Letters of the Blessed Theodoret, Bishop of…

 Letters of the Blessed Theodoret,

 II. To the Same.

 III. To Bishop Irenæus.

 IV. Festal.

 V. Festal.

 VI. Festal.

 VII. To Theonilla.

 VIII. To Eugraphia.

 IX. To an Anonymous Correspondent.

 X. To the Learned Elias.

 XI. To Flavianus Bishop of Constantinople.

 XII. To the Bishop Irenæus.

 XIII. To Cyrus.

 XIV. To Alexandra.

 XV. To Silvanus the Primate.

 XVI. To Bishop Irenæus.

 XVII. To the Deaconess Casiana.

 XVIII. To Neoptolemus.

 XIX. To the Presbyter Basilius.

 XX. To the Presbyter Martyrius.

 XXI. To the Learned Eusebius.

 XXII. To Count Ulpianus.

 XXIII. To the Patrician Areobindas.

 XXIV. To Andreas Bishop of Samosata.

 XXV. Festal.

 XXVI. Festal.

 XXVII. To Aquilinus, Deacon and Archimandrite.

 XXVIII. To Jacobus, Presbyter and Monk.

 XXIX. To Apellion.

 XXX. To Aerius the Sophist .

 XXXI. To Domnus Bishop of Antioch.

 XXXII. To the Bishop Theoctistus.

 XXXIII. To Stasimus, Count and Primate.

 XXXIV. To the Count Patricius.

 XXXV. To the Bishop Irenæus.

 XXXVI. To Pompianus, Bishop of Emesa.

 XXXVII. To Salustius the Governor.

 XXXVIII. Festal.

 XXXIX. Festal.

 XL. To Theodorus the Vicar.

 XLI. To Claudianus.

 XLII. To Constantius the Prefect.

 XLIII. To the Augusta Pulcheria.

 XLIV. To the Patrician

 XLV. To the Patrician Anatolius.

 XLVI. To the Learned Petrus.

 XLVII. To Proclus,

 XLVIII. To Eustathius, Bishop of Berytus.

 XLIX. To Damianus,

 L. To the Archimandrite Gerontius.

 LI. To the Presbyter Agapius.

 LII. To Ibas, Bishop of Edessa .

 LIII. To Sophronius, Bishop of Constantina .

 LIV. Festal.

 LV. Festal.

 LVI. Festal.

 LVII. To the Præfect Eutrechius.

 LVIII. To the Consul Nomus.

 LIX. To Claudianus.

 LX. To Dioscorus, Bishop of Alexandria.

 LXI. To the Presbyter Archibius.

 LXII. To the Presbyter John.

 LXIII. Festal.

 LXIV. Festal.

 LXV. To the General Zeno.

 LXVI. To Aerius the Sophist.

 LXVII. To Maranas.

 LXVIII. To Epiphanius.

 LXIX. To Eugraphia.

 LXX. To Eustathius, Bishop of Ægæ.

 LXXI. To Zeno,

 LXXII. To Hermesigenes the Assessor.

 LXXIII. To Apollonius.

 LXXIV. To Urbanus.

 LXXV. To the Clergy of Berœa.

 LXXVI. To Uranius, Governor of Cyprus.

 LXXVII. To Eulalius, Bishop of Persian Armenia.

 LXXVIII. To Eusebius, Bishop of Persian Armenia.

 LXXIX. To Anatolius the Patrician.

 LXXX. To the Prefect Eutrechius.

 LXXXI. To the Consul Nomus.

 LXXXII. To Eusebius, Bishop of Ancyra.

 LXXXIII. Of Theodoretus, Bishop of Cyrus, to Dioscorus, Archbishop of Alexandria.

 LXXXIV. To the Bishops of Cilicia.

 LXXXV. To the Bishop Basil.

 LXXXVI.

 LXXXVII. To Domnus, Bishop of Apamea.

 LXXXVIII. To Taurus the Patrician.

 LXXXIX. To Florentius the Patrician.

 XC. To Lupicinus the Master.

 XCI. To the Prefect Eutrechius.

 XCII. To Anatolius the Patrician.

 XCIII. To Senator the Patrician.

 XCIV. To Protogenes

 XCV. To the Præfect Antiochus.

 XCVI. To Nomus the Patrician.

 XCVII. To the Count Sporacius.

 XCVIII. To Pancharius.

 XCIX. To Claudianus the Antigrapharius.

 C. To Alexandra.

 CI. To the Deaconess Celarina.

 CII. To Bishop Basilius.

 CIII. To the Count Apollonius.

 CIV. To Flavianus,

 CV. To Eulogius the Œconomus.

 CVI. To Abraham the Œconomus.

 CVII. To the Presbyter Theodotus.

 CVIII. To Acacius the Presbyter.

 CIX. To Eusebius, Bishop of Ancyra.

 CX. To Domnus, Bishop of Antioch.

 CXI. To Anatolius the Patrician.

 CXII. To Domnus, Bishop of Antioch.

 CXIII. To Leo, Bishop of Rome.

 CXIII. (a).

 CXIV . To Andiberis.

 CXV. To Apella.

 CXVI.

 CXVII. To the Bishop Florentius.

 CXVIII. To the Archdeacon of Rome.

 CXIX. To Anatolius the Patrician .

 CXX. To Lupicius.

 CXXI. To Anatolius the Patrician.

 CXXII.

 CXXIII. To the Same.

 CXXIV. To the Learned Maranas.

 CXXV. To Aphthonius, Theodoritus, Nonnus, Scylacius, Apthonius, Joannes, Magistrates of the Zeugmatensis.

 CXXVI. To the Bishop Sabinianus.

 CXXVII. To Jobius, Presbyter and Archimandrite.

 CXXVIII. To Candidus, Presbyter and Archimandrite.

 CXXIX. To Magnus Antoninus the Presbyter.

 CXXX. To Bishop Timotheus.

 CXXXI. To Longinus, Archimandrite of Doliche.

 CXXXII. To Ibas, Bishop of Edessa.

 CXXXIII. To John, Bishop of Germanicia.

 CXXXIV. To Theoctistus, Bishop of Berœa.

 CXXXV. To Bishop Romulus.

 CXXXVI. To Cyrus Magistrianus.

 CXXXVII. To the Archimandrite John.

 CXXXVIII. To Anatolius the Patrician.

 CXXXIX. To Aspar, Consular and Patrician.

 CXL. To the Master Vincomalus.

 CXLI. To Marcellus, Archimandrite of the Acoemetæ.

 CXLII. To the Same.

 CXLIII. To Andrew, Monk of Constantinople.

 CXLIV. To the Soldiers.

 CXLV. To the Monks of Constantinople.

 CXLVI. To John the Œconomus.

 CXLVII.

 CXLVIII in the Edition of Garnerius.

 CXLIX is “Copy of the Letter written by John, Bishop of Antioch, to Nestorius.”

 CL. Letter of Theodoretus, Bishop of Cyrus, to Joannes, Bishop of Antioch.

 CLI. Letter or Address of Theodoret to the Monks of the Euphratensian, the Osrhoene, Syria, Phœnicia, and Cilicia.

 CLII. Report of the (Bishops) of the East to the Emperor, giving information of their proceedings, and explaining the cause of the delay in the arriva

 CLIII. Report of the same to the Empresses Pulcheria and Eudoxia.

 CLIV. Report of the same to the Senate of Constantinople.

 CLV. Letter of John, Bishop of Antioch and his Supporters, to the Clergy of Constantinople.

 CLVI. Letter of the same to the people of Constantinople.

 CLVII. Report of the Council of (the Bishops of) the East to the Victorious Emperor, announcing a second time the deposition of Cyril and of Memnon.

 CLVIII. Report of (the Bishops of) the East to the Very Pious Emperor, which they delivered with the preceding Report to the Right Honourable Count Ir

 CLIX. Letter of the same to the Præfect and to the Master.

 CLX. Letter of the same to the Governor and Scholasticus.

 CLXI. Report presented to the Emperor by John, Archbishop of Antioch and his supporters through Palladius Magistrianus.

 CLXII. Letter of Theodoretus to Andreas, Bishop of Samosata, written from Ephesus.

 CLXIII. First Letter of the Commissioners of the East, sent to Chalcedon, among whom was Theodoretus.

 CLXIV. Second Epistle of the same to the same, expressing premature triumph in Victory.

 CLXV. Letter of the same to the same.

 CLXVI. First Petition of the Commissioners, addressed from Chalcedon, to the Emperor.

 CLXVII. Second Petition of the same, sent from Chalcedon to Theodosius Augustus.

 CLXVIII. Third Demand of the same, addressed from Chalcedon to the Sovereigns.

 CLXIX. Letter written by Theodoretus, Bishop of Cyrus, from Chalcedon to Alexander of Hierapolis.

 CLXX. Letter of certain Easterns, who had been sent to Constantinople, to Bishop Rufus.

 CLXXI. Letter of Theodoret to John, Bishop of Antioch, after the Reconciliation.

 CLXXII. Letter of Theodoretus to Nestorius.

 CLXXIII. Letter to Andreas, Monk of Constantinople.

 CLXXIV. To Himerius, Bishop of Nicomedia.

 CLXXV. To Alexander of Hierapolis .

 CLXXVI. Letter to the same Alexander after he had learnt that John, Bishop of Antioch, had Anathematized the Doctrine of Nestorius.

 CLXXVII. Letter to Andreas, Bishop of Samosata.

 CLXXVIII. Letter to Alexander of Hierapolis.

 CLXXIX. Letter of Cyril to John, Bishop of Antioch, against Theodoret.

 CLXXX. Letter of Theodoretus, as some suppose, to Domnus, Bishop of Antioch, written on the Death of Cyril, Bishop of Alexandria.

 CLXXXI. Letter to Abundius, Bishop of Como .

XXI. To the Learned Eusebius.

The disseminators of this great news, with the idea that it would be very distasteful to me, fancied that they might in this way annoy me. But I by God’s grace welcomed the news, and await the event with pleasure. Indeed very grateful to me is any kind of trouble which is brought on me for the sake of the divine doctrines. For, if we really trust in the Lord’s promises, “The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us.”41 Rom. viii. 18

And why do I speak of the enjoyment of the good things which are hoped for? For even if no prize had been offered to them that struggle for the sake of true religion, Truth alone by her own unaided force would herself have been sufficient to persuade them that love her to welcome gladly all perils in her cause. And the divine Apostle is witness of what I say, exclaiming as he does, “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril or sword? As it is written, ‘For thy sake we are killed all the day long; we are accounted as sheep for the slaughter.’”42 Rom. viii. 35, 36

And then to teach us that he looks for no reward, but only loves his Saviour, he adds straightway “Nay in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us.”43 Rom. viii. 37

And he goes on further to exhibit his own love more clearly. “For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”44 Rom. viii. 38, 39

Behold, my friend, the flame of apostolic affection; see the torch of love.45 ἔρωτος. The use of this word in this connexion is in contrast with the spirit of the writers of the N.T., in which ἔρως and its correlatives never appear.

I covet not, he says, what is His. I only long for Him; and this love of mine is an unquenchable love and I would gladly forego all present and future felicity, aye, suffer and endure again all kinds of pain so as to keep with me this flame in all its force. This was exemplified by the divine writer in deed as well as in word and everywhere by land and sea he has left behind him memorials of his sufferings. So when I turn my eyes on him and on the rest of the patriarchs, prophets, apostles, martyrs, priests, what is commonly reckoned miserable I cannot but hold to be delightful. I confess to a feeling of shame when I remember how even they who never learnt the lessons we have learnt, but followed no other guide but human nature alone, have won conspicuous places in the race of virtue. The famous Socrates, son of Sophroniscus, when under the calumnious indictment, not only treated the lies of his accusers with contempt, but expressed his cheerfulness in the midst of his troubles in the words, “Anytus and Meletus46 Apol. Soc. xviii. ἐμὲ μὲν γὰρ οὐδὲν ἂν βλάψειεν οὔτε Μέλητος οὔτε ῎Ανυτος, οὐδὲ γὰρ ἂν δύναιτο can kill me, but they cannot harm me.” And the orator of Pæania,47 I.e. Demosthenes who belonged to Pæania a demus of Attica on the eastern slope of Hymettus, and so was called ὁ Παιανεύς who was as wise as he was eloquent, enriched both the men of his own day and them that should come after him with the saying: “to all the race of men the end of life is death, even though one shut himself up for safety in a cell; so good men are bound ever to put their hand to every honourable work, ever defending themselves with good hope as with a shield, and bravely to bear whatever lot may be given them by God.”48 Demosth. de Cor. 258. The sentiment finds various expression in ancient writers e.g. Euripides, in a fragment of the lost “Ægeus,” Κατθανεῖν δ᾽ ὀφείλεται καὶ τῷ κατ᾽ οἴκους ἐκτὸς ἡμένῳ πόνων and Propertius El. III. 10. “Ille licet ferro cautus se condat et œre, Mors tamen inclusum protrahit inde caput.”

Moreover a writer of earlier date than Demosthenes, I mean the son of Olorus, wrote many noble sentiments, and among them this “We must bear what the gods send us of necessity and the fortune of war with courage.”49 Thucydides II. lxiv. 3. φέρειν τε χρὴ τά τε δαιμόνια ἀναγκὰιως, τά τε ἀπὸ τῶν πολεμίων ἀνδρείως The quotation is from the speech of Pericles to the Athenians in b.c. 430 in which he encourages and soothes them under adversity. Why need I quote philosophers, historians, and orators? For even the men who gave higher honour to their mythology than to the truth have inserted many useful exhortations in their stories; as Homer in his poems introduces the wisest of the Hellenes preparing himself for deeds of valour, where he says

“He chid his angry spirit and beat his breast,

And said ‘Forbear my mind, and think on this:

There hath been time when bitterer agonies

Have tried thy patience.’”50 Homer Od. xx. 17. (Chapman’s Translation.) cf. notes on pp. 104, 255, 258, 259, and 260.

Similar passages might easily be collected from poets, orators, and philosophers, but for us the divine writings are sufficient.

I have quoted what I have to prove how disgraceful it were for the mere disciples of nature to get the better of us who have had the teaching of the prophets and the apostles, trusting in the Saviour’s sufferings and looking for the resurrection of the body, freedom from corruption, the gift of immortality and the kingdom of heaven.

So, my dear friend, comfort those who are discouraged at the stories bruited abroad, and if anybody is pleased at them, tell them that we are happy too, that we are exulting and dancing with joy, and that what they call punishment we are looking for as the kingdom of heaven itself.

To inform those who do not know in what mind we are, be assured, most excellent friend, that we believe, as we have been taught, in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. There is no truth in the slander of some that we have been taught to believe, or have been baptized, or do believe, or teach others to believe, in two Sons. As we know one Father and one Holy Ghost so we know one Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, God the Word who was made man. We do not however deny the properties of the natures. We hold them to be in error who divide the one Lord Jesus Christ into two Sons, and we also call them enemies of the truth who endeavour to confound the natures. We believe an union to have been made without confusion, and we reckon some qualities to be proper to the manhood and others to the Godhead; for just as the man—I mean man in general—reasonable and mortal being, has a soul and has a body, and is reckoned to be one being, just so the distinction between the two natures does not divide the one man into two persons, but we recognise in the one man both the immortality of the soul and the mortality of the body, and acknowledge the invisible soul and the visible body, but, as I said, one being at once reasonable and mortal; so do we recognise our Lord and God, I mean the Son of God our Lord Christ, even after His incarnation, to be one Son; for the union is indivisible, as we know it is without confusion. We acknowledge too that the Godhead is without beginning, and that the manhood is of recent origin; for the one nature is of the seed of Abraham and David, from whom descended the holy Virgin, but the divine nature was begotten of the God and Father before the ages without time, without passions, without severance. But suppose the distinction between flesh and Godhead to be destroyed, what weapons shall we use in our war with Arius and Eunomius? How shall we undo their blasphemy against the only begotten? As it is, we apply the words of humiliation as to man, the words of exaltation and divinity as to God, and the setting forth of the truth is very easy to us.

But this disquisition on the faith is exceeding the limits of a letter. Still even these few words are enough to show the character of the apostolic faith.51 Garnerius dates this letter in Sept. or Oct., 449.