Letter 40: Your eloquence, which I have long admired from afar, has now been demonstrated to me afresh through your excellent...

Theodoret of CyrrhusTheodorus|c. 440 AD|Theodoret of Cyrrhus|Human translated
education booksfriendship

Theodoret to the Learned Elias.

Your eloquence, which I have long admired from afar, has now been demonstrated to me afresh through your excellent letter. The clarity of your thought, the elegance of your expression, and the warmth of your friendship all conspire to give me delight.

I write to you today not only to reciprocate your kindness, but also to enlist your advocacy on behalf of a matter that concerns the welfare of our community. The details I have entrusted to the bearer of this letter, who will explain them more fully than any written account could.

I have every confidence in your sense of justice and in your willingness to act on behalf of the oppressed. May God reward your labors and keep you in His care.

Human translation - New Advent (NPNF / ANF series)

Latin / Greek Original

Original text not yet available in this corpus.

This letter still needs a Latin or Greek source-text backfill. The source link, when available, is preserved so the text can be checked and added later.

View source

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from New Advent / NPNF.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/2707040.htm

Related Letters

Pope Gregory the GreatTheodorusc. 595 AD · gregory great #6008

Gregory to Theodorus, Demetrius, Philip, Zeno, and Alcissonus, Bishops of Epirus. The notification of your letters, most dear brethren, has made known to us that our brother Andrew has, by the favour of God, been solemnly ordained bishop of the city of Nicopolis. And, since you signify that his consecration has taken place with the assent of the...

Pope Leo the GreatTheodorusc. 444 AD · leo great #32

He acknowledges their zeal and refers them to the Tome To his well-beloved sons Faustus, Martinus, and the rest of the archimandrites, Leo the bishop. As on behalf of the faith which Eutyches has tried to disturb, I was sending legates de latere to assist the defense of the Truth, I thought it fitting that I should address a letter to you also,...

Augustine of HippoTheodorusc. 396 AD · augustine hippo #61

1. I have resolved to commit to writing in this letter what I said when you and I were conversing together as to the terms on which we would welcome clergy of the party of Donatus desiring to become Catholics, in order that, if any one asked you what are our sentiments and practice in regard to this, you might exhibit these by producing what I h...

Isidore of PelusiumTheodorusc. 425 AD · isidore pelusium #new-1211
Pope Leo the GreatTheodorusc. 443 AD · leo great #23

Seeing that our most Christian and merciful Emperor, in his holy and praiseworthy faith and anxiety for the peace of the Catholic Church, has sent us a letter upon the matters which have roused the din of disturbance among you, we wonder, brother, that you have been able to keep silence to us upon the scandal that has been caused, and that you ...