Letter 48: Severus asks Philoxenus to help decide whether mercy can be given to men who bought ordination while claiming ignorance.

Severus of AntiochPhiloxenus, bishop of Hierapolis|c. 515 AD|Severus of Antioch|From Antioch, Syria|To Hierapolis (Mabbug), Syria|AI-assisted
Philoxenus of Hierapolis; Flavian; simony; ordination; forgiveness; Epiphany; Antioch; apocrisiarii; monastic intercession
The letter exposes a pressure campaign around simoniac ordinations, involving bishops, court representatives, powerful friends, and monastic leaders. Source id I.48; Brooks page 130; source-facing English extracted by adjudicated body markers from the Archive OCR text; original Syriac source-text backfill remains pending.

Severus asks Philoxenus for advice because Scripture itself says that salvation comes through much counsel. The question is one they have discussed before: what should be done with men who bought ordination from Flavian, whom Severus calls a trafficker in divine things? These men claim they did not understand the strictness of the canons and have asked for forgiveness on the ground of ignorance.

They have not merely asked once. They have collected sympathetic letters from various people, gone to the royal city, and shown those letters to Severus' representatives and to powerful friends who care about him. Those friends, moved by pity, have accused him of cruelty, though in a friendly way. When Severus still did not yield, the men went to orthodox monasteries and stirred the leaders of the ascetic communities to compassion. Those leaders too wrote to Severus, grieving over the fall of the offenders and asking that they be freed from their predicament.

Pressed from every side, Severus now turns to Philoxenus. Should these men receive forgiveness at Epiphany, or not? If Philoxenus thinks they should, Severus asks him to make the effort to come to Antioch after the feast and help carry out a course of mercy toward men who sinned from ignorance. Such leniency, he says, may not be wholly inconsistent with canonical strictness, since the payment was supposedly hidden under the name of a gift by profiteers who deceived them.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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

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Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern severus brooks batch12 v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://archive.org/details/selectletterssix01seveuoft/page/n148/mode/1up

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