Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers: Series II/Volume III/Theodoret/Letters/Letter 40
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
XL. To Theodorus the Vicar.[1]
The custom of the feast bids me write a festal letter, but the cloud of our calamities suffers me not to gather the usual happy fruit from it. Who is so stony-hearted as not to be shocked and affrighted at the anger and grief of the Lord? Who is not stirred to the memory of faults? Who does not look for the righteous sentence? All this dims the brightness of the feast, but the Lord is full of loving-kindness, and we trust He will not actually fulfil His threats, but will look mercifully on us, scatter our sadness, open the springs of mercy, and shew His wonted long suffering. I salute your greatness, and beseech you to send me news of the health I sincerely trust you are enjoying.
Footnotes
[edit]- ↑ τοποτηρητής, vicarius, or lieutenant, is used of “Vicars” both civil and ecclesiastical.