Letter 86

Theodoret of CyrrhusFlavianus of Constantinople|c. 440 AD|theodoret cyrrhus
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To Flavianus, Bishop of Constantinople.

I have been struck by many waves in this time, most beloved lord — but I have called on the great Pilot and have been able to stand firm against the storm. The attacks now mounted against me, however, surpass anything that tragedy can describe.

With regard to the attacks being plotted against the apostolic faith, I had thought I would find an ally and fellow-worker in the most godly bishop of Alexandria, the lord Dioscorus, and so I sent him one of our devout presbyters — a man of remarkable discernment — with a synodical letter informing his piety that we stand by the agreement reached in the time of blessed Cyril, and that we accept the letter written by Cyril as well as that written by the most blessed and sainted Athanasius to the blessed Epictetus — and before all these, the exposition of the faith set down at Nicaea by the holy Fathers. We urged him to induce those who were unwilling to abide by these documents to do so.

But one of the opposing party — those who are keeping up these disturbances — by tricking some of those on the spot and fabricating countless slanders against me, has stirred up a wicked agitation in my direction.

The most godly Bishop Dioscorus has sent me a letter of a kind that ought never to have been written by one who has learned from the God of all not to receive empty words. He has accepted the charges against me as though he had personally investigated every one of them and arrived at the truth through careful examination, and he has condemned me on that basis. I have borne the slanderous charge with steadiness, and have written him back a courteous reply, representing to his piety that the entire accusation is false and that not one of the godly bishops present at Antioch has ever heard anything from my mouth that could be called dividing Christ.

I ask your Holiness to lend your strength to the truth in this contest. The faith of Nicaea and the agreement of blessed Cyril are what we defend.

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

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