CHAP.
VIII.[624 A.D.]
JUSTUS, bishop of the church of Rochester, immediately
succeeded Mellitus in the archbishopric. He consecrated Romanus bishop of that
see in his own stead, having obtained authority to ordain bishops from Pope
Boniface, whom we mentioned above as successor to Deusdedit: of which licence
this is the form:
"Boniface, to his most beloved brother Justus. We have learnt not only
from the contents of your letter addressed to us, but from the fulfilment
granted to your work, how faithfully and vigilantly you have laboured, my
brother, for the Gospel of Christ; for Almighty God has not forsaken either the
mystery of His Name, or the fruit of your labours, having Himself faithfully
promised to the preachers of the Gospel, 'Lo! I am with you alway, even unto
the end of the world'; which promise His mercy has particularly manifested in
this ministry imposed upon you, opening the hearts of the nations to receive
the wondrous mystery of your preaching. For He has blessed with a rich reward
your Eminence's acceptable course, by the support of His loving kindness;
granting a plentiful increase to your labours in the faithful management of the
talents committed to you, and bestowing it on that which you might confirm to
many generations. This is conferred on you by that recompense whereby,
constantly persevering in the ministry imposed upon you, you have awaited with
praiseworthy patience the redemption of that nation, and that they might profit
by your merits, salvation has been bestowed on them. For our Lord Himself says,
'He that endureth to the end shall be saved.'' You are, therefore, saved by the
hope of patience, and the virtue of endurance, to the end that the hearts of
unbelievers, being cleansed from their natural disease of superstition, might
obtain the mercy of their Saviour: for having received letters from our son
Adulwald, we perceive with how much knowledge of the Sacred Word you, my
brother, have brought his mind to the belief in true conversion and the
certainty of the faith. Therefore, firmly confiding in the long-suffering of
the Divine clemency, we believe that, through the ministry of your preaching,
there will ensue most full salvation not only of the nations subject to him,
but also of their neighbours; to the end, that as it is written, the recompense
of a perfect work may be conferred on you by the Lord, the Rewarder of all the
just; and that the universal confession of all nations, having received the
mystery of the Christian faith, may declare, that in truth 'Their sound is gone
out into all the earth, and their words unto the end of the world.'
"We have also, my brother, moved by the warmth of our goodwill, sent you
by the bearer of these presents, the pall, giving you authority to use it only
in the celebration of the Sacred Mysteries; granting to you likewise to ordain
bishops when there shall be occasion, through the Lord's mercy; that so the
Gospel of Christ, by the preaching of many, may be spread abroad in all the
nations that are not yet converted. You must, therefore, endeavour, my brother,
to preserve with unblemished sincerity of mind that which you have received
through the kindness of the Apostolic see, bearing in mind what it is that is
represented by the honourable vestment which you have obtained to be borne on
your shoulders. And imploring the Divine mercy, study to show yourself such that
you may present before the tribunal of the Supreme Judge that is to come, the
rewards of the favour granted to you, not with guiltiness, but with the benefit
of souls. "God preserve you in safety, most dear brother!"
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