Letters of the Blessed Theodoret, Bishop of…
Letters of the Blessed Theodoret,
IX. To an Anonymous Correspondent.
XI. To Flavianus Bishop of Constantinople.
XVII. To the Deaconess Casiana.
XIX. To the Presbyter Basilius.
XX. To the Presbyter Martyrius.
XXIII. To the Patrician Areobindas.
XXIV. To Andreas Bishop of Samosata.
XXVII. To Aquilinus, Deacon and Archimandrite.
XXVIII. To Jacobus, Presbyter and Monk.
XXXI. To Domnus Bishop of Antioch.
XXXII. To the Bishop Theoctistus.
XXXIII. To Stasimus, Count and Primate.
XXXIV. To the Count Patricius.
XXXVI. To Pompianus, Bishop of Emesa.
XXXVII. To Salustius the Governor.
XLII. To Constantius the Prefect.
XLIII. To the Augusta Pulcheria.
XLV. To the Patrician Anatolius.
XLVIII. To Eustathius, Bishop of Berytus.
L. To the Archimandrite Gerontius.
LII. To Ibas, Bishop of Edessa .
LIII. To Sophronius, Bishop of Constantina .
LVII. To the Præfect Eutrechius.
LX. To Dioscorus, Bishop of Alexandria.
LXI. To the Presbyter Archibius.
LXX. To Eustathius, Bishop of Ægæ.
LXXII. To Hermesigenes the Assessor.
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.
LXXXII. To Eusebius, Bishop of Ancyra.
LXXXIII. Of Theodoretus, Bishop of Cyrus, to Dioscorus, Archbishop of Alexandria.
LXXXIV. To the Bishops of Cilicia.
LXXXVII. To Domnus, Bishop of Apamea.
LXXXVIII. To Taurus the Patrician.
LXXXIX. To Florentius the Patrician.
XCI. To the Prefect Eutrechius.
XCII. To Anatolius the Patrician.
XCIII. To Senator the Patrician.
XCV. To the Præfect Antiochus.
XCVII. To the Count Sporacius.
XCIX. To Claudianus the Antigrapharius.
CI. To the Deaconess Celarina.
CIII. To the Count Apollonius.
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.
CXVII. To the Bishop Florentius.
CXVIII. To the Archdeacon of Rome.
CXIX. To Anatolius the Patrician .
CXXI. To Anatolius the Patrician.
CXXIV. To the Learned Maranas.
CXXVI. To the Bishop Sabinianus.
CXXVII. To Jobius, Presbyter and Archimandrite.
CXXVIII. To Candidus, Presbyter and Archimandrite.
CXXIX. To Magnus Antoninus the Presbyter.
CXXXI. To Longinus, Archimandrite of Doliche.
CXXXII. To Ibas, Bishop of Edessa.
CXXXIII. To John, Bishop of Germanicia.
CXXXIV. To Theoctistus, Bishop of Berœa.
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.
CXLIII. To Andrew, Monk of Constantinople.
CXLV. To the Monks of Constantinople.
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.
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.
CLIX. Letter of the same to the Præfect and to the Master.
CLX. Letter of the same to the Governor and Scholasticus.
CLXII. Letter of Theodoretus to Andreas, Bishop of Samosata, written from Ephesus.
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 .
CLXXVII. Letter to Andreas, Bishop of Samosata.
CLXXVIII. Letter to Alexander of Hierapolis.
CLXXIX. Letter of Cyril to John, Bishop of Antioch, against Theodoret.
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.656
Your piety, which shines forth for the good of the empire and of the churches of God, has commanded us to assemble at Ephesus, in order to bring about peace and gain for the Church, rather than to confuse and disturb it. And the commands of your majesty plainly and distinctly indicate your pious and peaceful intentions for the churches of Christ. But Cyril of Alexandria, a man, it would seem, born and bred for the bane of the churches, after taking into partnership the audacity of Memnon of Ephesus, has first of all transgressed against your quieting and pious decree, and has so shewed his general depravity. Your majesty had ordered an investigation and careful testing to be made concerning the faith, and that with the consent and concord of all. Cyril, challenged, or rather himself convicting himself, on the count of the Apollinarian doctrines, by means of the letter which he lately sent to the imperial city, with anathematisms, whereby he is convicted of sharing the views of the impious and heretic Apollinarius, pays no heed to this condition of things, and, as though we were living with no emperor to govern us, is proceeding to every kind of lawlessness. He ought himself to be called to account for his unsound opinion about our Lord Jesus Christ; but, usurping an authority given him neither by the canons, nor by your edicts, he is hurrying headlong into every kind of disorder and illegality.
Moved by these things the holy Synod, which has refused to accept his devices for the damage of the faith, for the aforesaid reasons deposes him. It deposes Memnon also, who has been his counsellor and abettor through all, who has kept up constant agitation against the very holy bishops for refusing to assent to his pernicious heterodoxy; who has shut the churches and every place of prayer, as if we were living among the heathen and the enemies of God; who has brought in the Ephesian mob, so that every day we are in supreme danger, while we look not to defence, but heed the right doctrines of true religion. For the destruction of these men is identical with the establishment of orthodoxy.
From his own Chapters your majesty can have no difficulty in perceiving his impious mind. He is convicted of trying, so to say, to raise from Hades the impious Apollinarius, who died in his heresy, and of attacking the churches and the orthodox faith. He is shewn in his publications to anathematize at once evangelists and apostles and them that succeeded them as forefathers of the Church, who, moved not by their own imaginations, but by the holy Spirit, have preached the true faith, and proclaimed the gospel; a faith and gospel indeed opposed to what this man holds and teaches and by inculcating which he wishes to give his own private iniquity the mastery of the world. Since this is intolerable to us we have followed the proper course, relying at once on the divine grace and on your majesty’s good will.
We know that you give to nothing higher honour than to the sacred faith in which both you and your thrice blessed forefathers have been brought up. From them you have received the perpetual sceptre of empire, ever putting down the opponents of the apostolic doctrines. Such an opponent is the aforesaid Cyril, who, with the aid of Memnon, has captured Ephesus as he might some fortress, and justly shares with his ally the sentence of deposition. Justly: for, besides all that has been said, they have boldly tried every means of assault and every violence against us, who, to come together in council in ratification of your edict, have disregarded every claim of home and country and self.
We are now the prey of tyranny, unless your piety intervene and order us to assemble in some other place, near at hand, where we shall be able, from the scriptures, and from the writings of the Fathers, to refute beyond contradiction both Cyril and the victims of his ingenuity. We have mercifully expelled these men from communion with the suggested hope of salvation in case they should repent; although, as if on some campaign of uncivilized soldiery, they have up to this moment furnished him with the means of his illegality. Some were deposed long ago, and have been restored by Cyril. Some have been excommunicated by their own metropolitans, and admitted by him again into communion. Others have been impaled on various accusations, and have been promoted by him to honour. All through, the main motive of his action has been the endeavour to achieve his heretical purpose by the force of numbers, for he does not reckon as he ought that in what relates to true religion, it is not numbers that are required, but rather correctness of doctrine and the truth of the doctrine of the apostles. Men are needed who are competent to establish these points not by audacity and masterful self-assertion but by pious use of apostolic testimony and example.
For all these reasons we beseech and implore your majesty to bear prompt aid to assaulted truth, and to remedy without delay these men’s masterful readiness; for, like a hurricane, it is sweeping the less moderate among us into pernicious heresy. Your piety has had care for the churches in Persia and among the barbarians; it is only right that you should not neglect those which are tossed by the storm within the boundaries of the Roman empire.