Letter 64: Severus denies that he or his associates officiated without priestly rank or re-ordained clergy, and asks patricians to take the defense to the emperor.

Severus of AntiochPatricians addressed by Severus of Antioch|c. 510 AD|Severus of Antioch|From Antioch, Syria|AI-assisted
Severus of Antioch; patricians; emperor; Senate; priesthood; Eucharist; ordination; re-ordination; Dathan; Abiram; Korah; Uzziah; monastic life
This letter uses Roman aristocratic intermediaries as a political channel for Severus' defense before the emperor. Source id II.1; Brooks table page 207; page anchor and body boundary supplied by T249 marker adjudication because the broad concordance marks this row unstable. Source-facing English extracted by explicit body markers from the Archive OCR text; original Syriac source-text backfill remains pending.

Severus addresses the patricians as "rational stars" whose favor could dispel the darkness around him. He has heard that the emperor has been told two accusations: that some of Severus' associates have acted as priests without priestly rank, and that clergy have been re-ordained among them. Severus presents both accusations as slanders from people unable to attack the substance of his faith.

He answers first from Scripture. Anyone who presumes to take priestly functions without being a priest stands under grave judgment: he recalls Dathan, Abiram, Korah, Uzzah, and Uzziah as warnings against touching sacred office without consecration. The Eucharistic mystery, he says, is Christ's own offering, approached only through the priesthood because Christ himself is priest, victim, and offering. Severus therefore places himself under a curse if he has knowingly officiated without ordination.

He then denies the second charge. No one already admitted to the clergy has been re-ordained among them, and he anathematizes anyone who does so. If a cleric temporarily withdraws into monastic discipline and later returns to ministry, that is not re-ordination but ascetic training. Severus asks the patricians to bring this defense to the emperor, since it would be unjust for him to be condemned by default while nearby and able to answer the charges.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.

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Original text not yet available in this corpus.

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Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from modern severus brooks batch16 v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://archive.org/details/selectletterssix01seveuoft/page/n216/mode/1up

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