Letter 9078: I have received at the hands of the bearer of these presents the letter of your most sweet Holiness, speaking to me about your cause being terminated speedily. But, as soon as he had come, he learned how the possession which he sought from our Church was held, and soon satisfied himself about it. The business he had with others he settled withou...

Pope Gregory the GreatEulogius, of Alexandria|c. 599 AD|gregory great
property economicstravel mobility
Barbarian peoples/invasions; Theological controversy; Travel & mobility

Gregory to Eulogius, Patriarch of Alexandria.

I have received through the present bearer the letter of your most dear Holiness, in which you request that your case be resolved quickly. But as soon as the bearer arrived, he learned the status of the property he was seeking from our Church and was soon satisfied on the matter. His other business with other parties he settled without dispute.

Regarding the issue you should most certainly have written to me about, however, Your Holiness has said nothing -- perhaps assuming that I too have been slow to act on it. In truth, I have held back from raising it myself for fear that it might erupt into the scandal of a formal breach. I have preferred that whatever consequences follow should come through others rather than through me. But in time to come, God willing, you will see proof that when I seek to please God, I am not afraid of men. I took care to write to you about this even before, when you traveled to Constantinople.

As for the timber: I had prepared larger pieces, as Your Blessedness requested in your letter, but the ship that was sent is too small to carry them without cutting them down. I was unwilling to have them cut, and I have left it to your judgment what should be done. If you do not need them, we will put them to other uses here.

I ask Your Holiness to pray for me earnestly. I am pressed down without relief by the pain of gout, by the swords of barbarians, and by the weight of distressing cares. If you grant me the aid of your prayers, I believe you will powerfully sustain me against all adversities.

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

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