Letter From Pope Gregory II to Emperor Leo III

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    Letter from Pope Gregory II to Emperor Leo III (c. 727)

    Source: Oliver J. Thatcher and Edgar Holmes McNeal, eds., Source Book for

    Medival History (New York: Scribners, 1905; reprint AMS Press, 1971).

    Transcribed by Sean Faith.

    We have received your letter which you sent us by your ambassador Ruffinus. We

    are deeply grieved that you should persist in your error, that you should refuse to recognize

    the things which are Christs, and to accept the teaching and follow the example ofthe holy

    fathers, the saintly miracle-workers and learned doctors. I refer not only to foreign doctors,

    but also to those of your own country. For what men are more learned than Gregory the

    worker of miracles, Gregory of Nyssa, Gregory the theologian, Basil of Cappadocia, or

    John Chrysotom-not to mention thousands of others of our holy fathers and doctors, who,

    like these, were filled with the spirit of God? But you have followed the guidance of yourown wayward spirit and have allowed the exigencies of the political situation at your own

    court to lead you astray. You say: I am both emperor and bishop. But the emperors who

    were before you, Constantine the Great, Theodosius the Great, Valentinian the Great, and

    Constantine the father of Justinian, who attended the sixth synod proved themselves to be

    both emperors and bishops by following the true faith, by founding and fostering churches,

    and by displaying the same zeal for the faith as the popes. These emperors ruled righteously;

    they held synods in harmony with the popes, they tried to establish true doctrines, they

    founded and adorned churches. Those who claim to be both emperors and priests should

    demonstrate it by their works; you, since the beginning of your rule, have constantly failedto observe the decrees of the fathers. Wherever you found churches adorned and enriched

    with hangings you despoiled them. For what are our churches? Are they not made by hand

    of stones, timbers, straw, plaster, and lime? But they are also adorned with pictures and

    representations of the miracles of the saints, of the sufferings of Christ, of the holy mother

    herself, and of the saints and apostles; and men expend their wealth on such images.

    Moreover, men and women make use of these pictures to instruct in the faith their little

    children and young men and maidens in bloom of youth and those from heathen nations; by

    means of these pictures the hearts and minds of men are directed to God. But you have

    ordered the people to abstain from the pictures, and have attempted to satisfy them with idle

    sermons, trivialities, music of pipe and zither, rattles and toys, turning them from the giving

    of thanks to the hearing of idle tales. You shall have your part with them, and with those

    who invent useless fables and babble of their ignorance. Hearken to us, emperor: abandon

    your present course and accept the holy church as you found her, for matters of faith and

    practice concern not the emperor, but the pope, since we have the mind of Christ [1 Cor.

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    2:16]. The making of laws for the church is one thing and the governing of the empire

    another; the ordinary intelligence which is used in administering worldly affairs is not

    adequate to the settlement of spiritual matters. Behold, I will show you now the difference

    between the palace and the church, between the emperor and the pope; learn and be saved;

    be no longer contentious. If anyone should take from you the adornments of royalty, yourpurple robes, diadem, scepter, and your ranks of servants, you would be regarded by men as

    base, hateful and abject; but to this condition you have reduced the churches, for you have

    deprived them of their ornaments and made them unsightly. Just as the pope has not the

    right to interfere in the palace or to infringe upon the royal prerogatives, so the emperor has

    not the right to interfere in the churches, or to conduct elections among the clergy, or to

    consecrate, or to administer the sacraments or even to participate in the sacraments without

    the aid of a priest; let each one of us abide in the same calling wherein he is called of God

    [1 Cor. 7:20]. Do you see, emperor, the difference between popes and emperors? If anyone

    has offended you, you confiscate his house and take everything from him but his life, oryou hang him or cut off his head, or you banish him, sending him far from his children and

    from all his relatives and friends. But popes do not so; when anyone has sinned and has

    confessed, in place of hanging him or cutting off his head, they put the gospel and cross

    around his neck, and imprison him, as it were, in the sacristy or treasure chamber of the

    sacred vessels; they put him into the part of the church reserved for the deacons and the

    catechumens; they prescribe for him fasting, vigils, and praise. And after they have

    chastened him and punished him with fasting, then they give him of the precious body of

    the Lord and of the holy blood. And when they have restored him as a chosen vessel, free

    from sin, they hand him over to the Lord pure and unspotted. Do you see now, emperor, thedifference between the church and the empire? Those emperors who have lived piously in

    Christ have obeyed the popes, and not vexed them. But you, emperor, since you have

    transgressed and gone astray, and since you have written with your own hand and

    confessed that he who attacks the father is to be execrated, have hereby condemned

    yourself by your own sentence and have driven from you the Holy Spirit. You persecute us

    and vex us tyrannically with violent and carnal hand. We, unarmed and defenseless,

    possessing no earthly armies, call now upon the prince of all the armies of creation, Christ

    seated in the heavens, commanding all the hosts of celestial beings, to send a demon upon

    you; as the apostle says: to deliver such an one unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh,

    that the spirit may be saved [1 Cor. 5:5]. Do you see now, emperor, to what a pitch of

    impudence and inhumanity you have gone? You have driven your soul headlong into the

    abyss, because you would not humble yourself and bend your stubborn neck. When a pope

    is able by his teaching and admonition to bring the emperor of his time before God,

    guiltless and cleansed from all sin, he gains great glory from Him on the holy day of

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    resurrection, when all our secrets and all our works are brought to light to our confusion in

    the presence of his angels. But we shall blush for shame, because you will have lost your

    soul by your disobedience, while the popes that proceeded us have won over to God the

    emperors of their life times. How ashamed we will be on that day, that the emperor of our

    time is false and ignominious, instead of great and glorious. Now, therefore, we exhort youto do penance; be converted and turn to the truth; obey the truth as you found and received

    it. Honor and glorify our holy and glorious fathers and doctors who dispelled the blindness

    from our eyes and restored us to sight. You ask: How was it that was said about images in

    six councils? What then? Nothing was said about bread and water, whether that should be

    eaten or not; yet these things have been accepted from the beginning for the presence of

    human life. So also have images been accepted; the popes themselves brought them to

    councils, and no Christian would set out on a journey without images, because they were

    possessed of virtue and approved of God. We exhort you to be both emperor and bishop, as

    you have called yourself in your letter. But if you are ashamed to take this upon yourself asemperor, then write to all the regions to which you have given offence, that Gregory the

    pope and Germanus the patriarch of Constantinople are at fault in the matter of the images

    [that is, are responsible for the destruction of the images], and we will take upon ourselves

    the responsibility for the sin, as we have authority from God to loose and to bind all things,

    earthly and celestial; and we will free you from responsibility in this matter. But no, you

    will not do this! Knowing that we would have to render account to Christ the Lord for our

    office, we have done our best to convert you from your error, by admonition and warning,

    but you have drawn back, you have refused to obey us or Germanus or our fathers, the holy

    and glorious miracle-workers and doctors, and you have followed the teaching of perverseand wicked men who wander from the truth. You shall have your lot with them. As we

    have already informed you, we shall proceed on our way to the extreme western regions,

    where those who are earnestly seeking to be baptized are waiting for us. For although we

    have then bishops and clergymen from our church, their princes have not yet been induced

    to bow their heads and be baptized, because they hope to be received into the church by us

    in person. Therefore we gird ourselves for the journey in the goodness of God, lest

    perchance we should have to render account for their condemnation and for our faithfulness.

    May God give you prudence and patience, that you may be turned to the truth from which

    you have departed; may he again restore the people to their one shepherd, Christ, and to the

    one fold of the orthodox churches and prelates, and may the Lord our God give peace to all

    the earth now and forever to all generations. Amen.

    http://rbsche.people.wm.edu/H111_doc_gregoryiitoleoiii.html