Resultados18 letters/passages
innocent_i · c. 406 · score 0.02
… opal judgment was being awaited, sacred bishops were driven into exile? That by imperial favor, while the wretched prisons of the guilty were being opened, the innocent ministers of sacred law and peace were shut in by a cruel prison? That everything was thrown into confusion in the manner of war, and some were killed …
innocent_i · c. 407 · score 0.02
Pope Innocent I to Aurelius, Bishop of Carthage, and Augustine, Bishop of Hippo. A brief salutatory letter full of charity. When Emperor Honorius, prompted by Innocent's letters, had written twice to Arcadius about the case of John Chrysostom without result, he asked Innocent to send five bishops, two priests, and a de …
innocent_i · c. 406 · score 0.02
When these things were suddenly made known to us, I confess we were stricken. For who, in so bloody a crime, would not fear the offense of Almighty God? Or in what way could anyone think it beyond the utmost danger of the Roman world and of all mortals — when God Almighty, the author of our empire and the governor of t …
innocent_i · c. 416 · score 0.02
Pope Innocent I to Florentinus, Bishop of Tibur. Divine Scripture cries out not once but many times that the boundaries established by the fathers are not to be transferred. It is wrong for one person to seize what another has always possessed. Innocent writes to Florentinus because someone has intruded into a foreign …
innocent_i · c. 412 · score 0.02
Reading the letters of your love, we learned that certain presbyters and deacons are conducting themselves in a manner contrary to the laws of the Church and the decrees of the apostolic see. Since this matter pertains to the discipline which the blessed apostle Peter entrusted to this see for the governance of all the …
innocent_i · c. 408 · score 0.02
The mercy of the Church extends to all the afflicted, but the sacred ministry demands that its ministers be fitted for the work to which they are called. Sixth, concerning the reconciliation of the dying: no one who sincerely seeks penance at the hour of death shall be denied the consolation of reconciliation and commu …
innocent_i · c. 408 · score 0.01
We have received and read the letters which your charity sent through our son the deacon Pascentius, and we have carefully reviewed the matters which you referred to the judgment of the apostolic see. Although the rule of the fathers is clear enough and the canonical authorities leave nothing ambiguous, nevertheless si …
innocent_i · c. 406 · score 0.01
3. Although I, provoked by frequent injuries, ought to keep silent, and not so faithfully admonish a most closely joined brother and sharer of the kingdom, nevertheless, putting the bond of blood before the stimulus of silent grief, I exhort and urge that these things, if it can be done, be corrected by amendment of fu …
innocent_i · c. 404 · score 0.01
Pope Innocent I to Theophilus, Bishop of Alexandria. Innocent writes that he cannot withdraw from communion with John Chrysostom of Constantinople unless John is condemned by a lawful judgment. He holds both John and Theophilus to be in communion with him, just as he made clear in his earlier letters. Theophilus is sum …
innocent_i · c. 406 · score 0.01
For those whose authority was awaited, having granted peaceful communion to Bishop John, judged that harmony should be established, and did not think anyone should be expelled from fellowship before judgment. 5. What else now remains, but that schisms, torn apart in different directions, should lacerate the Catholic fa …
innocent_i · c. 412 · score 0.01
Since the care of all the churches presses upon us, which the blessed apostle Peter committed to this see when the Lord himself said to him, Feed my sheep, and again, I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail, and you being converted confirm your brethren, we cannot be silent when matters are brought to our at …
innocent_i · c. 410 · score 0.01
We have received the report of your love, and from its content we learn that certain things need correction in your province, which it falls to us by apostolic responsibility to address. You have made known that some bishops in your region are ordaining clergy without proper examination, promoting men to sacred orders …
innocent_i · c. 412 · score 0.01
Those writings which have been condemned by the councils or by this see are not to be read or circulated among the faithful, for they contain errors that can lead souls astray. We exhort all bishops to exercise the utmost vigilance in their dioceses, ensuring that only sound and orthodox teaching is offered to the fait …
innocent_i · c. 410 · score 0.01
Pope Innocent I to Alexander, Bishop of Antioch: On Peace (second letter). Innocent testifies by his public acts how welcome, how pious, how necessary the legation sent by Alexander's holiness to him has been. He writes as 'beloved brother' to Alexander in the warmest terms, rejoicing at the reconciliation achieved and …
innocent_i · c. 411 · score 0.01
Pope Innocent I to Maximianus, Bishop (on Atticus of Constantinople). Innocent rules that communion is not to be restored to Atticus of Constantinople unless he first requests it through a solemn legation and fulfils what was agreed at Antioch — that is, restores the name of John Chrysostom to the sacred diptychs. He m …
innocent_i · c. 403 · score 0.01
You have asked in your letter, beloved son, about many things concerning which we must respond carefully, since both the ecclesiastical discipline and the care for souls committed to us demand it. For it is proper that the bishop of the apostolic see, when consulted by the bishops of the provinces, should not withhold …
innocent_i · c. 402 · score 0.01
Pope Innocent I to John, Bishop of Jerusalem. The noble holy virgins Eustochium and Paula have lamented to Innocent with tears the plunderings, killings, fires, and every kind of outrage of extreme madness that the devil has perpetrated in the places of John's church; they withheld the name of the man responsible. Alth …
innocent_i · c. 415 · score 0.01
Pope Innocent I to John, Bishop of Jerusalem. John of Jerusalem ought to have foreseen that Paula and Eustochium would be oppressed by so many and such great evils, and unless these matters are henceforth either corrected or restrained, he will be made to render account for them. Innocent reproves John sharply for allo …