Nilus of Ancyra→Theodotus|c. 415 AD|nilus ancyra|From Ancyra|AI-assisted
To Theodotus the Comes [count, a high civil or military official].
The divine angels, imitating their own Master, love humility. Therefore, whenever a monk, exulting in the loftiness of his way of life, embraces pride and clings to it so that he can scarcely be torn from it, the angels abandon the boastful man and withdraw far off, no longer willing to shelter, to help, to guard, and to assist him as they did before. And at once the utterly wicked demons rush in, and, grappling with the man who has been orphaned of that blessed protection, they cast the puffed-up man down into fornication, or theft, or murder, or adultery, or some other of the forbidden deeds. For greater than all transgressions is the transgression of pride, and on account of this the inventor of all baseness, the devil, was hurled down from the heavens to the earth. These things have been said by me because you asked me for what reason some of those who have chosen the ascetic life are at a certain moment carried down into unlawful deeds and fearful falls. It is good, then, to embrace and to hold fast continually to what is good; and nothing is more beautiful than modesty of mind, which Christ also, the Lord of all and God and Master, while consorting with men according to the flesh, displayed to us all and commanded us to emulate, saying: "Learn from me, that I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find a sure rest for your souls." [Matthew 11:29]
To Theodotus the Comes [count, a high civil or military official].
The divine angels, imitating their own Master, love humility. Therefore, whenever a monk, exulting in the loftiness of his way of life, embraces pride and clings to it so that he can scarcely be torn from it, the angels abandon the boastful man and withdraw far off, no longer willing to shelter, to help, to guard, and to assist him as they did before. And at once the utterly wicked demons rush in, and, grappling with the man who has been orphaned of that blessed protection, they cast the puffed-up man down into fornication, or theft, or murder, or adultery, or some other of the forbidden deeds. For greater than all transgressions is the transgression of pride, and on account of this the inventor of all baseness, the devil, was hurled down from the heavens to the earth. These things have been said by me because you asked me for what reason some of those who have chosen the ascetic life are at a certain moment carried down into unlawful deeds and fearful falls. It is good, then, to embrace and to hold fast continually to what is good; and nothing is more beautiful than modesty of mind, which Christ also, the Lord of all and God and Master, while consorting with men according to the flesh, displayed to us all and commanded us to emulate, saying: "Learn from me, that I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find a sure rest for your souls." [Matthew 11:29]
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.