Nilus of Ancyra→Sosthenes|c. 415 AD|nilus ancyra|From Ancyra|AI-assisted
To Sosthenes the Commentariensius [registrar of prison and court records].
I perceive you to be foolish and without understanding. For if you find fault with the God-bearing man John, the bishop of Constantinople [John Chrysostom], as being irascible and as delighting in insults, when in rebuking those who sin he gravely lays hold of those who are sick with insensibility and lack of feeling, then it is time for you also to censure John the Baptist, because he called certain men a brood of vipers, being venomous in their character; and to judge the Apostle [Paul] to be an insulter, because he twice called the Galatians foolish; and to render the prophets liable to the charge of insult, since they applied to rational beings the names of lust-maddened horses, and of dogs that bite in secret, and of wolves, and of swine, drawing the one who had gone astray toward correction by their reproofs. And what would you say about the God of all and the provident Christ, the humble-minded one, who by his own forbearance and gentleness surpassed all gentleness, when you hear him calling those who transgress the law fools, and blind, and sons of the devil, and tares, and dogs, and swine, and certain other mocking names?
To Sosthenes the Commentariensius [registrar of prison and court records].
I perceive you to be foolish and without understanding. For if you find fault with the God-bearing man John, the bishop of Constantinople [John Chrysostom], as being irascible and as delighting in insults, when in rebuking those who sin he gravely lays hold of those who are sick with insensibility and lack of feeling, then it is time for you also to censure John the Baptist, because he called certain men a brood of vipers, being venomous in their character; and to judge the Apostle [Paul] to be an insulter, because he twice called the Galatians foolish; and to render the prophets liable to the charge of insult, since they applied to rational beings the names of lust-maddened horses, and of dogs that bite in secret, and of wolves, and of swine, drawing the one who had gone astray toward correction by their reproofs. And what would you say about the God of all and the provident Christ, the humble-minded one, who by his own forbearance and gentleness surpassed all gentleness, when you hear him calling those who transgress the law fools, and blind, and sons of the devil, and tares, and dogs, and swine, and certain other mocking names?
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.