Letter 45: (After the Consecration every one thought that Gregory would at once join his friend; and Basil himself much wished for his assistance. But Gregory thought it better to restrain his desire to see his friend until jealousies had time to calm down. So he wrote the following letter to explain the reasons for his staying away at this juncture.) When...

Gregory of NazianzusBasil of Caesarea|c. 367 AD|Gregory of Nazianzus|Human translated
imperial politics
Personal friendship; Economic matters

When I learned you'd been placed on the lofty throne — that the Spirit had prevailed to set the candle on the candlestick, a candle that already shone with no dim light — I was glad. I confess it. How could I not be, seeing the Church in such a sorry state, so desperately in need of a guiding hand like yours?

But I didn't rush to you right away, and I won't — not even if you ask.

First, for the sake of your dignity: I don't want it to look like you're gathering partisans in a fit of hot temper and bad taste, as your critics would say. Second, for my own sake: I want to build a reputation for steadiness and being above petty hostility.

"When will you come, then?" you may ask. "How long will you wait?"

As long as God directs, and until the shadow of the present enmity and slander has passed. The lepers — I know it — won't hold out very long to keep our David out of Jerusalem.

Human translation - New Advent (NPNF / ANF series)

Latin / Greek Original

Original text not yet available in this corpus.

This letter still needs a Latin or Greek source-text backfill. The source link, when available, is preserved so the text can be checked and added later.

View source

Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from New Advent / NPNF.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/3103b.htm

Related Letters

Gregory of NazianzusBasil of Caesareac. 363 AD · gregory nazianzus #2

(Written about the same time, in reply to another letter now lost.) I do not like being joked about Tiberina and its mud and its winters, O my friend, who are so free from mud, and who walk on tiptoe, and trample on the plains. You who have wings and are borne aloft, and fly like the arrows of Abaris, in order that, Cappadocian though you are, y...

Gregory of NazianzusBasil of Caesareac. 364 AD · gregory nazianzus #8

(Written to S. Basil shortly after his Ordination as Priest, probably toward the end of a.d. 362.) I approve the beginning of your letter; but what is there of yours that I do not approve?

Gregory of NazianzusBasil of Caesareac. 369 AD · gregory nazianzus #59

(The reply to Basil's somewhat angry answer to the last.) This was a case which any wiser man would have foreseen; but I who am very simple and foolish did not fear it in writing to you. My letter grieved you; but in my opinion neither rightly nor justly, but quite unreasonably. And while you did not acknowledge that you were hurt, neither did y...

Antipater, on assuming governorship of CappadociaBasil of Caesareac. 368 AD · basil caesarea #187

Twice cabbage is death, says the unkind proverb. I, however, though I have called for it often, shall die once. Yes: even though I had never called for it at all!

LibaniusBasil of Caesareac. 378 AD · basil caesarea #358

Oh, for the old days in which we were all in all to one another! Now we are sadly separated! You have one another, I have no one like you to replace you.