Letter 2054: Here follows the Epistle of Saint Licinianus, bishop, concerning the Book of Rules, addressed to Saint Gregory, pope of the city of Rome. To the most blessed Lord pope Gregory, Licinianus, bishop. The Book of Rules issued by Your Holiness, and by the aid of divine grace conveyed to us, we have read with all the more pleasure for the spiritual ru...

Pope Gregory the GreatUnknown|c. 591 AD|gregory great
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Imperial politics; Military conflict; Personal friendship

Gregory to Natalis, Bishop of Salona.

[This letter is from Bishop Licinianus to Gregory, not from Gregory himself.]

To the most blessed Lord Pope Gregory, from Licinianus, Bishop.

The Book of Rules issued by Your Holiness, which reached us by divine grace, we have read with all the greater pleasure for the spiritual guidance we found in it. Who would not read with pleasure a work in which, through constant meditation, one may find medicine for the soul -- in which, despising the fleeting and changeable things of this world, one may open the eyes of the soul to the settled reality of eternal life?

This book of yours is a palace of all the virtues. In it prudence draws the boundary between good and evil. Justice gives each person what is due, while subjecting the soul to God and the body to the soul. Fortitude stands constant in adversity and prosperity alike, neither broken by opposition nor inflated by success. Temperance restrains the fury of desire and imposes proper limits on pleasures. In it you encompass all things pertaining to the attainment of eternal life: not only laying down a rule of life for pastors, but also providing guidance for those who hold no governing office.

Pastors may learn from your fourfold division what they should be when they come to office, what life they should lead after assuming it, how and what they should teach, and what they must do to avoid being corrupted by so high a position as the priesthood. This excellent teaching of yours is confirmed by the holy ancient fathers, doctors, and defenders of the Church -- Hilary, Ambrose, Augustine, Gregory Nazianzen -- all of whom bear testimony to you as the prophets bore testimony to the apostles.

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

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