Letter 118: Severus refuses to turn ascetics into oracles for Conon's marriage decision.

Severus of AntiochConon the silentiary|c. 510 AD|Severus of Antioch|From Antioch, Syria|To Constantinople|AI-assisted
Conon; marriage; discernment; revelation; silentiary
The letter draws a bright line between spiritual discernment and treating holy elders like soothsayers. Source id X.4; Brooks page 439; source-facing English extracted by body markers from the Archive OCR text; source terminology repaired where required; original Syriac source-text backfill remains pending.

Severus writes to Conon the silentiary because John, a fervent soldier of Christ, has asked an overbold question about Conon's daughter and the men seeking to marry her. John wanted Severus to put the names before holy elders and ascetic women so that they could say which suitor should be chosen.

Severus refuses. Fathers with real discernment avoid such questions because they do not want to look like soothsayers or charlatans. Monastics should not be turned into fortune-tellers for household decisions. Some holy people do receive insight from God, but not because petitioners submit propositions to them like clients seeking an oracle. Grace overflows freely; it is not controlled by a questionnaire.

Still, since Christ tells us to give to those who ask, Severus offers ordinary counsel. Conon should choose the suitor who is most correct in orthodox faith and most earnest about a devout, modest life. Everything else belongs in second place. It would be offensive to God to pass over clear judgments of faith and character and instead demand hidden signs or revelations. That is close to tempting the Lord. If Conon chooses by what is manifestly right, he may trust God for the future and do everything in the name of Christ.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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.

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.

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Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern severus brooks batch5 v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://archive.org/details/selectletterssix02seveuoft/page/n223/mode/1up

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