Letter 17

HormisdasThe subdeacon Pullio|hormisdas
conversion
From: Hormisdas, Pope of Rome
To: The subdeacon Pullio (instructions)
Date: ~516 AD
Context: Practical instructions to Pullio for his mission to Nicopolis — how to collect the bishops' signatures on the libellus, with contingency plans if the bishops are afraid to sign openly, and a warning to leave quickly because of "the tricks and cunning of enemies."

[Instructions for Pullio, subdeacon.]

With God's help and the prayers of the holy apostles Peter and Paul, when you arrive at Nicopolis, you must proceed as follows: after the bishop of Nicopolis has received our letters, he should gather the bishops who are in his diocese and have them sign the formal statement [libellus] that is attached to our letters.

If, however, the aforementioned bishop says it is too burdensome to assemble the bishops, he should send representatives with you to each individual bishop, so that they may sign the statement in your presence.

You must do this, with God's mercy, in such a way that the letters we have sent are read publicly. But if you see that the bishops are unwilling to do this out of fear, they should at least read them to their own clergy. Leave the matter in the bishops' hands, and bring back to us — with God's mercy — the written responses of the bishops and of that bishop, that is, the metropolitan John.

After this is done, we do not want you to linger there at all, because of the traps and cunning of our enemies.

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