5. Roman Christian Missions

5.
Roman Christian Missions

Pope Gregory the Great, Letters (598–601)

Although Britain stood on the periphery of the empire, it, too, could not escape the turmoil of the late imperial period. After the Roman army was recalled to Italy, the Anglo-Saxons invaded the island in the 440s and replaced local traditions, including Christianity, with their own. In due course, however, Christianity was reintroduced from a variety of directions, of which Italy was among the most important. From here Pope Gregory I (r. 590–604) dispatched two groups of missionaries to establish Roman-style Christianity in England. The first group, sent in 595, was led by Augustine and the second was sent in 601 by Mellitus; both were monks from Rome. In these letters, Gregory describes the mission’s initial progress and then offers strategies for furthering its success. He points not only to the pope’s growing influence in the West but also to the interaction between Roman and non-Roman customs.

From A Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, 2nd ser., vols. 12 and 13 (New York: Christian Literature Co., 1895 and 1898), 12:240, 13:84–85.

To Eulogius, Bishop of Alexandria

Gregory to Eulogius, &c.

Our common son, the bearer of these presents, when he brought the letters of your Holiness found me sick, and has left me sick; whence it has ensued that the scanty water of my brief epistle has been hardly able to exude to the large fountain of your Blessedness. But it was a heavenly boon that, while in a state of bodily pain, I received the letter of your Holiness to lift me up with joy for the instruction of the heretics of the city of Alexandria, and the concord of the faithful, to such an extent that the very joy of my mind moderated the severity of my suffering. And indeed we rejoice with new exultation to hear of your good doings, though at the same time we by no means suppose that it is a new thing for you to act thus perfectly. For that the people of holy Church increases, that spiritual crops of corn for the heavenly garner are multiplied, we never doubted that this was from the grace of Almighty God which flowed largely to you, most blessed ones. . . .

But, since in the good things you do I know that you also rejoice with others, I make you a return for your favor, and announce things not unlike yours; for while the nation of the Angli, placed in a corner of the world, remained up to this time misbelieving in the worship of stocks and stones, I determined, through the aid of your prayers for me, to send to it, God granting it, a monk of my monastery for the purpose of preaching. And he, having with my leave been made bishop by the bishops of Germany, proceeded, with their aid also, to the end of the world to the aforesaid nation; and already letters have reached us telling us of his safety and his work; to the effect that he and those that have been sent with him are resplendent with such great miracles in the said nation that they seem to imitate the powers of the apostles in the signs which they display. Moreover, at the solemnity of the Lord’s Nativity which occurred in this first indiction, more than ten thousand Angli are reported to have been baptized by the same our brother and fellow-bishop. This have I told you, that you may know what you are effecting among the people of Alexandria by speaking, and what in the ends of the world by praying. For your prayers are in the place where you are not, while your holy operations are shewn in the place where you are.

To Mellitus, Abbot

Gregory to Mellitus, Abbot in France.

Since the departure of our congregation, which is with thee, we have been in a state of great suspense from having heard nothing of the success of your journey. But when Almighty God shall have brought you to our most reverend brother the bishop Augustine, tell him that I have long been considering with myself about the case of the Angli; to wit, that the temples of idols in that nation should not be destroyed, but that the idols themselves that are in them should be. Let blessed water be prepared, and sprinkled in these temples, and altars constructed, and relics deposited, since, if these same temples are well built, it is needful that they should be transferred from the worship of idols to the service of the true God; that, when the people themselves see that these temples are not destroyed, they may put away error from their heart, and, knowing and adoring the true God, may have recourse with the more familiarity to the places they have been accustomed to. And, since they are wont to kill many oxen in sacrifice to demons, they should have also some solemnity of this kind in a changed form, so that on the day of dedication, or on the anniversaries of the holy martyrs whose relics are deposited there, they may make for themselves tents of the branches of trees around these temples that have been changed into churches, and celebrate the solemnity with religious feasts. Nor let them any longer sacrifice animals to the devil, but slay animals to the praise of God for their own eating, and return thanks to the Giver of all for their fullness, so that, while some joys are reserved to them outwardly, they may be able the more easily to incline their minds to inward joys. For it is undoubtedly impossible to cut away everything at once from hard hearts, since one who strives to ascend to the highest place must needs rise by steps or paces, and not by leaps. Thus to the people of Israel in Egypt the Lord did indeed make Himself known; but still He reserved to them in His own worship the use of the sacrifices which they were accustomed to offer to the devil, enjoining them to immolate animals in sacrifice to Himself; to the end that, their hearts being changed, they should omit some things in the sacrifice and retain others, so that, though the animals were the same as what they had been accustomed to offer, nevertheless, as they immolated them to God and not to idols, they should be no longer the same sacrifices. This then it is necessary for thy Love to say to our aforesaid brother, that he, being now in that country, may consider well how he should arrange all things.

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. Earlier in his papacy, Gregory had advised the destruction of pagan temples. How does Gregory reverse this decision in his letter to Mellitus, and why?

    Question

    Eo9JaCiBYNoltjKdIVMETjUPlOHLbaGMNmKM+k/8AkWino+FE9R9kWqWsiW2vtpfMNmw34DVbM808EBa70S0rUkMaXDbck/GDjGVrejTgiEgQkT4U8s9MUofyzkO3Lb/Lp9KGJiibjMOkXPqlTu/b8wOvrHZ23eshRna+mdR1+g0QIOb4nUjObl/hurI39p6I+B1GEKmHGFggP8eUx/8hEjFS2KO5odjJxay33JeoSbJ6Xb5fdIuOJMDBniGoXKn1qlGFg==
    Earlier in his papacy, Gregory had advised the destruction of pagan temples. How does Gregory reverse this decision in his letter to Mellitus, and why?
  2. What does Gregory’s change of approach suggest about the ways in which Latin Christianity adapted to non-Roman cultures?

    Question

    UW4kVkp5+UJdzhxeGOko9kj4Bt3q1ityEr5BnUQ1XBxUbhbkECqnrthaef95IopuZRPqxtixKeY/YTvMt/Zt/meXdhPt3HylJsgqnc9+HkeXVWgTYflrzlrEU/g+ckzCOCOLWaQK3OyY3URTRhGu8G1pSFCi3kQkrbR30H92y7iaEkjgePbRfe4C/68eCwZ4JS/yRFO0l6TK0CdHp9c87AYlRhs=
    What does Gregory’s change of approach suggest about the ways in which Latin Christianity adapted to non-Roman cultures?
  3. Historians often refer to Gregory I as the “father of the medieval papacy” because of the role he played in transforming the papacy into the moral and spiritual head of the West. What evidence can you find in these letters to support this view?

    Question

    8kWVHFMNsctL59Csf5Bb+VJltYxUAKTNhE1SD7gaEzz07A+qa/0vsAJTe8JNXFdKJ2MBY6CS0bho1xUwklbvaB5hwrts1Bzi+N5vC+0+WRfclmk2NjWJgp+R2SnM7/WN7OhipBooMh3dK54vdRuqvDxAZyqCvlpePeQl78pwsKUQDEBmXaXPAfkSIACNoRP/83yu4BtUl58y/FBw4WNkeqHZxCpHBRSOU7Cl5q/dq+wVbKa2aP31QAmIzE8LinXpPIMSes/JUe2EQgfWHd5PHC6KhqvXwIzEbVpBtL9rBkX/nvgh5zV+vg2Zhy7FnEV0huYnvufy4nJCMGfoNVg/M41B5Iq8hkNwGDY1xZZkGTcVqdKkIiE6nbjKWGgB4YsXCLmIYQ==
    Historians often refer to Gregory I as the “father of the medieval papacy” because of the role he played in transforming the papacy into the moral and spiritual head of the West. What evidence can you find in these letters to support this view?