Letter 57: Against Andronicus [Letter 57].

Synesius of CyreneUnknown|c. 399 AD|Synesius of Cyrene|Human translated
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Against Andronicus [Letter 57].

[This is not a letter but a formal episcopal decree — the longest document in Synesius's correspondence. It is a devastating indictment of Andronicus, a corrupt governor of Pentapolis.]

The malevolent forces in the universe fulfill the designs of Providence insofar as they punish the deserving — but they are nonetheless abhorred by God and must be shunned. "I will raise against you a people at whose hands you shall suffer great woes" [adapted from Jeremiah].

[The document proceeds at enormous length to detail Andronicus's crimes: extortion, torture, murder, corruption of justice, and sacrilege. Synesius exercises his full authority as bishop to excommunicate Andronicus and his entire household, barring them from every church in the province. It is a remarkable demonstration of episcopal power in a crumbling empire — a philosopher-bishop wielding the one weapon that a corrupt secular governor still feared: exclusion from the Christian community.]

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