To my most beloved brothers, the African bishops, Symmachus.
Chapter I: The Lord Reigns in the Devotion of the Few; The Sword of the Faithless Has Cut Away the Withered Members of the Church; The Rewards of Confession Surpass the Gifts of Named Dignity
The enemy might perhaps reckon it gain if, among the perils he has brought upon Christians, he had subdued the souls of believers, and — the Lord’s flock having been scattered through diverse places — there were not even a few left by whom he could be trampled with persevering faith. Yet He still reigns in your number, He who has been pleased not so much in multitude as in devotion. For it is written that power was given to Satan to sift Christ’s servants (Luke 22:31), so that what could be found of the wheat might be gathered into the barns, and what was of the chaff might pass over to the fuel of fires. To you it was specially said: Do not fear, little flock, for it has pleased your Father to give you the kingdom (Luke 12:32). The sword of the faithless came among you, a sword that would cut away the withered members of the Church and lead the sound to heavenly glory. The contest reveals whom Christ has as His soldiers; through battles is known who merits triumph. Fear not that they have stripped from you the bands of the pontifical mitre.1 With you is that Priest and Victim Himself, who is accustomed to rejoice not so much in honors as in souls. The rewards of confession are greater than the gifts of named dignity: to the latter, human favor often brings even persons of lesser merit; the former, only heavenly grace bestows. For He Himself both fought and conquered in you — He whom faith merits to be joined to even amid the torments of men.
Chapter II: The Patronage of Saints Nazarius and Romanus Granted Through Deacon Hormisdas; The Heavenly Emperor Has Already Recognized the Bishops’ Faith in the Battles; The Promise of Peace’s Return
There is no need for prolonged discourse to inspire heavenly fervor in you. The fire of divine virtue has its own increases. There is no need to lift up with praises those already standing in the trophy of victory, who have conquered without an admonisher: whatever the flatteries of acclamation bring, they burden the conscience of a Christian. The deed you have done is indeed a work of virtue — but to be surpassed by the rendering of the supreme reward. Yet what you have hoped for through letters directed to Our son, Deacon H.2 — requesting the blessing of the blessed Nazarius and Romanus — We do not deny to the faithful. Receive the venerable patronage of these unconquered soldiers; and since the Emperor3 has already recognized your pious faith in the battles, fulfill happily the offices of confession. God will grant, when it shall please Him, the return of peace to the Churches, and that the sorrow which adversity has brought may be consoled by the sweetness of peace.
Footnotes
- ↩ The Latin is pontificalis apicis infulas. The apex was the priestly cap (originally worn by the Roman flamens, later adopted by Christian bishops); the infulae were the white woolen bands wound about it. Together they served as the visible insignia of the episcopal office. To strip the apicis infulas from a bishop was to deprive him of his outward standing as a bishop, which is what the Vandal Arian kings had done in exiling these African bishops to Sardinia.
- ↩ The manuscript reads H. diaconum. Baronius read this as a monogram for N. (an unspecified-name placeholder), and accordingly proposed Ennodius. Thiel, following Sirmondus, retains the manuscript H and identifies it as Hormisdas — then a deacon at Rome and later Symmachus’s successor as pope (514–523). Thiel’s argument is that the ancient practice for indicating an unspecified name was the abbreviation ill., not the letter N alone, so the H is more naturally read as a real letter abbreviation for an actual person. The identification is significant: the future author of the Formula of Hormisdas (519) is here acting as the Roman intermediary through whom exiled bishops in Sardinia approached the Apostolic See for relics.
- ↩ The imperator here is Christ — the Heavenly Emperor or Commander recognizing His soldiers. The military metaphor runs through the whole letter: the bishops are milites (soldiers); the persecution is the certamen (contest) and the bella (battles); the sword of the faithless is the gladius; their having been already raised to victory is rendered as in tropaeo jam positos (set on the trophy). The imperator who has recognized their piam fidem in praeliis belongs to that same metaphorical register — and cannot in any case be a temporal emperor, since the bishops were exiled by the Arian Vandal kings, not by any Roman emperor.
Historical Commentary