Letter 7020: Our pastoral charge constrains us to succour with anxious consideration any Churches that are deprived of the government of a priest. Accordingly, inasmuch as your Church has long been deprived of pastoral rule from the malady, as you know, of its own priest, we, moved by your entreaties, have not failed to admonish the said bishop, that, if he ...

Pope Gregory the GreatJanuarius|c. 596 AD|Pope Gregory the Great|Human translated
illnessimperial politics
Military conflict

Gregory to the Clergy and People of Rimini.

Our pastoral duty compels us to give anxious attention to any churches that are left without the governance of a priest. Your church has long been without pastoral rule, as you know, because of the illness of your own priest. Moved by your entreaties, we have not failed to urge the said bishop that if he should feel recovered from his ailment, he should resume the priestly ministry he undertook. He has now been warned by us repeatedly, and has at last communicated to us in a written petition, under the pressure of his continuing illness, that he is in no way able, by reason of this illness, to rise to the governance of the said church or to the duties he undertook. Compelled therefore by the hopeless condition of this person, we have judged it necessary to take steps for the ordering of your church.

We therefore urge that all of you, with one accord and without disorder or strife, choose with the Lord's help a priest to govern you who is not disqualified by the venerable canons and who is found worthy of so great a ministry. Let him, when required, come to us to be ordained, accompanied by the formal declaration attested by the signatures of all and confirmed by the written approval of the visitor, so that your church may have its own priest by the Lord's ordering.

We also wish that whoever your unanimity shall have chosen, you take without delay to our brother and fellow bishop Marinianus at Ravenna, so that, having been thoroughly examined and tested by him, he may have the support of Marinianus's testimony as well when he comes to us.

Human translation - New Advent (NPNF / ANF series)

Latin / Greek Original

Gregorius clero et plebi consistenti Arimino.

B Pavxtoralis nos cura constringit Ecclesiis sacerdotis

moderamine destitutis 80llicita consideratione Con-
currere. Et ideo quia Ecclesia vesira diu 8acerdotis
proprii, corporis qua nostis impediente molestia,
pastorali est regimine destituta, vestris precibus
perimoti, eumdem episcopum non destitimus admo=-
nere, ut si ex eadem molestia se melioratum esse
s*ntiret, ad ssuscepli sacerdotii debui-set remeare
ministerium. Qui semel a nobis sxpiusve commo-
nitus, eadem urgente molestia, nunc scriptis nobis
Supplicatione porrecta noscitur intimasse nullatenus
Se ad regimen ejusdem Ecclesiz BgG vel susce-
ptum oflicium, impediente molestia, assurgere pos8e.

Qua personz ejusdem desperatione compulsi, ne-

cessarium duximus de ordinatione nos vestre Eccle-
Sie COgilare. Hortamur ergo ut uno omnes codein-
que consensu, remoto strepitu, talem vobis prafi- -
ciendum eligatis anxi'iante Domino sacerdolem, qui
et a venerandis canonibus nvilatenus respuatur;-et
tanto ministerio dignus valeat reperiri. Qui dum
fuerit postulaius, cum solemnitate decreti, omniura
Subscriplionibus roborali, et visitatoris pagina pro-
Sequente, ad nos veniat ordinandus, quatenus Eccle-
sia yeslra, disponente Domino, proprium habere
valeat sacerdotem. Volumus autem ut eum quem
unanimitas vestra elegerit ad ſfrairem et coepisco-.
pum nosirum Marinjanum Ravennam sine dilatione
aliqua perducatis, ut ab eo subliliter inouisitus atque
perspectus, ipsius quoque ad nos veniens teslimonio
roborelur.

D indict. 15. At' secunda, mense Maio, ut etiam legitur

in Colb. vel. et in iribus Valic.

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/360207020.htm

Related Letters

Pope Gregory the GreatJanuariusc. 599 AD · gregory great #9006

The Jews who have come hither from your city have complained to us that Peter, who has been brought by the will of God from their superstition to the worship of Christian faith, having taken with him certain disorderly persons, on the day after his baptism, that is on the Lord's day of the very Paschal festival, with grave scandal and without yo...

Gregory the Great (Wisigothic)Januariusc. 593 AD · gregory great #4074

I am directing you to demand a full accounting from the hospices under your jurisdiction — when were they last...

Augustine of HippoJanuariusc. 400 AD · augustine hippo #88

1. Your clergy and your Circumcelliones are venting against us their rage in a persecution of a new kind, and of unparalleled atrocity. Were we to render evil for evil, we should be transgressing the law of Christ.

Pope Gregory the GreatJanuariusc. 593 AD · gregory great #4026

Gregory to Januarius, Bishop of Caralis (Cagliari). We have ascertained from the report of our fellow bishop Felix and the abbot Cyriacus that in the island of Sardinia priests are oppressed by lay judges, and that your ministers despise your Fraternity; and that, so far as appears, while you aim only at simplicity, discipline is neglected. Wher...

Augustine of HippoJanuariusc. 395 AD · augustine hippo #55

1. Having read the letter in which you have put me in mind of my obligation to give answers to the remainder of those questions which you submitted to me a long time ago, I cannot bear to defer any longer the gratification of that desire for instruction which it gives me so much pleasure and comfort to see in you; and although encompassed by an ...