Letter 1042: John, our brother and fellow bishop, in a schedule sent to us by his cleric Justus, has among many other things intimated to us as follows: that some monks of the diocese of Surrentum transmigrate from monastery to monastery as they please, and depart from the rule of their own abbot out of desire for a worldly life; nay even (what is known to ...

Pope Gregory the GreatAnthemius|c. 590 AD|gregory great
grief deathmonasticismproperty economics
Military conflict; Economic matters

Book I, Letter 42

To Anthemius, Subdeacon [Gregory's financial agent in the Sorrento area].

Gregory to Anthemius.

John, our brother and fellow bishop, has sent us a report through his cleric Justus that includes, among many other things, the following: certain monks in the diocese of Sorrento [a coastal area south of Naples] are moving from monastery to monastery as they please, abandoning the rule of their own abbot out of a desire for worldly living. Worse still -- which is known to be forbidden -- some are even aiming to hold personal property.

We therefore command you by this order: no monk is henceforth to be allowed to transfer between monasteries, and you are not to permit any of them to own anything personally. If anyone dares to do so, send him back under proper constraint to the monastery where he originally lived, to be placed again under the authority of the abbot he fled from. If we allow such a grave violation to go uncorrected, the souls of those who are lost will be required from their superiors.

Furthermore, if any clergy choose to become monks, they may not afterward return to the church where they previously served, nor to any other -- unless a monk proves to be of such outstanding character that the bishop under whom he formerly served considers him worthy of the priesthood. In that case, the bishop may choose him and ordain him to whatever position he sees fit.

We have also learned that some monks have fallen into such wickedness as to openly take wives. Seek these out with all diligence and, when found, send them back under constraint to the monasteries they belonged to. Apply the same rules to clergy who have professed the monastic life. Do this, and you will be pleasing in God's eyes and share in a full reward.

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

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