Letter 9068: Gregory to Eusebius of Thessalonica, Urbicus of Dyrrachium, Andrew of Nicopolis, John of Corinth, John of Prima Justiniana, John of Crete, John of Larissa and Scodra, and many other bishops. We are constrained by the care of government which we have undertaken to extend vigilantly the solicitude of our office, and to instruct the minds of our br...

Pope Gregory the GreatEusebius|c. 599 AD|gregory great
imperial politicspapal authoritypelagianism
Imperial politics; Church council; Military conflict

Gregory to Eusebius of Thessalonica, Urbicus of Dyrrachium, Andrew of Nicopolis, John of Corinth, John of Prima Justiniana, John of Crete, John of Larissa and Scodra, and many other bishops.

The responsibility of the office we have taken on compels us to extend our vigilance broadly and to address our brothers with words of instruction, so that no wrongful presumption can deceive the uninformed, and no feigned ignorance can excuse those who know better.

Your Fraternity should be aware, then, that John, formerly bishop of Constantinople, acted against God, against the peace of the Church, and in contempt and injury of all bishops when he exceeded the bounds of propriety and his own station by unlawfully claiming in synod the arrogant and destructive title of "ecumenical" -- that is, universal -- bishop.

When our predecessor Pelagius of blessed memory learned of this, he annulled by a fully authoritative censure all the proceedings of that synod, except what had been decided in the case of Gregory, bishop of Antioch of venerable memory. He rebuked John with the sharpest severity and warned him to abandon that novel and reckless title of presumption -- going so far as to forbid his own deacon from processing with John unless John repented of this great offense.

We, holding firmly to the same principled course, observe his decisions under God's protection without wavering. For it is only right that one who must stand before the eternal Judge to give account for this same office should walk without stumbling along the straight path set by his predecessor.

On this matter, lest we seem to have left anything undone for the peace of the Church, we wrote to the most holy John repeatedly, urging him to abandon this title of pride and bend the arrogance of his heart toward the humility our Master and Lord has taught us.

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

Related Letters