Letter 57: Severus tells Didymus to shepherd through public disaster while avoiding separation disguised as zeal.

Severus of AntiochDidymus, bishop and correspondent of Severus of Antioch|c. 522 AD|Severus of Antioch|From Antioch, Syria|AI-assisted
Didymus; invasion; captivity; episcopate; schism; royal road; Irenaeus
Brooks notes that the attack is probably the incursion of al-Mundhir mentioned by Zacharias Rhetor. Source id I.57; Brooks page 171; source-facing English extracted by body markers from the Archive OCR text; source terminology repaired where required; original Syriac source-text backfill remains pending.

Severus writes to Didymus after news of an attack, captivity, siege, and war near Didymus' city. The report grieves everyone, but it grieves Severus especially because Didymus has had to endure such calamity at the very beginning of his episcopate. A bishop, he says, must treat public disaster as his own. Like David during the plague, the shepherd is unable to watch the sheep suffer without wanting the blow to fall on himself.

Yet Severus refuses to read disaster as mere ruin. When received rightly, chastisement can become help. He believes Didymus has been raised to sacred leadership at this very moment so that he may show what kind of man he is under pressure. The attack exposes the burden of the office, but it also gives Didymus a chance to shepherd with courage, patience, and prayer. The bishop must not merely survive the crisis; he must let it form him.

Much of the letter warns against schism and separation. Severus cites the fathers against those who stay away from the assembly or isolate themselves under pious-sounding pretexts. Even thoughts that seem to come from the right side can lead a person off the royal road. Didymus must beware not only obvious evil but also the kind of zeal that turns fear, injury, or scruple into distance from the church's common life.

The closing counsel is steady and practical. Didymus should direct his mind to the fathers, guard against obstructive forces, look to heaven, and ask God to direct his paths according to the divine word. Severus does not minimize the violence around him. He gives Didymus a way to govern inside it: feel the grief, accept the chastening, avoid schism, and let God make the new bishop straight in a crooked and dangerous time.

The letter also protects Didymus from a common pastoral mistake after disaster: confusing purity with withdrawal. In a time of captivity, siege, and fear, people may think the safest course is to stand apart from everyone whose judgment is uncertain. Severus answers that the fathers call the church back to assembly, correction, and patience. The bishop must help wounded people stay on the shared road, even when the road passes through war. His first proof of office is not brilliance but faithful presence.

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.

Latin / Greek Original

Original text not yet available in this corpus.

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Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern severus brooks batch7 v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://archive.org/details/selectletterssix01seveuoft/page/n189/mode/1up

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