, when offered a choice of three deaths, refuse famine and the sword and choose instead that his people should fall under the hand of God? Consider, then, what great mercy is shown to those who perish under divine chastisement -- they die by the very stroke that was offered to the holy prophet as a grace.

Let us give thanks to our Creator in all adversity. Trusting in his mercy, let us bear everything patiently, knowing we suffer far less than we deserve. Yet since we are chastised in time precisely so that we may not be left without the comfort of eternal life, and since these very signs tell us the coming Judge is near, we must all the more secure our accounts through zeal for good works and the tears of repentance. Let these great afflictions become, by the favor of his grace, not the beginning of our condemnation but a purification for our good.

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

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