Letters of Isidore of Pelusium
The holy bishops and the guides of the monastic discipline, from the conflicts and struggles which they underwent,...
Burning coals were set ablaze byit.
Concerning an active life of good works.
Concerning the conflicts which you undergo, excellent sir, be convinced: the present circumstances put before us are...
Concerning the food of the Precursor[17] and asceticism[18].
Concerning: “For [there is] a cup in the hand of the Lord.
Concerning the Mother of God.
That it is necessary that the labor of spiritual discipline[34] be moderate[35].
Concerning the appearances at night.
That nothing is greater than love, in which one has[43] brotherly union as proof.
That in philosophy one is frequently wronged or maltreated.
Although you conceal failure, still you show yourself as haughty, being puffed up concerning your tribe, strength,...
When you were approaching the high mountain of ascetic practice, you cleansed both your clothes and senses.
Concerning practical asceticism[60].
If you are trying to gain the kingdom of Christ — may persistence unworn away crown this –, and the prize of...
To Esaias the soldier. To[2] the disorderly soldier. If, from among your weapons, you consider your spears and your...
. Against the Macedonians, or Spirit-Contesters.
. Concerning him who received (a slap)on the cheek.
Gelasios Concerning pride, impotence and insignificance It is usual for human beings- at least for most, although...
Against theNovatians Say to the disciple of Novatian’s pride: why are you foolishly boasting as if [you were] clean?
, a newly-professed monk Concerning the need always to be sober You have grasped the ploughshare well and to the point.
Against the Theopaschites and those who affirm one nature in Christ.
Why Our Lord after His Resurrection questioned Peter three times about love.
On those who unworthy aspirations touch on ordination as a bishop.
Why John called the Jews generations of vipers.
On the saying, “Do not make my Father’s house a house of trade”.
The devil does not know what is in the mind, most gentle one.
Almost every other passion, Prohairesios, has a peak, knows a decline, and understands satiety.
Marathonios. Against the Macedonians or Spirit-Contesters.
We will reach the summit of humility — for I would define this not as a descent but as an ascent — if we quench the...
Concerning one ordained by means of money payment.
You are doing something like a man with an incurable disease who, having been given freedom to do whatever he...
That he has sold the priesthood for payment.
This is the explanation of the three periods of day and night of Our Lord’s entombment.
Elias. “What have you to do with the way to Egypt with a view to drinking Nile water?
Possessing a wise means of discovering truth, namely the many-shaped device of torments, use fear with regard to...
Why, best of men, do you place divine assistance second to human support?
Liking cannot see far ahead, while dislike cannot see clearly.
How to provide assurance to the synod If you could personally take the time to join them in deliberating at Ephesus,...
On how you cannot argue with an ignorant person.
If the advocate of Marcion's blasphemy puts forward their so-called Gospel, take it up and read it — you will find...
Just as the emperor is subject to the laws, the law having a life of its own, so a priest is subject to the laws of...
The indispositions of the body originate from excess.
If indeed, like Zosimus, Eustathius and Maron, people who don’t have a shred of honesty, who never bother about the...
If riches, beauty, strength, glory, power, everything we find beautiful, are soon consumed and dissipate like smoke,...
Personally, I find wise the things that you you claim are absurd.
It is necessary, my dear chap, to persuade your listeners by facts that the kingdom of heaven exists, and then to...
You seemed to have a good pretext for your last offence to forgive yourself as avenging your brother.
For fear of presumption, a terrible ill from which one can escape with difficulty, lest we remain on earth and be...
Since you’ve provided us the occasion to return to the apostolic treasures — in fact you said: ‘It says “Not only do...
Since you ask me in your letter: For what reason was it that “God gave them over to an intelligence without...
Just as the quality of the site of a city is closely related to the quality of the climate [of the location], in the...
Undoubtedly it is to better endure insults in silence, like a philosopher, but your attitude is not without elegance...
Once the hierarchy used to correct and temper the office of emperor when it stumbled and fell, but now it has fallen...
It is entirely unfitting for a monk to be reading pagan Greek writings.
Why do people bring the Lord's judgment down upon themselves?
The priest pronounces peace upon the church from the height of his chair, imitating the Lord of that chair, who upon...
Wretched Zosimus, it is the last hour.
Why did you choose the narrow way and make vows to God about it, only to walk the broad road?
If the shamelessness of sinners and the arrogance of the wicked trouble you, do not be surprised.
Abraham's statement to the rich man — "Between us and you a great chasm has been fixed" — reveals something crucial...
The person who professes the ascetic life must give up everything that belongs to it — not just wealth, but...
Regarding the three days and nights of the Lord's burial: the reckoning is straightforward if you understand Jewish...
When Christ said, "Unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven," he was not...
Why do people bring the Lord's judgment down upon themselves — these blasphemers, these fighters against God, who...
The priest pronounces peace upon the church from the height of his chair, imitating the Lord who upon his ascension...
On the text, "Be wise as serpents and innocent as doves" [Matthew 10:16].
It goes beyond all audacity to make theological pronouncements when your life contradicts the faith you claim to uphold.
The celebrated vision of the divine Daniel represents the succession of empires that would rule the world: the...
You wrote asking why a certain man, when he comes among the poor, fails to do them any good despite having the means.
Why did you choose the narrow way and make vows to God, only to walk the broad road that leads to death?
Even if the heresy of Montanus was unknown to you until now, as you write, it has long been known to the Church —...
The way into the Holy of Holies was hidden within the temple, sealed off by the veil that separated God's presence...
Many people mock you as a grudge-bearer — and rightly so, since you use anger as a weapon of revenge.
The strength of rulers lies in friendship with God.
You honor the Lord well by offering us the firstfruits of your harvest and tithing the produce of your land to the...
Knowing full well that indulgence breeds passions and gluttony drags a person toward sexual immorality, I think you...
Just as it is not safe to travel through a wilderness with a violent companion, so it is not easy to engage in...
When Christ said, "Unless you turn and become like children" [Matthew 18:3], he was not demanding a return to...
What the Apostle did to the sorcerer does not contradict the divine law that commands us to love our enemies — far...
The Lord called himself bread — and the name is fitting on two levels.
You began well in your manly resolve, but you have not continued — so we hear.
That flattering companion, that dry and lifeless inflation, that empty and earthly glory — let it be banished from us.
Everything about the supernatural and ineffable birth was itself supernatural.
You ask why the law entrusted its sacrifices to blood, when blood seems repulsive rather than holy.
To Vouserius: Some things are good, others dangerous — and the key is knowing which is which.
If you have been caught by the poison of greed — which is the root of every evil [1 Timothy 6:10] — and it is...
The Philip who baptized the Ethiopian eunuch and instructed Simon the sorcerer was not the Apostle Philip, but one...
You are wrong to admire Athens — the Stoa, the Peripatetic school, and all that Attic pretension — you who once...
The divine nature is unnameable.
It is good to gird your loins before dangers come, to serve God, and to strike down the opposing ranks by faith...
Why do you carry books around for nothing, when your reading is contradicted by your conduct?
Even if the blasphemy of Montanus was unknown to you until now, as you wrote, it is ancient and extensive, having...
The love of adornment — jewels and their sparkle, gold woven among them, curled hair twisted into elaborate designs,...
The Cappadocian who corrupted our citizens is now in the military camp, trying once again to seize power for himself.
Join in the fight against this man, I beg you by all that is holy.
Those who are guides and teachers must not only keep themselves above reproach but must also be rich in divine virtues.
If you imagine that being tall makes you greater than other people, the giant Nimrod far surpassed you, as did the...
Many people mock you as a grudge-bearer, and rightly so — for you use anger as a weapon of petty revenge.
Those who love virtue and live rightly during their time on earth find their reward in eternity — they are honored...
The strength of rulers is friendship with God.
I am ashamed both when I write to you and when I turn away from your bad conduct.
Some people prefer Epicurus to Christ — and the reason is obvious, even if they will not admit it.
On "Lest anyone be a fornicator or profane person, like Esau" [Hebrews 12:16]: Scripture showed Esau as a glutton...
You have scorned temporal profit and chosen the divine reward instead.
Do not merely consider yourself above reproach — consider yourself worthy of praise.
If it were possible to take your money with you after death, even then it would hardly be precious — it would be...
I consider it a sacred duty to trust the divine oracles and follow them diligently, rather than to prefer one's own...
That an old man in his declining years should shelter young men who are sunk in debauchery surpasses every form of...
Among the pagans — though the devil led them wherever he pleased, even into idolatry — and among the Jews — though...
Since excessive intimacy seems to invite suspicion, let it be tempered by the fear of God, so that both may flourish...
You ask why wine does not affect everyone the same way — why it makes some genial, others aggressive; some...
If someone with a taste for slander asks, "Can God do all things?
I hear that flatterers hang on your every word, swearing that everything you do is excellent — even if what you...
One must never contract the nature of the Godhead in the Jewish manner, reducing it to the Father alone, nor expand...
Your blessed brother Timothy has departed from among us, leaving behind everything mortal in the earth but walking...
You seem unable to follow the common sense of the matter.
If the poison of greed has caught you — and it is the root of every evil — and it is driving you into idolatry,...
When anger snaps the reins of the guiding reason, it drags a person's mind far beyond the boundaries of nature.
The most just judge of disputed matters, in my opinion, is the one who is not overawed by the highest rank but...
"Professing to be wise, they became fools" [Romans 1:22] — this was said, my wise friend, because among the...
The person who departs from truth at the beginning will inevitably roll downhill from that point forward and end in...
The person who is conscious of no good in himself, wise friend, and therefore speaks modestly and is forgiving — or...
Among true Christians alone — those who genuinely deserve the name, for one should not judge the faith by the...
I confess that I am a friend to both of you.
Epicurus, the shepherd of your flock, impiously declared that everything came into being by chance and would return...
Two things, I believe, convinced people to embrace the divine message: the power of the message itself, and the...
The apostles, as students of wisdom and lovers of truth, saw the Savior paying attention to the blind man and...
Nothing from this life endures.
If you care nothing for hell and nothing for the kingdom of heaven — if neither threat nor promise moves you — then...
Silence, rightly practiced, is not the absence of speech but the fullness of restraint.
In Holy Scripture, expressions that go beyond the singular number indicate the distinction of the persons;...
Setting aside the well-worn interpretations, let me state the meaning clearly — even if some think I am cutting a...
Your brother, my admirable friend, is admired for his character; you are admired for your eloquence.
I believe with all my strength that a teacher needs two things: purity of life and competence in speech.
A certain man — not only superior to shameful gain but one who distributed his own possessions to those in need —...
The most destructive thing in the world is false doctrine, and the labors of those who follow it are utterly fruitless.
I know perfectly well that if I were to ask you whether I am wiser than Paul, you would treat the very question as...
I greatly admire the courage of the celebrated Paul — how even when he was on trial, he gave public addresses, and...
You seem not to realize that the same word, the same phrase, and the same statement, when spoken with a different...
Even if some of your flatterers told you that your response was the product of reason rather than anger, it seems to...
Many people — for it would be wrong to blame everyone — do evil without ever being taught, yet cannot understand the...
The person who not only defends those who have been wronged but also takes care that no one is wronged in the first...
It was not the power of the message alone, my admirable friend, but also the lives of those who proclaimed it —...
Do not seek wealth, my friend — it is the father of pride, the parent of contempt, the supplier of pleasures, the...
The pleasures of the body are smooth-tongued and dangerously enchanting.
A distinguished man — upright in character and splendid in life (I will pass over his high office, for that is only...
On the Arians and Eunomians.
For the ordained minister: wealth is the beauty of virtue; pleasure is self-control; luxury is contentment with...
I call both humble and magnanimous the person who accomplishes great things yet does not claim the glory of those...
That your gentleness is not something people look down on, and that your courage is not brutal — for your love of...
The terrible pirate does not simply launch himself at those sailing this storm-tossed sea.
A festival — properly speaking — is one that is unstained by any shameful indulgence, but adorned instead with...
Since small causes often ignite great wars, I advise you: do not throw sparks of contention.
Whatever your office requires of you, whatever comes your way — measure it by piety and justice.
Those who fail conspicuously at what is universally acknowledged to be right have no authority to pronounce on...
On the text: "Why do you see the speck in your brother's eye, but do not notice the log in your own?
The cross — the very thing the idol-worshippers mocked — crucified their polytheistic delusion.
Just as it is not his cloak and staff that show a man to be a philosopher, but his boldness of speech and his way of...
On "Do not practice your righteousness before others to be seen by them" [Matthew 6:1].
On the text: "Do not practice your almsgiving before others" [Matthew 6:1].
You ask why the Apostle placed the drunkard and the reviler in the same list as adulterers and fornicators [1...
On the text: "And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called...
Why are you surprised that so many heresies arose after the Savior's incarnation in the flesh?
Since you have written asking for an explanation of the passage, I will answer briefly.
On the Epistle to the Romans: "God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do what ought not to be done" [Romans 1:28].
On the question of whether God is the cause of evil.
When the celebrated temple was destroyed and the city was given over to its captors, many asked: why did God permit...
What you call unreasonable, I consider to be wisdom.
Injustice is always bad.
On the captivity of the Jews.
Continuing on the destruction.
On the Apostle: "He is a chosen vessel of mine" [Acts 9:15].
On three texts:
It is wise — what you call unreasonable — that we do not have knowledge of all things.
Do not grow weary in the contest.
You asked: why did the one who received five talents, doubled them, and the one who received two, get the same reward?
On the text: "If they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry?
Since you asked what Paul means by "forbidding to marry and commanding to abstain from foods" [1 Timothy 4:3], know...
From the Epistle of Peter: Why does Peter command husbands to honor their wives as the weaker vessel?
The richness of divine teaching is such that a single passage of Scripture often contains answers to questions we...
On the text: "He stands in every way that is not good" [Psalm 36:1], and on "His soul shall be blessed in his life"...
Not only the uneducated and the rough-mannered fall into moral error.
On the text: "Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up" [John 2:19].
Since it was not obvious to all who heard it what "I am the Resurrection and the Life" [John 11:25] meant, and since...
On the necessity that those who shine with the correctness of their teaching must also have a life that matches...
On the coming of God in the flesh.
The body was made to serve the soul, not to govern it.
In civil wars, even the victors are more wretched than the vanquished — for the more they do, the greater their shame.
Even during the tyranny of Eusebius — as you have written — when the friends of virtue were being destroyed, no one...
They stood firm against the passions — the very passions they had previously acknowledged defeat against.
Truly, as you have written, many disturbances have swept through the churches.
The person who falls twice into the same trap does not deserve the same mercy as the one who fell once without...
Those who are stung by the sharp goads of worldly reputation embrace voluntary hardship — they exhaust themselves...
On the blessed Aphrodisios, your brother, presbyter in the faith.
Stain, pollution, defilement — what should I call it that would be enough?
Even though teachers and fathers have rejected flattery as something supremely harmful and ruinous — using fear...
The person who sins in full knowledge of it seems to me better off than the one who sins without knowing.
I reproach you sharply for this: the gratitude that was owed has died in you.
Whether in prosperity or adversity, in public life or in private — the standard of conduct does not change.
The temptation that has already passed quickly loses its edge and turns toward forgetting.
I have watched how the communion is administered, and I am troubled.
If you wish to silence those who mock Christ's teaching, the most effective response is not argument but conduct.
I define the wise — and I offer this as my view, not as law — as those adorned with the virtues of the reasoning...
What you will in any case leave to your enemies against your will — give it willingly now.
Correction that actually corrects must come from those with the authority and standing to give it — from teachers,...
Let us hold only to those possessions we will need after our departure from this life.
What the tongue speaks, let the mind first approve.
For those of moderate virtue, suspicion is an inconvenience.
The best approach is a middle course between harshness and softness — neither crushing the penitent with excessive...
It is good to do good to your friends.
First, you must overcome.
True grace has piety as its foundation and virtue as its crown.
The advisory and beneficial words of sound teaching reach your hearing — but certain people have stopped up their ears.
I do not admire the custom of lavishing adornment on the body.
A terrible love of rhetoric has seized human souls in this age.
Do not confuse the apostolic life with a comfortable domestic arrangement.
What seems narrow turns out to be the most beautiful road — the one that leads to piety, and ends in broad and...
If your natural gift for love — and it is a great gift — is being wasted on quarrels, then something has gone badly...
I will not pass judgment, and I will not condemn, a man whom I have never heard speak and never met in person.
I will not render judgment based on hearsay alone, and I will not take sides before hearing both parties.
When mercy is sought, let it be found.
If words alone could destroy wickedness, every teacher would be a savior.
Know this: those who discipline you are not your enemies, and those who flatter you are not your friends.
A good speech does more than convey information — it transforms.
The usurper must be reprimanded — not to gratify those who are watching, and not to make a point at his expense, but...
Two things above all bring us down: the flattery of others that inflates us beyond what we are, and the neglect of...
The things of this life are fleeting and shadowy.
We all greatly marvel at the mystery of the Incarnation — and rightly so.
Secular power and spiritual authority are different things and must not be confused.
It is a bold claim — but the calamity threatening the Church does not come primarily from external enemies.
On "heap burning coals on his head" [Romans 12:20]: repaying evil with good is not merely a clever strategy for...
I am troubled that in our time the names of virtues and vices have been systematically confused.
On "What God has joined together, let no one separate" [Matthew 19:6].
What seems broad and pleasant often turns out to be narrow and painful.
We owe thanks for everything — not merely for the blessings we recognize as blessings, but also for the trials we...
Most people are slow to do what is genuinely good, and quick to do what is harmful.
Advice given seems like a warning.
I am astonished at the insatiable greed of certain people.
What is not lawful to do is not lawful to say.
The cross of Christ stands as the measure against which everything else is evaluated — in this world, and in the one...
When arrogance — which is a form of madness — exceeds all measure and restraint and departs from the principles of...
The one who neither transgresses himself nor leads others to transgress has achieved a double crown.
The wise person keeps his head during prosperity and prepares for adversity while things are going well.
The priesthood is not a rank to be sought but a weight to be accepted.
Two brothers once quarreled over something trivial and spent years in bitter estrangement.
Victory over temptation brings relief — but relief can breed complacency, and complacency invites the next attack...
Our nature pulls us toward excess — this is one of the consequences of the fall.
Prayer does not always obtain what it seeks — and this is itself a mercy.
Injustice breeds instability.
The path of the spiritual life has a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Whoever thinks there is no art to silence is foolish.
When your own strength fails — as it will — calling on God is not weakness.
The theater — that furnace of irrational love — captures the best of men and drags them into the worst of themselves.
The one who commands rightly must first have learned to obey rightly.
The theater is to be avoided — not because pleasure is evil in itself, but because this particular pleasure actively...
Those who labor sincerely at both sacred and secular learning will find that they illuminate each other.
The arrogant mind cannot follow the straight path because it cannot see it.
All honors are fleeting, and all positions of power are temporary.
The one who takes the place of a father to the orphan has done more than fulfill a duty — he has imitated God, who...
To sin after receiving the most generous gifts of God's grace — and to do so on a scale greater than one's ancestors...
Patience in bearing injuries benefits the soul more than any revenge could benefit the pride.
Those who truly practice virtue by God's grace are the only ones who have the standing to correct others.
If you wish to judge others, first judge yourself.
Do not blame those who fled headlong from that merciless threat — the danger lurking in what was happening.
Those who were ordained with care — those chosen with the genuine guidance of discernment rather than through...
Look at what people actually do, and consider how far short it falls of what they later claim they intended.
I hold the straightest rule of friendship to be this: one who breathes in harmony with his brothers without...
Just as those who are easily frightened are terrified even at the bare sound of danger, and cannot endure so much as...
That one ought not to do anything licentious or boyish, but to keep a temperate and disciplined manner of life in...
Truth is powerful, Peter — and often silent.
Your former transgression, Maron, has become a ready pretext for the present one.
You asked what it means: "O priests, speak to the heart of Jerusalem.
Whoever, having seen the ineffable and surpassing beauty of self-control, was not conquered by its attraction — let...
With all your strength, best of men, you ought to practice virtue.
A bishop cannot content himself with having done no harm.
You know how pleasantly good repute is nourished, when it is well tended.
If you were to dwell on the memory of the coming glory, Pepios, it would put wings on your soul.
Even Hippocrates the physician, so the story goes, knowing that death was coming, wanted to improve the condition he...
That one ought not to disclose everything to everyone is agreed upon by all who have any sense.
You seem to be ignorant of how great a joy the untroubled life contains.
Your letter reached me, and I read it with care.
I would gladly ask you this, Maron: why is your war against virtue an unrelenting and unproclaimed one — a war waged...
Forgetting does not happen outside the range of human experience — it falls upon us like other ailments.
I have received what you sent, and I recognize in it the spirit of one who genuinely seeks rather than one who...
Two things are generally confused by those who hold authority: the power to command and the obligation to care.
When I heard that you had written to Zosimus the Presbyter in those terms, I was troubled — not because your...
Do not think you need only to be above reproach, Arabianus.
You asked about the raven sent to feed Elijah.
Do not mistake the delay of punishment for its cancellation, best of men.
You asked me about the style of the blessed John [Chrysostom], and whether it represents genuine Attic Greek.
Let me put this to you plainly, Zosimus.
The philosophers who claim to have abolished passion altogether have not, in my view, achieved virtue — they have...
You may wonder why I continue to write rather than coming to speak with you face to face.
The work of virtue is done slowly, Paul — so slowly that it sometimes seems nothing is happening.
The man who cannot be corrected has made himself into a finished product before he is finished.
Envy, Epiphanos, is remarkable among the vices for this: it punishes its possessor more reliably than it punishes...
A physician who only treats the healthy is not a physician — he is simply a companion to those who do not need him.
What can be seen from the outside, Zosimus, is the least important part of the life.
The demands of the priestly life are real, Athanasios — I will not pretend otherwise.
You have trained your mind well, Ioannis — I do not doubt that.
The friendship of the powerful is pleasant, Atherious, but costly — and the cost is not always visible at the time...
Justice in ecclesiastical administration requires exactly what it requires in civil administration: impartiality.
Legal knowledge is a tool, Theodosius, and tools take the character of the hands that wield them.
The damage done by idle talk, Ammonios, is rarely dramatic.
What does it mean to be a Christian, Markos?
The apparent good and the genuine good are often different things, Timotheos.
The work of a grammarian, Ophelios, is not merely to be precise for its own sake.
When someone treats you unjustly, Athanasios, the natural response is to respond in kind.
Correct belief and correct life are not the same thing, Antiochos, but neither are they separable in the end.
The philosophers teach, Nemesios, that the soul has parts, and that its health depends on the right ordering of...
Wealth, Paul, does not belong to its possessor in the way that his virtues belong to him.
You have asked me whether the philosophical education you received serves your faith or works against it.
Your office is not merely vocal, Theophilos.
You have complained, Eurthemon, about the slowness of justice and the impunity of those who seem to act without...
The danger that accompanies learning, Ammonios, is pride — and the pride of the learned is particularly resistant to...
You share my name, Isidoros, and I take that as a reason to write to you with particular care.
The man in authority, Arcadios, does not have the same privacy available to him that an ordinary person has.
The longer a wrong goes unaddressed, Ammonios, the harder it becomes to address.
The defense of sound doctrine is not a matter of institutional pride, Pamretios.
The courage required to speak truth to the powerful, Alexandros, is different from the courage required in battle —...
The bishop who is only firm is feared but not loved.
Command without example is only half of leadership, Paul — and the less important half.
The person who reveals what has been entrusted to him in confidence has committed a betrayal, Theognostos.
Virtue is its own witness, Aroionios.
If there were no resurrection, Peter, the advice I give you would be foolishness.
You are under pressure, Pamretios, and you want to know whether you should give way.
I wrote to you before about the proper use of legal knowledge, Theodosius.
There is a reason, Dionysios, that those who live virtuously are described in scripture as lights.
The man who believes he has sufficiently progressed in virtue has stopped progressing, Archivios.
The apostle Paul addressed this clearly, Isidoros: Christians who drag their disputes before pagan courts have...
The pressure to accommodate, to soften, to avoid the fight that orthodoxy requires — I know this pressure, Herakleides.
Service is not degradation, Apollonios.
Humility, Ammonios, does not require you to accept every criticism that is made of you as accurate.
The affairs of the city that have been placed in your hands, Hedid and Dorotheos, are not your private possession.
The difficulty you are experiencing in maintaining the disciplines you have chosen is not a sign that you chose...
Ingratitude, Peter, is not merely an unpleasant quality — it is a failure of perception.
I have heard things about your conduct, Isidoros, that I wish I had not heard — that you carry the title of deacon...
Correct doctrine is necessary in a sermon, Theodosius, but it is not sufficient.
The bishop's role in conflict, Lampetios, is not to silence the parties but to help them understand each other — and...
The calling does not change with the circumstances, Isidoros.
You of all people, Ophelios, understand that words are not the things they describe.
The standards of justice do not change depending on the arena, Theodosius.
The man who handles records and documents, Theodosius, holds something more than paper.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Wealth is a tool, not a treasure.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
True humility is not the absence of accomplishment but the refusal to boast about it.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Prayer is not the manipulation of God but the alignment of our will with his.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
A teacher must live what he teaches.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
God's judgment is certain, and no amount of cleverness or delay can avoid it.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Wealth is a tool, not a treasure.
Prayer is not the manipulation of God but the alignment of our will with his.
True humility is not the absence of accomplishment but the refusal to boast about it.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Vice needs no teacher — it comes naturally to our fallen nature.
Wealth is a tool, not a treasure.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
God's judgment is certain, and no amount of cleverness or delay can avoid it.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Vice needs no teacher — it comes naturally to our fallen nature.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
God's judgment is certain, and no amount of cleverness or delay can avoid it.
True humility is not the absence of accomplishment but the refusal to boast about it.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
True humility is not the absence of accomplishment but the refusal to boast about it.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
Vice needs no teacher — it comes naturally to our fallen nature.
A ruler's authority comes from God and must be exercised in justice.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
Flatterers are not friends — they are parasites who feed on your vanity and disappear when your power fades.
The cross — foolishness to the world — is the power of God.
The cross — foolishness to the world — is the power of God.
Vice needs no teacher — it comes naturally to our fallen nature.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
A ruler's authority comes from God and must be exercised in justice.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
True humility is not the absence of accomplishment but the refusal to boast about it.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Repentance is not a feeling but a reversal — a turning of the whole person from the wrong direction to the right one.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Wealth is a tool, not a treasure.
Repentance is not a feeling but a reversal — a turning of the whole person from the wrong direction to the right one.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Wealth is a tool, not a treasure.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Vice needs no teacher — it comes naturally to our fallen nature.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
A teacher must live what he teaches.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
The Holy Trinity — three persons, one nature — is not a contradiction but a mystery.
The cross — foolishness to the world — is the power of God.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Patience is not passive endurance but active resistance to despair.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
A teacher must live what he teaches.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
God's judgment is certain, and no amount of cleverness or delay can avoid it.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Prayer is not the manipulation of God but the alignment of our will with his.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Repentance is not a feeling but a reversal — a turning of the whole person from the wrong direction to the right one.
Death is not the end but a transition.
The man who has done everything within his power to persuade, and yet failed, deserves to be admired as one who...
If, as you write, the piety of rulers in matters of God has exposed the impiety of bishops — if the extraordinary...
Do not be ashamed of your work — take pride in it.
Hold on — especially since the greater part has already been endured and its sting has been spent.
I cannot understand how unbelievers manage to make light of faith in God, whose knowledge is easy to acquire, whose...
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Those who stand strongest in virtue, who surpass others in piety and sound judgment, and who excel their neighbors...
My definition of the wise — I am not laying down law, but offering my judgment — is those adorned with the virtues...
Since you have asked where the word for pardon (συγγνώμη — literally, 'knowing together') gets its meaning when...
What you will often leave to your enemies against your will — give it willingly now.
A short while ago, when it was still dawn — night and daybreak were just blending — a close friend of mine came to...
If you have a very sharp tongue, try above all to bridle it and rein it in.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Let us hold only to those possessions of which we will have need after departing this life.
Since our nature has nothing inherently noble or extraordinary, let us lead it toward the moderate and the fitting —...
What you ask about, I could tell you — but I cannot, obedient as I am to the divine oracle that commands, 'Do not...
Since we ourselves have no perception of the terrible things we do, because of laziness and self-love — and since we...
It is good to do good to friends.
What appears elegant is not necessarily elegant, and what appears just is not necessarily just.
Far better, most wise one, is a victory untainted by any defeat than to conquer after a fall.
The resurrection of the soul deadened by sin happens here, in this life, when it is reformed into life by acts of...
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Whoever receives the advice and counsel that breathes good and usefulness will profit from it — provided he...
I greatly admire ancient Sparta — a city adorned with honor, whose mothers forbade ornament so that the men they...
A terrible love of words has flooded the souls of people in this time — words, I say, not of the kind that bring...
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The road that seems finest to me is the one that leads toward piety and ends in open, spacious freedom.
Some say that your eldest and youngest children are at odds, and that you know this but pretend not to.
I was extraordinarily glad to hear of your excellent change of heart.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
I will neither condemn nor acquit a man of whom I was neither a witness nor a judge.
If you are unwilling to heal anything, and actually deepen the wounds of the poor — what more terrible battle are...
A man deeply devoted to the most holy religion, and who places great value on meeting others who share his way of...
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The vile and God-hated Zosimus dares to serve as priest — as you write with shock.
If I claimed to possess words capable of eliminating every kind of wickedness, I would rightly be accused of arrogance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Since it is difficult — hard, that is — for one who has fallen into the love of money to pull back (for such a...
God's judgment is certain, and no amount of cleverness or delay can avoid it.
Know this, best of men: we err even in this — avenging wrongs done against ourselves while overlooking wrongs done...
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Pursue peace and holiness, without which no one will see the Lord.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
Everyone, without exception, is utterly astonished and struck dumb when they see how quickly the great collapse and...
Virginity is the most divine and supernatural of the three states; lawful marriage is honorable; fornication is lawless.
A teacher must live what he teaches.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
True friendship is built on truth, not on comfort.
Do not entrust the verdict of victory to the weak power of human beings.
True humility is not the absence of accomplishment but the refusal to boast about it.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Nothing, O admirable friend, is wealth — not even if it be great and flooding in from every direction.
What you have written is truly bold — and true.
No one would be found worthy of the heavenly festival unless he were truly adorned with the marks of virtue.
The monastic life demands total commitment.
Do not be shaken by the fact that many who love virtue suffer countless terrible things in this world.
I am thoroughly astonished at those who confuse not only the things themselves but their very names — who have...
If, speaking of a man and a woman as two separate persons, it is said: "What God has joined, let no man put asunder"...
I believe that the one who reproves another should neither strike, nor revile, nor come to physical confrontation —...
Just as the inequality we see in this present life — the righteous suffering, the wicked prospering — appears to be...
Touching on the highest of all subjects — for there is nothing more glorious than leading a wandering soul back to...
For this reason, O wisest of men, why do you not despise the worthless and embrace the worthy with all your heart —...
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Those who imagine that contradicting things rightly said is a form of wisdom are only attaching infamy to themselves...
I know that they have received positions of dignity greater than their personal merit warranted.
I greatly marvel at the insatiability and servility of those who devour every benefit offered to them but do not...
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Since arrogance (ἀπόνοια) has fallen away from due measure and from what is fitting — having become 'apo,' that is,...
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Grace is superior to all change.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Great is the exactness of the divine judge: he scrutinizes words and deeds and even intentions, penetrating into the...
Prayer is not the manipulation of God but the alignment of our will with his.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
It is not the person who has no opportunity to do injustice who deserves to be called just — but the one who,...
This much is enough for me: your holiness has testified that your anger was not the ill-temper of a man making much...
At times, immoderate joy does more damage to the soul than sorrow does.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
There were once two full brothers who had quarreled so violently with each other that they regarded as enemies even...
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
True humility is not the absence of accomplishment but the refusal to boast about it.
A teacher must live what he teaches.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
A ruler's authority comes from God and must be exercised in justice.
The one who practices virtue may justly call upon the divine inclination for help.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The one who is mad about theaters, O dear friend, becomes mad about love.
A teacher must live what he teaches.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
Nothing makes one fit to rule lawfully so much as having been ruled lawfully.
The man bringing this letter to your piety has been well trained — at home, on his own, as if under a master — and...
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Since genuine and sincere friendship is guaranteed precisely by the fact that it speaks without fear, it is on this...
If, having failed to obtain what you contested — having been decisively defeated — you now appear to be asking a...
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
The monastic life demands total commitment.
Scripture speaks with precision to those who read carefully.
Wealth is a tool, not a treasure.
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
True humility is not the absence of accomplishment but the refusal to boast about it.
Many people are greatly reproaching you: that you speak most pleasantly with those whom it is not even right to look...
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Virtue must be practiced with all one's strength — not merely admired from a distance.
Character is revealed not by what a person says but by what he does when no one is watching.
Even if, seized by an incurable madness as you are, the sane seem to you to be raving and those who admonish you...
The priesthood is a sacred trust, not a career.
God's judgment is certain, and no amount of cleverness or delay can avoid it.
Anger is a fire: useful when controlled, devastating when unleashed.
The other philosophers defined philosophy as the art of arts and the science of sciences.
I consider the truest rule of friendship to be the one who agrees with his brothers without making excuses, who...
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
That nothing licentious or childish should be practiced — that one should maintain a disciplined and restrained...
The spiritual life is a journey with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Vice needs no teacher — it comes naturally to our fallen nature.