Priscillian of Avila: The Execution That Haunted the Church

Priscillian of Avila is one of the most difficult figures in early Christian history because his story was, for a long time, mostly written by his opponents. He was remembered as a heretic, a magician, a deceiver, an ascetic extremist, and the leader of a dangerous movement. But he was also remembered as a learned lay teacher, a bishop, a reformer, a man surrounded by devoted followers, and eventually a martyr in the eyes of his own party.

That tension is the whole story.

If we only read the hostile sources, Priscillian looks like a seducer of souls. If we only read his own defenses, he looks like an orthodox ascetic being persecuted by jealous bishops. The truth is difficult to recover, and any honest script has to admit that. The sources do not give us a clean modern biography. They give us accusations, apologies, councils, appeals, politics, and blood.

Sulpicius Severus gives the most famous ancient portrait. He begins the story by linking Priscillian’s movement to earlier forms of Gnostic and dualist error, especially through a certain Marcus from Egypt. That genealogy may preserve real memory, or it may be a hostile way of placing Priscillian inside a known map of heresy. Either way, when Sulpicius introduces Priscillian himself, the portrait is surprisingly complicated. He does not describe him as a fool.

“Priscillian was of noble birth, rich, bold, restless, eloquent, learned through much reading, and ready in debate. Undoubtedly he had many admirable qualities of mind and body. He could endure long vigils, hunger, and thirst; he had little desire for wealth and used it sparingly. But he was also most vain and puffed up with profane knowledge; indeed, it was believed that from youth he had practiced magical arts.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.46, c. 403.

That is a hostile source, but it is not a flat caricature. Sulpicius admits Priscillian’s intelligence, endurance, austerity, eloquence, and charisma. This matters because Priscillian’s movement did not grow because he was obviously ridiculous. It grew because he was persuasive. He spoke to people who wanted a more serious Christian life. He appealed to the educated and the ordinary, to ascetics and laypeople, to people frustrated with comfortable religion.

Jerome, writing before Sulpicius’s full narrative, preserves another important clue. He does not clear Priscillian of suspicion, but he does acknowledge that the memory of Priscillian was contested. Some accused him of Gnostic heresy. Others said he was not guilty of the things charged against him.

“Priscillian, bishop of Avila, who by the faction of Hydatius and Ithacius was slain at Trier by the tyrant Maximus, published many little works, some of which have come down to us. He is accused by some even now of the Gnostic heresy of Basilides or Marcus; but others defend him, saying that he did not think as he is accused.”

Jerome, On Illustrious Men, 121, c. 392.

That is the doorway into the script. Priscillian was not simply a name in a heresy catalog. He was a real fourth-century Christian leader whose reputation was fought over almost immediately. Even Jerome knew there were two stories being told.

And that is before we even come to the most shocking fact: Priscillian became the first major Christian figure remembered as being executed for heresy by a Christian imperial court. The formal charges at Trier included accusations of magic and scandalous behavior, not only doctrinal error. But in Christian memory, the event became something larger. A dispute among bishops, ascetics, and churches had crossed into imperial bloodshed.

The question is not only, “Was Priscillian a heretic?” The deeper question is, “What happened when the Church began asking the empire to solve its internal conflicts with the sword?”


A Holy Life—or a Dangerous Circle?

Priscillian’s movement seems to have begun as a call to stricter Christian life. He and his followers emphasized Scripture, fasting, renunciation, moral discipline, and serious devotion. Their critics saw danger in that very intensity. Private meetings, ascetic practices, women participating in religious study, and the use of disputed writings all became suspicious.

Priscillian’s own account presents his circle as people who had been renewed by baptism and had turned away from worldly life. In his appeal to Damasus, bishop of Rome, he describes the movement not as rebellion, but as devotion.

“After we had been renewed by the washing of living regeneration, and after we had rejected the darkness of worldly deeds, we gave ourselves wholly to God, reading that whoever loved anyone more than God could not be His disciple. Some of us were already chosen for God in the churches; others labored in life so that we might be chosen; and we pursued the quiet of Catholic peace.”

Priscillian, Letter to Damasus, Würzburg Tractate 2, c. 381.

That is how Priscillian wants to be seen: baptized, renouncing the world, submitting to God, seeking Catholic peace. He does not present himself as a rebel against the Church. He presents himself as someone whose strictness has been misrepresented.

Sulpicius tells the same story from the other side. To him, Priscillian’s appeal was dangerous precisely because it drew so many kinds of people.

“Gradually he drew many nobles and common people into fellowship with him by the arts of persuasion and flattery. Women also, eager for novelty and of unstable faith, flocked to him in crowds.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.46, c. 403.

The language about women is hostile and patronizing, but it reveals something important. Priscillian’s circle included women in ways that alarmed his opponents. Late antique bishops often became anxious when lay religious gatherings formed outside ordinary episcopal supervision, and that anxiety intensified when women were prominent. To Priscillian’s followers, this may have looked like serious Bible study and ascetic devotion. To critics, it looked like disorder, secrecy, and a challenge to church authority.

Sulpicius also says that Priscillian cultivated a humble appearance. Again, he means it negatively, as part of a deceptive image. But even hostile testimony suggests that Priscillian’s appeal was ascetic, not luxurious.

“His face and manner had the appearance of humility, and he appeared modest in bearing.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.46, c. 403.

This is the tension. Asceticism could look like holiness. It could also look like pride. A teacher who gathered laypeople for Scripture could look like a reformer. He could also look like someone undermining bishops. Women studying and praying could look like the Spirit at work. It could also be framed by opponents as suspicious novelty. The same practices could be read in opposite ways depending on whether one stood inside or outside the movement.

Priscillian himself insisted that renunciation was not a crime. He believed Christians should be free to choose a more rigorous life, so long as the faith itself remained sound.

“We have always admonished, and still admonish, that evil morals, indecent patterns of life, and whatever fights against the faith of Christ our God should be condemned by the love of proven Christian life. But we do not forbid someone, having despised parents, children, wealth, dignity, and even his own soul, to choose to love God rather than the world.”

Priscillian, Letter to Damasus, Würzburg Tractate 2, c. 381.

That quote is important because it shows the heart of his self-defense. Priscillian does not deny that some Christians may renounce more than others. He defends that freedom. But he also tries to avoid condemning those who cannot live the strictest life. His argument is not simply, “Everyone must become like us.” He says there are different measures of Christian capacity.

“Nor should hope of pardon be taken from those who cannot reach the first things, but stand in the second and third places; for there are many mansions with God the Father, and if the faith of the creed is kept uncorrupted, the hope set before us in Christ ought to be held.”

Priscillian, Letter to Damasus, Würzburg Tractate 2, c. 381.

That is not how his enemies remembered him. But it is how he wanted Rome to hear him: strict, yes; ascetic, yes; but not outside the creed.


Zaragoza: When Private Devotion Alarmed Public Bishops

In 380, a council met at Caesaraugusta, or Saragossa, in Spain. The surviving canons do not simply give us a clean list saying, “Priscillian is condemned by name.” Instead, they condemn practices that seem closely related to the controversy around his circle. That makes the council especially useful. It shows what bishops feared before the movement reached the imperial court.

The first canon addresses women, readings, and meetings. It shows anxiety about women gathering with men outside approved settings, and about teaching or study that was not clearly under church control.

“All women who are of the Catholic Church and faithful are to be separated from the readings and meetings of strange men; but other women are to meet with those women who read for teaching or learning. Let those who do not observe this judgment of the council be anathema.”

Council of Caesaraugusta, Canon 1, 380.

This canon does not name Priscillian, but it fits the controversy. His circle had drawn women, and opponents were disturbed by religious gatherings outside ordinary structures. The issue was not only doctrine. It was authority, gender, teaching, and control of sacred reading.

The second canon addresses fasting, Sunday observance, withdrawal during Lent, and meetings outside church assemblies. It reads like a response to Christians who were avoiding normal parish life in favor of private ascetic gatherings.

“One is not to fast on Sunday for the sake of the day, belief, or superstition. Those who persist in these opinions are not to be absent from the churches during Lent, nor to hide in cells and mountains; rather, they are to keep the example and precept of the bishops, and they are not to meet on strange estates in order to hold meetings.”

Council of Caesaraugusta, Canon 2, 380.

The canon gives us a picture of what bishops feared: Christians leaving the ordinary church assembly, meeting in villas or private places, adopting unusual fasts, and creating a parallel religious life. In a world where heresies often spread through private circles, that was enough to alarm church leaders.

Another canon shows concern about Eucharistic practice. If someone received the Eucharist in church but did not consume it, the council considered that a grave offense. This may reflect suspicion that some were taking the consecrated elements away for private ritual use.

“If anyone receives the grace of the Eucharist in the church and is proven not to have consumed it, let that person be anathema forever.”

Council of Caesaraugusta, Canon 3, 380.

The council also forbids withdrawal from church during the days before Epiphany. Again, the pattern is the same: do not disappear into houses, villas, mountains, or barefoot ascetic practices; gather with the Church.

“From the seventeenth day before the Kalends of January until the day of Epiphany, no one is permitted to be absent from the church, nor to hide in a house, nor to stay at a villa, nor to go into the mountains, nor to walk barefoot. They must gather at church. Whoever does not observe this is to be anathema forever.”

Council of Caesaraugusta, Canon 4, 380.

The council also speaks against unauthorized teachers. In a movement like Priscillian’s, where lay teaching, scriptural study, and ascetic circles seem to have been central, this canon matters.

“No one is to take for himself the name of teacher, except those persons to whom it has been granted, according to what has been written.”

Council of Caesaraugusta, Canon 7, 380.

Finally, the council regulates consecrated virgins. It insists that women should not take the veil too early, but only after a proven age and with priestly confirmation.

“A virgin dedicated to God is not to be veiled unless she has reached the age of forty years and has been examined and approved by the priest.”

Council of Caesaraugusta, Canon 8, 380.

Taken together, the canons show a church worried about unofficial asceticism. The bishops are not merely asking, “What does Priscillian believe?” They are asking: Who is teaching? Where are Christians meeting? Are women joining private circles? Are people withdrawing from churches? Are they fasting when they should not? Are they handling the Eucharist irregularly? Are they forming a religious movement outside episcopal oversight?

Priscillian later insisted that the council had not judged him properly. In his appeal to Damasus, he says no one from his group was formally accused, heard, convicted, or condemned at Saragossa.

“At the episcopal assembly held at Caesaraugusta, no one of ours was made a defendant, no one was accused, no one convicted, no one condemned. No crime was charged against our name, our vow, or our manner of life; no one had even the anxiety of being summoned.”

Priscillian, Letter to Damasus, Würzburg Tractate 2, c. 381.

He then claims that Damasus himself had already instructed that absent and unheard people should not be condemned.

“Your letter prevailed there against the wicked, for in it, according to the commands of the gospel, you had ordered that nothing be decreed against those absent and unheard.”

Priscillian, Letter to Damasus, Würzburg Tractate 2, c. 381.

Sulpicius tells the story differently. In his narrative, the council condemned Priscillian and his associates, and then the controversy escalated.

“A synod was held at Saragossa, at which neither Instantius nor Salvianus nor Priscillian appeared. Nevertheless, judgment was given against them, and Ithacius was appointed to pursue the sentence against the heretics.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.47, c. 403.

Already the case is tangled. Priscillian says they were not accused, heard, or condemned. Sulpicius says the synod condemned them despite their absence. The council canons do not give us a simple named condemnation. The result is not a clean courtroom record, but a contested memory.

That contest would soon become deadly.


Priscillian Speaks for Himself

Priscillian’s surviving writings matter because they prevent us from hearing only the prosecution. They do not solve every question. A person’s self-defense is not automatically true. But without it, Priscillian would be only a shadow in hostile reports.

In the Letter to Damasus, he presents himself as a Catholic Christian whose faith is centered on the creed. He is not trying to sound like an outsider. He is trying to convince Rome that he belongs inside the Church.

“The faith, just as we have received it, so we hold and hand down: believing in one God, the Father almighty, and in one Lord Jesus Christ, born of the Virgin Mary by the Holy Spirit, who suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, buried, rose on the third day, ascended into heaven, and will come to judge the living and the dead.”

Priscillian, Letter to Damasus, creed section, c. 381.

He continues with the rest of the confession: the Church, the Spirit, baptism, forgiveness, and bodily resurrection.

“We believe in the holy Church, the Holy Spirit, saving baptism, the remission of sins, and the resurrection of the flesh.”

Priscillian, Letter to Damasus, creed section, c. 381.

This is important because many of the later charges against Priscillian involved dualism, Manichaean tendencies, and suspicion about the body. Yet in his own defense, he explicitly confesses the resurrection of the flesh. That does not prove that all his theology was orthodox by later standards, but it does complicate the picture. His own language is not the language of a man openly rejecting the creed.

He also says that he condemns heresy. Again, this is a self-defense, but it shows the ground on which he wanted the argument to be judged.

“Guarding the path of this creed, with Catholic mouth we condemn all heresies, teachings, institutions, or dogmas that have made quarrels for themselves.”

Priscillian, Letter to Damasus, c. 381.

Priscillian’s defense also reveals how he interpreted the conflict. He did not think he was being opposed because he denied Christ. He thought he was being slandered because private hostilities had been dressed up as zeal for religion.

“Heal what has been wounded by the words of slanderers, for the fruit of life is to be approved by those who seek the faith of truth, not by those who, under the name of religion, pursue private enmities.”

Priscillian, Apology, Würzburg Tractate 1, c. 380–381.

That line captures the heart of his complaint. He believes the controversy is not really about truth, or not only about truth. It is about enemies using the language of orthodoxy to destroy him.

Of course, opponents could answer that heretics often claim to be orthodox. The Church had seen that before. A creed in an appeal letter might not settle the deeper question of what a teacher meant in practice, what books he used, what rituals he encouraged, or what private teachings circulated in his group.

But Priscillian’s own words still matter. They show that he did not present himself as an enemy of the Church. He presented himself as a Christian ascetic, committed to baptism, Scripture, creed, and Catholic peace, asking Rome to hear him before condemning him.

That appeal would not save him.


The Battle Over Books

One of the most serious suspicions surrounding Priscillian’s circle involved books. His opponents accused him and his followers of using apocryphal writings — texts outside the recognized canon of Scripture. In the fourth century, that was not a small matter. Many heretical groups appealed to hidden gospels, secret revelations, or alternative apostolic writings. To bishops already concerned about private meetings and unauthorized teachers, apocryphal books looked dangerous.

Priscillian responded in a tract known as On Faith and the Apocrypha. His argument is not that every apocryphal book should be trusted. His argument is more subtle: Christians should not condemn texts out of ignorance. They should examine, test, read carefully, and remember that even the apostles sometimes referred to writings outside the strict canon.

He turns first to the apostles themselves.

“Let us see, then, whether the apostles of Christ Jesus, the teachers of our conduct and life, read nothing outside the canon.”

Priscillian, On Faith and the Apocrypha, Würzburg Tractate 3, c. 381.

He then points to Jude’s use of Enoch. The argument is clear: if Jude can cite Enoch, then the mere fact that a writing is outside the canon does not mean every use of it is forbidden or useless.

“Jude the apostle says, ‘Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied about these things.’ Who is this Enoch whom the apostle Jude took as a witness of prophecy?”

Priscillian, On Faith and the Apocrypha, Würzburg Tractate 3, c. 381.

This argument would not satisfy everyone. Bishops could still respond that heretics used apocryphal writings deceptively, and that ordinary Christians might not be able to separate useful testimony from corrupt doctrine. But Priscillian’s defense shows that he did not think “apocryphal” automatically meant “never to be read.” He treated the question as one of discernment, not automatic rejection.

In one sharp passage, he mocks those who condemn what they have not examined. He frames the issue as a struggle between lazy ignorance and the command to search.

“On one side, ignorant rage presses us, saying nothing but, ‘Condemn what I do not know; condemn what I do not read; condemn what I do not examine, because I am devoted to idle laziness.’ On the other side, divine eloquence urges us: ‘Search the Scriptures.’”

Priscillian, On Faith and the Apocrypha, Würzburg Tractate 3, c. 381.

That is a dangerous sentence if one’s opponents already think one is too curious about forbidden books. But it is also intellectually serious. Priscillian is saying that condemnation without examination is not faithfulness. It is ignorance with ecclesiastical authority.

Still, this part of his legacy is one reason the controversy never becomes simple. Priscillian’s insistence on reading and testing may sound admirable. But the fourth-century Church had real reasons to worry about alternative writings used in secretive groups. Some apocryphal texts were harmless or edifying. Others carried strange cosmologies, speculative myths, or teachings far from the apostolic rule of faith. Once a movement was already suspected of Gnostic or Manichaean tendencies, its openness to non-canonical writings could easily become evidence against it.

So the battle over books reveals both sides. Priscillian wanted careful reading rather than ignorant condemnation. His opponents feared that unauthorized reading was feeding a movement they could no longer control.


Bishops Against Bishops

The Priscillian controversy was not only a theological dispute. It became a battle among bishops.

Sulpicius names Hydatius and Ithacius as leading opponents. Hydatius first heard reports about the movement and took action. But even Sulpicius, who despises Priscillian’s teaching, says Hydatius made the conflict worse by his severity.

“Hydatius attacked Instantius and the others beyond measure and without moderation. He applied the torch, as it were, to the growing fire, and made bad men worse by exasperating them rather than restraining them.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.47, c. 403.

That is an extraordinary admission from a hostile narrator. Sulpicius does not say, “Hydatius wisely corrected the danger.” He says Hydatius inflamed it. The conflict was already serious, but bad pastoral handling made it worse.

Then comes Ithacius. He would become Priscillian’s most infamous accuser. Sulpicius’s portrait of him is devastating. Again, this is not a pro-Priscillian writer. This is a writer who thinks Priscillian was a dangerous heretic. Yet he says Ithacius himself was morally compromised.

“Ithacius had no worth and no holiness. He was bold, loquacious, impudent, extravagant, and a slave to his belly. He was so foolish that he charged all holy men who devoted themselves to reading, or who practiced fasting, as companions or disciples of Priscillian.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.50, c. 403.

That quote may be the most important line in the whole controversy. It shows that anti-Priscillian zeal became so broad that ordinary ascetic holiness could be mistaken for heresy. If a Christian read much, fasted much, or lived austerely, Ithacius might suspect him. In that kind of atmosphere, the boundary between defending orthodoxy and attacking religious seriousness can become dangerously thin.

This is also where Martin of Tours enters the story indirectly. Sulpicius says Ithacius even dared to accuse Martin — the very Martin whom Sulpicius revered as a saint.

“He even dared to reproach Martin, a man plainly like the apostles, as though he too were involved in the heresy.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.50, c. 403.

That line tells us how far the controversy had gone. The pursuit of Priscillianism was no longer only about Priscillian. It was becoming a net wide enough to catch anyone who looked too ascetic, too intense, too scriptural, too independent, or too inconvenient.

Priscillian, for his part, described the conflict as a religious cover for private hatred. We do not have to accept his account entirely to see why it would have felt plausible.

“Those who, under the name of religion, pursue private enmities should not be allowed to judge the fruit of life.”

Priscillian, Apology, Würzburg Tractate 1, c. 380–381.

The tragedy is that both danger and injustice may have existed at once. Priscillian’s movement may really have contained troubling teachings or practices. His accusers may also have been reckless, proud, politically ambitious, and unjust. Early Christian history often becomes morally difficult exactly there: when a real concern is pursued by the wrong means, in the wrong spirit, by the wrong people.


Rome, Milan, and the Search for Vindication

After the conflict in Spain intensified, Priscillian and his allies sought vindication beyond their local enemies. According to Sulpicius, Instantius, Salvianus, and Priscillian went to Rome to present their case before Damasus, the bishop of Rome. The journey itself tells us how serious the conflict had become. This was no longer a local argument about unusual fasting or private meetings. It had become a transregional struggle for legitimacy.

Sulpicius says their path took them through Aquitaine, where they gained followers and caused further alarm. In Bordeaux, Bishop Delphinus opposed them.

“They set out for Rome to clear themselves before Damasus. On the way, passing through Aquitaine, they spread their errors among some. But when they came to Bordeaux, they were driven away by Delphinus, the bishop of that city.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.48, c. 403.

Sulpicius then introduces two women, Euchrotia and her daughter Procula, whose names became tangled in the accusations surrounding Priscillian. The language is hostile and scandalous, and it shows how quickly the controversy took on charges involving women, sexuality, and improper religious intimacy.

“They stayed for a time with Euchrotia and her daughter Procula. Of Procula there was a common report that she had been violated by Priscillian and had procured an abortion.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.48, c. 403.

This is the kind of charge that must be handled carefully. Sulpicius reports it as rumor. We do not have a neutral trial record proving it. But the accusation itself mattered because it helped turn Priscillian from a disputed ascetic teacher into a figure of moral panic. The presence of women in his circle had already alarmed opponents. Accusations of sexual scandal made that alarm explosive.

When Priscillian and his allies reached Rome, Sulpicius says Damasus did not admit them to a hearing. They also tried Ambrose of Milan, but he too opposed them.

“When they reached Rome, they were not admitted to Damasus. Then they went on to Milan, but Ambrose was not more favorable to them.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.48, c. 403.

This is one of the script’s important connections to earlier figures. Ambrose, who could be so courageous against emperors, also appears here as one of the bishops who refused Priscillian’s appeal. Damasus and Ambrose were not persuaded. Whether because they judged the movement dangerous, distrusted its leaders, or did not want to be entangled in Spanish episcopal conflict, Priscillian did not get the vindication he sought.

But the story did not end there. Sulpicius says Priscillian’s party used bribery and flattery to gain influence with powerful imperial officials, especially Macedonius, and obtained a rescript that allowed them to return.

“By gifts and flattery they won over Macedonius, who was then master of the offices. Through him they obtained a rescript by which they were restored to their churches.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.48, c. 403.

Again, the source is hostile, but the movement between church and empire is clear. Bishops had condemned. Priscillian appealed. Rome and Milan refused. Imperial officials intervened. Rescripts were issued. Churches were lost and recovered. The machinery of the empire had entered the dispute.

And once imperial power enters an ecclesiastical conflict, it rarely remains a neutral tool.


Bordeaux, Trier, and the Door to the Sword

The next stage of the controversy carried Priscillian toward death.

Ithacius, under pressure, eventually appealed to imperial authority. The political situation had also changed. Magnus Maximus had seized power in the West and ruled from Trier. His court became the place where the Priscillian controversy would move from church discipline to capital prosecution.

Sulpicius says Maximus ordered the case to be heard by a synod at Bordeaux. There Instantius was judged unworthy of the episcopate. Priscillian, seeing what had happened, appealed to the emperor.

“By command of the emperor, the bishops were ordered to assemble at Bordeaux. There Instantius was commanded to plead his cause, and after he was heard, he was judged unworthy of the episcopate. But Priscillian avoided being heard by the bishops and appealed to the emperor.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.49, c. 403.

Sulpicius pauses here to give his own judgment, and it is crucial. He thinks Priscillian was a heretic. He thinks Priscillian was dangerous. But he also thinks the bishops made a grave mistake by transferring the case to a secular ruler.

“Our bishops should never have brought an ecclesiastical cause before the emperor, for even if Priscillian was worthy of punishment, the judgment should have remained with the bishops.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.49, c. 403.

This is the turning point. Priscillian had appealed to the emperor, but Sulpicius still blames the bishops for allowing an ecclesiastical matter to become an imperial criminal case. The line between church discipline and state punishment began to collapse.

At Trier, Ithacius pressed the case. Sulpicius says he will not blame the accusers merely for zeal, if they had not pursued victory too fiercely. But their spirit disgusts him.

“I would not blame the accusers for their zeal in overcoming the heretics, if they had not contended more eagerly than was fitting for victory. But Ithacius himself was displeasing to me, for he was a man of no worth and no holiness.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.50, c. 403.

This is one of the great moral complexities of the story. Sulpicius agrees that Priscillian’s doctrine was evil, but he recoils from the men who pursued him. He believes heresy is dangerous, but he does not trust the spirit of the prosecution. That is why Martin of Tours becomes so important.


Martin of Tours Says No Blood

Martin of Tours stands in this story as one of the clearest moral voices. He did not defend Priscillian’s teaching. He did not say the movement was harmless. But he opposed the shedding of blood.

According to Sulpicius, Martin urged Ithacius to stop prosecuting the case and pleaded with Maximus not to execute the accused. For Martin, excommunication or expulsion from the churches was enough. The state had no business judging an ecclesiastical case with death as its possible outcome.

“Martin did not cease to urge Ithacius to give up his accusations, or to implore Maximus not to shed the blood of those unhappy people. He maintained that it was punishment enough that, after being declared heretics by the sentence of bishops, they should be expelled from the churches; and that it was a foul and unheard-of indignity for a secular ruler to judge an ecclesiastical case.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.50, c. 403.

That is the moral center of the episode. Martin is not soft on heresy. He is clear about limits. Bishops may judge doctrine. Churches may exclude false teachers. But the sword is another matter.

While Martin remained at Trier, the execution was delayed. Sulpicius says Maximus promised Martin that no cruel measures would be taken.

“As long as Martin remained at Trier, the trial was put off. When he was about to leave, Maximus promised him that nothing bloody would be done against the accused.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.50, c. 403.

But once Martin left, other voices prevailed. Sulpicius names court figures who persuaded Maximus to proceed more harshly. The emperor’s promise did not hold.

“After Martin left, the emperor was corrupted by the counsels of Magnus and Rufus and handed the case over to the prefect Evodius, a stern and severe man.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.50, c. 403.

The contrast is stark. Martin pleads for no blood. Ithacius prosecutes. Maximus hesitates, promises restraint, and then yields. The machinery of imperial justice begins to move.

And once it moves, it does not merely correct. It kills.


The Sword Falls

Sulpicius says the prefect Evodius heard Priscillian’s case twice. Here again, the source is hostile, and we should read it as the prosecution’s world rather than a neutral transcript. Sulpicius says Priscillian confessed to shameful doctrines, nocturnal meetings with women, and praying naked. These accusations fit late antique fears about heretical secrecy, sexual disorder, and magic.

“Evodius heard Priscillian twice and convicted him of wickedness. Priscillian did not deny shameful doctrines, nocturnal meetings with women, and the custom of praying naked. Evodius judged him guilty and sent him back to prison until the emperor should decide.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.50, c. 403.

We have to pause here. This is not Priscillian’s own confession preserved in his words. It is Sulpicius’s report of a trial handled by hostile authorities. It may preserve real admissions. It may also reflect coercive interrogation, hostile interpretation, or the standard accusations attached to suspect ascetic groups. The historian cannot simply erase it. But neither should it be repeated as though it were a clean modern court record.

The sentence came from Maximus. Priscillian was condemned to death. Several followers died with him, including Latronianus and Euchrotia. Others were exiled.

“Priscillian was condemned to death, and with him Felicissimus and Armenius, who had recently turned from the Catholic faith to follow him. Latronianus and Euchrotia were also beheaded. Instantius, whom the bishops had already condemned, was ordered into exile on the island of Sylina.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.51, c. 403.

This was the event that made Priscillian’s story infamous. A Christian bishop, accused of heresy and related crimes, was executed by a Christian imperial court. Whatever one thinks of Priscillian’s theology, this was a new and ominous moment.

Sulpicius himself has no affection for Priscillian. After describing the executions, he still calls them people unworthy of life. Yet his narrative has already told us that Martin opposed the bloodshed and that Ithacius was morally contemptible. That combination makes the account morally unstable in the best way. Sulpicius cannot let Priscillian off the hook, but he also cannot make the prosecution look holy.

“Thus men unworthy of the light of day were punished by death or exile. Yet the accusers themselves, and especially Ithacius, did not escape the stain of their own disgrace.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.51, c. 403.

This is why the execution of Priscillian is more than an episode in the history of heresy. It is a mirror held up to the post-Constantinian Church. The empire had become Christian, but the sword had not become pastoral. Bishops could ask the state for help, but once the state entered, it brought prisons, interrogations, confiscations, exile, and death.

Martin saw that danger. Ithacius did not. Or if he saw it, he wanted victory more.


After the Execution: A Martyr Is Made

If Maximus and the accusers thought Priscillian’s death would end the movement, they were wrong. Sulpicius says the execution strengthened it. That detail is one of the most important in the whole story. Killing a teacher does not always destroy a movement. Sometimes it gives the movement a martyr.

“The heresy was not suppressed by the death of Priscillian. Rather, it grew stronger and spread more widely. His followers, who had honored him before as a saint, afterward began to worship him as a martyr.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.51, c. 403.

The bodies of Priscillian and the others were brought back to Spain. Their funeral became a public act of devotion.

“The bodies of those who had been killed were brought back to Spain, and their funerals were celebrated with great pomp. To swear by Priscillian was considered the highest act of religion among his followers.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.51, c. 403.

That is the bitter irony. The imperial sword did not purify Spain. It deepened the wound. Priscillian’s enemies had made him more powerful in death than he had been in life. A condemned bishop became a martyr to his followers, and his movement endured.

Sulpicius’s closing reflection on the aftermath is one of the darkest passages in his narrative. He says the controversy corrupted almost everyone involved. Bishops were driven by hatred, fear, envy, ambition, lust for office, pride, and greed. The people of God were exposed to mockery.

“The discord continued for fifteen years, shameful and disgraceful. Through the quarrels of the bishops, everything was disturbed. Hatred, favor, fear, envy, faction, lust, greed, pride, sleepiness, sloth, and many private corruptions were mingled with the cause of religion, and the people of God were exposed to mockery.”

Sulpicius Severus, Sacred History, 2.51, c. 403.

That may be Sulpicius’s most important judgment. He believes Priscillian was wrong. But he also believes the Church’s handling of the matter became a scandal. Once bishops entered the logic of faction, once accusers became worse than pastors, once the state was invited to do the work of discipline, the whole Church suffered.

Years later, Priscillianism remained a concern in Spain. Orosius, a Spanish priest, wrote to Augustine about the errors of the Priscillianists and Origenists. His tone is deeply hostile, but it shows that the movement had not disappeared.

“It was necessary for me, in haste, to gather into one all the trees of perdition with their roots and branches, and to offer them to your fiery spirit, so that, seeing the army and discerning the wickedness, you might determine what medicine of strength you can apply.”

Orosius, Commonitorium to Augustine on the Error of the Priscillianists and Origenists, 1, c. 414.

Orosius even asks Augustine to correct by teaching those whom violence had not healed. His language is revealing: the sword had already fallen, but the wound remained.

“Through you, our Lord God — through you, blessed father — may He correct by the word those whom He chastened by the sword.”

Orosius, Commonitorium to Augustine on the Error of the Priscillianists and Origenists, 1, c. 414.

That sentence unintentionally exposes the failure of the execution. The sword had not settled the matter. It had not healed the Church. A generation later, Spanish clergy still looked for “medicine” against Priscillianism.

The death of Priscillian had not ended the controversy. It had made it unforgettable.


Was Priscillian a Heretic?

The honest answer is that the sources do not let us speak with the same simplicity as his enemies did.

Sulpicius thought he was a heretic. Orosius thought his followers were dangerous. The Council of Saragossa condemned practices associated with his movement. Damasus and Ambrose did not receive his appeal. Later Spanish councils continued to fight Priscillianism. The suspicion was not invented out of nothing.

And yet Priscillian’s own surviving writings sound more orthodox than the hostile summaries would lead us to expect. He confesses the creed. He affirms Christ’s birth, passion, resurrection, ascension, judgment, baptism, remission of sins, and resurrection of the flesh. He condemns heresies with Catholic language. He defends asceticism, but also says not everyone can reach the same measure of renunciation. He argues for reading disputed writings carefully, not simply swallowing every hidden book.

So how should we tell the story?

We should not turn Priscillian into an uncomplicated hero. His movement may well have contained dangerous speculative elements, secretive practices, and a spiritual elitism that worried bishops for understandable reasons. The Church had seen enough Gnostic and Manichaean confusion to be alert.

But we also should not let hostile sources define him without challenge. The accusers were not pure. Sulpicius himself tells us Ithacius was morally unworthy and reckless in accusation. Martin opposed the execution. The council canons reveal anxiety about control as well as doctrine. The imperial process turned an ecclesiastical dispute into a capital case. And after Priscillian died, his followers did not disappear; they honored him as a martyr.

Jerome’s divided summary may still be the fairest ancient doorway into the problem.

“He is accused by some even now of the Gnostic heresy of Basilides or Marcus; but others defend him, saying that he did not think as he is accused.”

Jerome, On Illustrious Men, 121, c. 392.

That is the Priscillian problem in one sentence. Some accuse. Others defend. The historian has to listen to both.

What we can say with confidence is this: Priscillian’s case revealed the dangers of a Christian empire learning to discipline religious error through coercive power. Once heresy becomes a matter for imperial prosecution, bishops may win a case and lose something deeper. They may preserve boundaries while corrupting the spirit of judgment. They may silence a teacher while creating a martyr. They may defend orthodoxy and still fail the gospel’s restraint.


Conclusion

Priscillian’s story matters because it stands at a dangerous turning point in Christian history. Before Constantine, Christians knew what it meant to be judged by imperial power. After Constantine, Christians had to decide what they would do when imperial power seemed available for their own disputes. Priscillian’s death shows how quickly the persecuted Church could become a Church tempted to prosecute.

He was not the easiest figure to defend. His circle was controversial. His use of apocryphal writings alarmed bishops. His ascetic movement disrupted ordinary church structures. His followers included women and laypeople in ways that unsettled episcopal authority. Accusations of magic, secrecy, and immorality clung to his name. But his own writings show a man who claimed the creed, appealed to Catholic peace, defended careful reading, and insisted that he had been condemned unheard.

That is why the story must not be told as simple triumph. If Priscillian was dangerous, the way his enemies pursued him was also dangerous. If his teaching needed correction, the sword was not the medicine of Christ. Martin of Tours understood that. He believed heresy could be judged by bishops and excluded from churches, but he pleaded that no blood be shed. In this story, Martin’s voice sounds like a warning to the whole Christian empire.

The execution did not end the movement. It intensified it. Priscillian’s body returned to Spain, and his followers honored him as a martyr. The empire had killed the man, but the blood created memory. The bishops who wanted victory inherited scandal. The Church inherited a question it would face again and again: when error appears, will the Church trust teaching, discipline, patience, and prayer — or will it reach for the power of the state?

Priscillian of Avila remains difficult. He was ascetic reformer, accused heretic, bishop, defendant, and martyr to his followers. He may have been more orthodox than his enemies claimed, or more dangerous than his own writings reveal. But the deepest lesson of his story does not depend on solving every charge. The deepest lesson is that Christian truth is not served by every weapon used in its name.

At Trier, the Church learned what could happen when bishops brought their quarrels to the imperial court. The sword fell. A bishop died. And Christian history received one of its earliest warnings that even zeal for orthodoxy can become unholy when it forgets mercy.

Ambrose of Milan: The Bishop Who Taught Emperors to Repent

Ambrose of Milan did not begin as a monk in the desert, a bishop’s son raised for the altar, or a young theologian slowly climbing the steps of church office. He began in the world of Roman administration. That is not a decorative detail in his story. It is the first key to understanding him. Ambrose would become one of the strongest episcopal voices of the fourth century because he already knew how public power worked. He knew courts, officials, imperial procedure, civic order, and the fragile peace of a city where religion and politics could not be separated.

Our main ancient biographical source for Ambrose’s early life is Paulinus of Milan, a deacon connected with Ambrose’s church. Paulinus wrote his Life of Ambrose after Ambrose’s death and at Augustine’s request. He is not a neutral modern historian. He writes as a Christian admirer, and sometimes as a hagiographer. But he is still crucial, because he tells us that his account was based on testimony from people who knew Ambrose, especially Ambrose’s sister Marcellina, and also on things Paulinus himself had seen.

“I will briefly describe what I learned from approved men who stood near him before me, and especially from his venerable sister Marcellina; also what I myself saw while I stood near him, and what I learned from others.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 1, c. 422.

That source note matters inside the story itself. When Paulinus tells us about Ambrose’s early life, he is not pretending to write an imperial archive. He is preserving church memory. Some details are framed as signs of providence, but the broad outline is clear: Ambrose was born into a family already tied to Roman authority.

Paulinus begins Ambrose’s life by linking his birth to his father’s service in the prefecture of Gaul. Rather than overstating what the source proves, we should let Paulinus say exactly what he says: Ambrose was born while his father, also named Ambrose, was holding administrative responsibility in the prefecture of Gaul.

“When his father Ambrose had been placed in the administration of the prefecture of the Gauls, Ambrose was born.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 3, c. 422.

So before Ambrose ever stood in a pulpit, his life was already connected to the machinery of empire. Paulinus then gives one of those late-antique childhood signs that hagiographers loved: a swarm of bees gathering around the infant’s mouth. We do not have to treat the scene as stenographic biography to see what it meant to later Christians. Ambrose would become a preacher whose words shaped bishops, emperors, catechumens, and ordinary believers. Paulinus remembers even his infancy as a sign of future eloquence.

“While he was an infant lying in his cradle in the courtyard of the praetorium, asleep with his mouth open, suddenly a swarm of bees came and covered his face and mouth, going in and out of his mouth in turn.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 3, c. 422.

Paulinus says that Ambrose’s father watched and interpreted the sign.

“His father, terrified by what had happened, said, ‘If this little child lives, he will be something great.’”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 3, c. 422.

That is how Paulinus wants us to read Ambrose from the beginning: as a man prepared for speech before he knew he was being prepared. But the preparation did not first take the form of formal theological training. It took the form of Roman education, legal argument, and civic office.

After his father’s death, Ambrose grew up in Rome with his widowed mother and his sister Marcellina, who had already embraced the life of consecrated virginity. Paulinus even preserves a childhood memory in which Ambrose, seeing priests receive signs of reverence, playfully offered his own hand as though he too would one day be a bishop. Again, the story is told with providential coloring, but it also locates Ambrose inside a devout Christian household before he ever held church office.

“When he had grown older and was living in the city of Rome with his widowed mother and his sister, who had already professed virginity, he saw priests having their hands kissed by members of the household. Playing, he offered his own right hand, saying that this should also be done to him, since he remembered that he would be a bishop.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 4, c. 422.

But Ambrose’s actual path did not move directly from pious childhood to priesthood. Paulinus next shows him stepping into the educated world of Roman public service. Ambrose studied the liberal disciplines, left Rome, practiced as an advocate in the court of the praetorian prefect, and impressed the powerful prefect Probus. This is the primary-source basis for calling Ambrose a trained Roman official, not just a religious leader who happened to know politics.

“After he had been instructed in the liberal disciplines, he left the city and practiced in the court of the praetorian prefecture. He pleaded cases so brilliantly that he was chosen by the illustrious Probus, then praetorian prefect, to give counsel. After this, he received the insignia of consular rank, so that he might govern the provinces of Liguria and Aemilia, and he came to Milan.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 5, c. 422.

That sentence carries a tremendous amount of the story. Ambrose was not an obscure cleric unexpectedly discovered by the crowd. He was a public man. He had stood in legal settings. He had spoken persuasively before officials. He had been trusted with counsel. Then he had been sent to govern Liguria and Aemilia, with Milan as the city where his life would change.

Milan was not a quiet provincial town. It was one of the great imperial centers of the western empire. Emperors, soldiers, courtiers, bishops, merchants, pagan senators, Nicene Christians, anti-Nicene Christians, and Jewish communities all belonged to the world Ambrose entered. The city was Christian, but not peacefully Christian. The Council of Nicaea had spoken in 325, declaring the Son to be of one substance with the Father, but imperial politics and local church life had not stopped shifting. A bishop’s death could become a civic crisis.

That is exactly what happened in 374, when Auxentius, the bishop of Milan, died. Paulinus does not present the scene as calm deliberation. He describes a city at risk of sedition because Nicene Christians and Arians each wanted a bishop of their own party. Ambrose went to the church because it was his duty as governor to prevent unrest.

“At that time, Auxentius, bishop of the Arian unbelief, had died. Since the people were rising toward sedition in seeking a bishop, and since Ambrose had responsibility for calming the sedition, lest the people of the city turn to their own danger, he went to the church.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 6, c. 422.

This is the moment the whole story turns. Ambrose enters the church as a magistrate. He is there to restore public order. But while he is addressing the crowd, the people hear a cry.

“While he was addressing the people, the voice of an infant is said suddenly to have sounded among the people: ‘Ambrose, bishop!’”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 6, c. 422.

Paulinus then says the cry spread through the divided crowd. What had been a conflict between factions suddenly became a unified acclamation.

“At the sound of this voice, the mouths of all the people were turned to the same cry, shouting, ‘Ambrose, bishop!’ Those who before had been violently divided — since the Arians wanted one bishop for themselves and the Catholics another for themselves — suddenly agreed on this one man with miraculous and incredible harmony.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 6, c. 422.

That is the primary-source basis for the famous scene. Ambrose was not campaigning for the episcopate. He was not even baptized. He was a catechumen, a Christian in formation, not yet sacramentally initiated into the Church. Paulinus makes that point clear when he describes the crowd’s response to Ambrose’s attempts to escape the election.

Ambrose tried to make himself look unworthy. Paulinus says he left the church, set up a tribunal, and even staged harsh judicial behavior contrary to his usual character, hoping the people would reject him. But they kept shouting that the responsibility would fall on them. Paulinus interprets this as the people trusting that baptism would wash away his sins.

“Contrary to his custom, he ordered tortures to be applied to certain persons. Yet while he was doing this, the people kept shouting, ‘Your sin be upon us.’ Since they knew he was a catechumen, they promised him, with a faithful voice, the forgiveness of all sins through the grace of baptism.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 7, c. 422.

This detail is important because it shows the strangeness of the election. Ambrose was not merely a layman. He was still unbaptized. The crowd’s answer was not, “That does not matter.” Their answer was, “Baptism will answer it.” In their minds, the urgency of the city, the need for peace, and the grace of baptism came together.

Paulinus then says Ambrose tried to flee. The story has a dramatic, almost comic quality: Ambrose leaves Milan at night, intending to escape to Ticinum, but somehow finds himself the next morning back at the Roman gate of Milan. Paulinus reads this as divine providence preventing his escape.

“When he saw that his plan could accomplish nothing, he prepared to flee. Leaving the city in the middle of the night, thinking he was going to Ticinum, in the morning he was found at the gate of the city of Milan called the Roman Gate.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 8, c. 422.

At this point Paulinus brings back Probus, the same official who had advanced Ambrose’s civil career. When Ambrose had been sent to govern Milan, Probus had spoken words that later Christians heard as prophecy.

“Probus the prefect also rejoiced that his word was being fulfilled in Ambrose; for when he was giving him his instructions as he set out, as is customary, he had said: ‘Go, act not as a judge, but as a bishop.’”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 8, c. 422.

Ambrose hid again, but eventually he was handed over and brought back to Milan. Paulinus says that once Ambrose understood he could no longer resist, he insisted on being baptized by a Catholic bishop, because he was already alert to the danger of Arian control. Then, within eight days, he passed from baptism to episcopal consecration.

“When he was handed over and brought to Milan, and understood the will of God concerning him, and that he could no longer resist, he asked that he be baptized only by a Catholic bishop, for he carefully guarded against the unbelief of the Arians. Having been baptized, he is said to have fulfilled all the ecclesiastical offices, and on the eighth day he was ordained bishop, with the greatest favor and joy of all.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 9, c. 422.

That is why Ambrose’s beginning as bishop is so remarkable. He did not simply move from politics into religion. He was pulled from one form of public responsibility into another. The governor who had come to calm a church dispute became the bishop who would soon confront emperors.

Ambrose himself later looked back on that transition without pretending he had been prepared. In On the Duties of the Clergy, written for ministers of the Church, he admits that his entrance into priestly office came so suddenly that he had to learn and teach at the same time.

“I was carried off from the judgment seat and the insignia of administration into the priesthood, and I began to teach you what I myself had not yet learned. So it happened that I began to teach before I began to learn. Therefore I must learn and teach at the same time, since I had no leisure to learn beforehand.”

Ambrose, On the Duties of the Clergy, 1.1.4, c. 391.

Ambrose’s own memory gives the opening of his story its proper weight. He was not a finished theologian stepping into an expected post. He was a governor seized by a calling, forced to become a learner in the same season that he became a teacher. His Roman training gave him discipline, courage, and public presence. But as bishop, he had to become a student of Scripture in public, before a divided city, under the eyes of the imperial court.


Learning the Scriptures in Public

Ambrose became bishop, and then he became a student. This is not just a modern guess from the outside. It is how Ambrose described his own ministry. He had been taken from the judgment seat into the priesthood, and because he had no long season of quiet preparation, he had to learn while teaching.

That makes him different from some of the other great fourth-century theologians. Athanasius had spent a lifetime inside the conflicts of the Alexandrian church. Basil had been formed in ascetic circles and theological debate before becoming bishop of Caesarea. Ambrose, by contrast, was a Roman administrator suddenly standing in the pulpit of one of the empire’s most important churches. He had the tools of an educated Roman — rhetoric, legal instinct, memory, public poise — but he needed the Scriptures to become the grammar of his episcopal life.

Ambrose’s own catechetical works show how seriously he took that task. In On the Mysteries, a work drawn from his instruction to the newly baptized, he describes the pattern of teaching that preceded his explanation of baptism and the Eucharist. Before opening the sacraments to them, he had been forming them morally through the patriarchs and Proverbs.

“Every day we spoke about moral matters, while the deeds of the patriarchs or the precepts of Proverbs were being read, so that, formed and instructed by them, you might learn to enter the ways of the fathers, walk in their paths, and obey the divine commands.”

Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 1.1, c. 387.

This is Ambrose the pastor, not merely Ambrose the public fighter. He was not only arguing with emperors or refusing imperial demands. He was shaping Christians day by day through Scripture. He taught them Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Proverbs, baptism, the Eucharist, and the moral life that belonged to those who had been washed.

And Ambrose’s teaching was not only moral instruction. He believed Scripture had depths that could not be exhausted by surface reading. Augustine, who arrived in Milan as a rhetorician and skeptic, tells us that Ambrose’s preaching helped him reconsider the Old Testament. Augustine had rejected crude readings of Scripture, especially when Christians seemed to imagine God in bodily terms or when Old Testament passages seemed morally strange. Ambrose’s spiritual reading opened a door.

“I heard Ambrose every Lord’s Day rightly dividing the word of truth among the people. I became more and more convinced that all those knots of crafty accusations which my deceivers had tied against the divine books could be untied.”

Augustine, Confessions, 6.3.4, c. 397–401.

Augustine continues by saying that Ambrose’s way of preaching helped him see that the old Scriptures of the law and the prophets could be read with spiritual depth.

“I rejoiced that the old Scriptures of the law and the prophets were now set before me to be read with a different eye than before. With delight I heard Ambrose often commend this rule in his sermons to the people: ‘The letter kills, but the Spirit gives life.’ Drawing aside the mystical veil, he spiritually opened things which, taken according to the letter, had seemed to teach perverse doctrines.”

Augustine, Confessions, 6.4.6, c. 397–401.

That is one of the most important windows into Ambrose’s influence. Augustine did not first come to Ambrose as a humble disciple ready to receive baptism. He came as a proud and brilliant man who had many objections. Ambrose did not answer all of Augustine’s questions in private conversation. Augustine actually says he struggled to get time with him. But Ambrose’s public preaching began to change the way Augustine heard Scripture.

Augustine also gives us a vivid picture of the pressure surrounding Ambrose’s daily life. The bishop was not a scholar in quiet retreat. He was surrounded by people who needed counsel, help, judgment, comfort, and attention. When he was not serving the crowds, he was either eating quickly or reading.

“I was kept from hearing and speaking with him as I wished by crowds of busy people, whose weaknesses he served. When he was not occupied with them — and that was only a little time — he refreshed his body with necessary food, or his mind with reading.”

Augustine, Confessions, 6.3.3, c. 397–401.

Then Augustine gives the famous description of Ambrose reading silently. The point is not merely that Ambrose had an unusual reading habit. The point is that Ambrose had to guard the tiny spaces of attention left to him.

“As he read, his eyes glanced over the pages and his heart searched out the meaning, but his voice and tongue were silent. Often, when we came to him — for no one was forbidden to enter, nor was it his custom that visitors be announced — we saw him reading in this way, silently and never otherwise. After sitting for a long time in silence, for who would dare interrupt one so intent, we would depart.”

Augustine, Confessions, 6.3.3, c. 397–401.

This is the bishop behind the public legend. Ambrose could stand before emperors because he first sat under Scripture. He could teach Milan because he was himself still learning. He could interpret the Church’s faith in public because his private intervals, such as they were, were filled with reading.

Augustine’s witness also keeps us from making Ambrose merely a political figure. Yes, Ambrose was a public bishop in an imperial city. Yes, he knew how to confront rulers. Yes, he had a Roman official’s instinct for procedure and authority. But Augustine saw something else: a bishop serving the weaknesses of the people, guarding fragments of time for study, and preaching Scripture in a way that could unsettle a skeptical mind.

So when Ambrose later says that he had to learn and teach at the same time, we should hear the full weight of that confession. He was not being modest in a decorative way. He was describing the actual burden of his calling. The governor had become a bishop. The public administrator had become an interpreter of Scripture. The man who once pleaded cases before Roman officials now pleaded the mystery of Christ before Milan.


The Argument Over Christ

To understand Ambrose, we have to understand that the fourth century was still arguing over the most basic Christian confession: Who is Jesus Christ?

The Nicene answer was clear. The Son is not a creature, not a lesser divine being, not merely highest among heavenly powers. The Son is true God from true God, begotten of the Father, of one substance with Him. But many powerful figures resisted Nicene language. Some preferred formulas that seemed to honor Christ while avoiding the full force of Nicaea. Others openly rejected the claim that the Son shared the Father’s eternal divine nature.

Ambrose did not see this as an abstract debate for specialists. For him, the identity of Christ stood at the center of worship, baptism, prayer, and salvation. If Christ is not truly God, then the Church’s worship is confused. If Christ is not truly Lord, then baptism into His name is emptied of its power. If Christ is not one with the Father, then the Christian life itself is built on a diminished Savior.

Writing to the emperor Gratian in Exposition of the Christian Faith, Ambrose explained the Nicene confession with the precision of a teacher and the urgency of a pastor.

“Christ says, ‘I and the Father are one.’ He says ‘one,’ so that there may be no separation of power or nature; and He says ‘we are,’ so that you may recognize the Father and the Son, not as one person confused together, but as one divine nature.”

Ambrose, Exposition of the Christian Faith, 1.1.9, c. 378.

Ambrose knew that theological error often comes from demanding the wrong kind of explanation. The Church can confess that the Son is begotten of the Father; it cannot reduce eternal generation to a creaturely mechanism. Some truths are revealed for worship, not dissected for mastery.

“We are permitted to know that the Son is begotten; we are not permitted to quarrel over the manner of His begetting.”

Ambrose, Exposition of the Christian Faith, 1.10.65, c. 378.

Ambrose also insisted that Scripture itself gives the Church the language for worshiping the Son. The Son is Word, Power, Wisdom, and Light — not an assistant creature beneath God, but the eternal Son through whom the Father is known.

“He is called the Word, the Son, the Power of God, the Wisdom of God: the Word, because He is without blemish; the Power, because He is perfect; the Son, because He is begotten of the Father; the Wisdom, because He is one with the Father, one in eternity, one in divinity.”

Ambrose, Exposition of the Christian Faith, 1.2.16, c. 378.

This theological conviction shaped Ambrose’s public life. When he resisted imperial pressure, he was not merely defending church property. He was defending the worship of the true Christ. When he refused to surrender basilicas to the court-backed anti-Nicene party, he believed he was guarding the confession of the Church. Milan’s churches were not neutral halls. They were places where the crucified and risen Lord was worshiped as true God.

For Ambrose, doctrine was not a decorative layer placed on top of church life. Doctrine was the grammar of worship. It was the difference between bending the knee to the eternal Son and honoring a religious symbol useful to the empire.


The Basilica Siege: When Hymns Became Resistance

The most famous conflict of Ambrose’s early episcopate came when the imperial court demanded a basilica for the use of the anti-Nicene party. The young emperor Valentinian II was under the influence of his mother Justina, who favored the Homoian or Arian side. The court wanted space in Milan for worship that Ambrose regarded as false to the faith of Nicaea.

Ambrose’s answer was simple: he could not give away what belonged to God. In a letter to his sister Marcellina, he described the confrontation. The tone is personal and immediate. He is not writing a polished theological treatise from a distance; he is telling his sister what happened when soldiers, officials, and imperial demands pressed against the church.

“First, certain great men and counselors of state begged me to give up the basilica and to make sure the people raised no disturbance. I answered, as was fitting, that the temple of God could not be surrendered by a bishop.”

Ambrose, Letter 20 to Marcellina, 2, Easter c. 385.

Ambrose’s argument was not that bishops owned churches as private property. It was the opposite. The bishop could not surrender the basilica because it was not his possession to trade. The emperor could ask Ambrose for Ambrose’s own goods, and Ambrose would give them. But the things consecrated to God were not at the disposal of imperial command.

“The counts and tribunes came and urged me to cause the basilica to be surrendered quickly, saying that the emperor was exercising his right, since everything was under his power. I answered that if he asked for what is mine — my land, my money, or whatever of that kind belongs to me — I would not refuse, although all that I have belongs to the poor. But the things that are God’s are not subject to imperial power.”

Ambrose, Letter 20 to Marcellina, 8, Easter c. 385.

This is one of Ambrose’s defining lines. The empire had become Christian, but the emperor had not become lord of the altar. The Church prayed for rulers, honored rulers, and taught obedience in civil affairs, but it could not hand over the worship of God as though doctrine were a negotiable asset.

Ambrose made the same point in a sharper form when he recalled his answer to the imperial demand. The emperor had palaces. The bishop guarded churches. Public buildings belonged to imperial administration; sacred buildings belonged to God.

“Do not, O Emperor, burden yourself with the thought that you have any imperial power over the things that belong to God. Do not exalt yourself, but if you desire to reign long, submit yourself to God. It is written: ‘The things that are God’s to God, and the things that are Caesar’s to Caesar.’ Palaces belong to the emperor; churches belong to the bishop. Authority has been given to you over public buildings, not over sacred ones.”

Ambrose, Letter 20 to Marcellina, 19, Easter c. 385.

The confrontation intensified. Ambrose tells Marcellina that he wept and prayed while offering the Eucharist, fearing bloodshed. His resistance was firm, but he did not want a riot. He did not want the Church defended by violence. If blood had to be shed, he wanted it to be his own.

“While offering the oblation, I began to weep bitterly and to implore God that He would come to our aid, and that no one’s blood would be shed in the Church’s cause — or at least that it would be my blood, shed for the benefit not only of my people, but even of the unbelievers.”

Ambrose, Letter 20 to Marcellina, 5, Easter c. 385.

The people stayed with their bishop. They filled the basilica. They kept vigil. Soldiers came, but some came to pray. The congregation sang. According to Augustine, this crisis helped establish in Milan the practice of congregational singing in the style of the Eastern churches. Hymns became a way for frightened believers to endure pressure without collapsing into panic.

“The devout people kept guard in the church, prepared to die with their bishop, Your servant. There my mother, Your handmaid, taking first place in care and watchfulness, lived in prayer. Then it was established that hymns and psalms should be sung after the custom of the Eastern churches, lest the people waste away in sorrow.”

Augustine, Confessions, 9.7.15, c. 397–401.

Paulinus, writing from the memory of Ambrose’s church, confirms the same basic picture. The court’s pressure produced not only resistance, but worship. The Milanese church began to keep vigils and sing hymns in a way that spread widely in the West.

“At that time, antiphons, hymns, and vigils first began to be celebrated in the church of Milan. The devotion of this celebration remains to this day, not only in that church, but through almost all the provinces of the West.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 13, c. 422.

This is one of the most vivid pictures of Ambrose’s Milan: a church surrounded by pressure, held together not by swords, but by psalms. The people sang because they needed courage. They sang because doctrine had become public. They sang because worship itself was resistance.

Ambrose later gave the principle behind his action in a sermon against Auxentius, his anti-Nicene rival. His words have echoed for centuries because they state, in compressed form, one of the great claims of Christian political theology.

“The emperor is within the Church, not above the Church. A good emperor seeks the help of the Church and does not refuse it. We say this humbly, but we state it firmly.”

Ambrose, Sermon Against Auxentius on the Giving Up of the Basilicas, 36, c. 386.

Ambrose was not arguing for a modern separation of church and state. He lived in a world where religion and public life were intertwined in ways we do not experience in the same form. But he was arguing for something essential: the baptized ruler is not above the faith into which he has been baptized. Imperial purple does not outrank the lordship of Christ.


The Altar of Victory: Rome Learns It Is Not Eternal

Ambrose’s Milan did not only face conflict inside Christianity. It also stood in the long shadow of Rome’s pagan past. In 384, the distinguished pagan senator Symmachus appealed for the restoration of the Altar of Victory in the Roman Senate house. To many pagan aristocrats, the altar represented more than a ritual object. It was tied to memory, ancestry, public identity, and the old claim that Rome’s greatness had come through the favor of the gods.

Symmachus made the case with elegance. He did not sound like a fool or a cartoon villain. He spoke as a cultured Roman defending inherited religion, civic continuity, and reverence for antiquity. His argument was not simply, “We prefer the old gods.” It was that Rome’s old rites had carried the city through centuries of triumph. If a practice had endured for so long, and if Rome had flourished under it, then surely that antiquity deserved respect.

“If a long period gives authority to religious customs, we ought to keep faith with so many centuries and follow our ancestors, as they happily followed theirs.”

Symmachus, Third Relation to Valentinian II, 8, c. 384.

Then Symmachus does something rhetorically powerful. He lets Rome herself speak. Rome becomes an aged mother pleading with young Christian emperors not to strip away the rites that had accompanied her greatness. The argument is emotional, patriotic, and reverent toward the past.

“Respect my years, to which these sacred rites have brought me. Let me use the ancestral ceremonies, for I do not repent of them. Let me live after my own fashion, for I am free.”

Symmachus, Third Relation to Valentinian II, 9, c. 384.

In Symmachus’s imagined speech, Rome points to her victories. The old worship, he says, repelled Hannibal from the walls and the Senones from the Capitol. It subdued the world to Roman law. Then comes the sharpest form of the age argument: reform may be acceptable for the young, but it is shameful when forced on the old.

“This worship subdued the world to my laws; these sacred rites repelled Hannibal from the walls and the Senones from the Capitol. Have I been preserved for this, that in my old age I should be blamed? I will consider what is thought should be corrected, but reform in old age is late and discreditable.”

Symmachus, Third Relation to Valentinian II, 9, c. 384.

This is the argument Ambrose has to answer. Symmachus is saying that Rome’s age is itself a kind of proof. Her past success gives dignity to her old rites. Her antiquity makes sudden religious correction feel like an insult. Why should the ancient mother of nations be lectured by a newer faith?

Symmachus then widens the argument into one of the most famous statements of late Roman religious pluralism. Since the divine mystery is so great, he says, why should one road be imposed on all? The old rites, the new Christian faith, and the many ways of seeking truth should be allowed to coexist.

“We look on the same stars; the sky is common; the same world surrounds us. What difference does it make by what wisdom each person seeks the truth? So great a mystery cannot be reached by one road.”

Symmachus, Third Relation to Valentinian II, 10, c. 384.

Ambrose understood the force of the argument. He did not answer by pretending Rome had no past. He answered by denying that antiquity itself could sanctify error. First, he takes Symmachus’s personified Rome and gives her different words. Symmachus had made Rome say, “Respect my age.” Ambrose makes Rome say, “Do not stain me with useless sacrifice.”

“Why do you daily stain me with the useless blood of harmless herds? Trophies of victory depend not on the entrails of flocks, but on the strength of those who fight.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 7, c. 384.

That is a brilliant reversal. Ambrose does not let Symmachus own Rome’s voice. He says, in effect: if Rome could truly speak, she would not ask for more blood on pagan altars. She would remember that courage, discipline, and providence — not animal entrails — had carried her through war.

Then Ambrose attacks the word “ancestral.” Not everything old is noble. Rome’s past includes greatness, but it also includes cruelty, tyranny, and shame. If the argument is simply, “Keep the rites of the ancestors,” Ambrose asks which ancestors we are talking about.

“Why do you bring forward the rites of our ancestors? I hate the rites of Neros.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 7, c. 384.

That line cuts through nostalgia. Ambrose is saying that the past is not pure simply because it is past. Ancestry can hand down wisdom, but it can also hand down bloodshed. Antiquity may deserve examination, but it does not deserve automatic obedience.

Then Ambrose answers the old-age argument directly. Symmachus had said reform in old age is shameful. Ambrose says the opposite: the true shame is to be too old to repent.

“I do not blush to be converted with the whole world in my old age. No age is too late to learn. Let that old age blush which cannot amend itself.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 7, c. 384.

This is the heart of Ambrose’s response. Rome’s old age does not make conversion disgraceful. It makes conversion urgent and beautiful. To grow old in error is not dignity. To amend oneself, even late, is wisdom.

Ambrose then gives one of his most memorable formulations. There are two kinds of old age: the old age of years and the old age of character. The first merely counts time. The second measures maturity.

“Not the old age of years is worthy of praise, but the old age of character. There is no shame in passing to better things.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 7, c. 384.

That is the point Ambrose wants Valentinian to hear. The emperor should not be intimidated by the phrase “ancient custom.” The question is not whether a rite is old. The question is whether it is true, whether it is just, whether it leads toward God.

Ambrose also responds to Symmachus’s famous “one road” argument. Symmachus had said that so great a mystery cannot be reached by only one road. Ambrose replies that Christians are not guessing upward through fog. They have received revelation from God.

“What you do not know, we know by the voice of God. What you seek by conjectures, we have found from the Wisdom and Truth of God.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 8, c. 384.

This is where Ambrose’s answer becomes sharply Christian. He does not accept Symmachus’s premise that all religions are equally uncertain attempts to reach an unknowable mystery. Ambrose believes the mystery has spoken. God has revealed Himself in Christ. Therefore Christian faith is not merely one civic tradition among many; it is the truth by which all traditions must be judged.

Later in the letter, Ambrose returns to the age question even more fully. Symmachus had argued that ancestral rites should be retained because they were ancient. Ambrose answers with a theology of progress. The world itself did not remain in its first condition. Creation moved from formlessness to order, from darkness to light, from barrenness to fruitfulness. Why, then, should Rome be ashamed to move from old rites to better worship?

“They say the rites of our ancestors ought to be retained. But what then, since all things have advanced toward what is better?”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 23, c. 384.

Ambrose then unfolds the image. The day does not begin at noon. The moon does not begin full. The earth is first wild, then cultivated. The year begins with fragile growth and ends in fruit. Human beings begin in infancy and mature with time. So too, Ambrose says, the world can pass from religious childhood into fuller truth.

“The world itself, which at first was dark with shapeless confusion, afterward received the distinction of sky, sea, and earth. The lands, freed from misty darkness, wondered at the new sun. The day does not shine in the beginning, but as time goes on, it brightens with increasing light.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 23, c. 384.

He continues with the image of the moon, earth, and harvest. Each one becomes a witness that later does not necessarily mean lesser. Some things are most beautiful when they arrive in maturity.

“The moon herself, when first rising again, is hidden from us in darkness; then, filling up her horns little by little, she glows with clear brightness. The earth once had no experience of being worked for fruit; afterward, when the careful farmer began to rule the fields and clothe the shapeless soil with vines, it put off its wild disposition.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 24–25, c. 384.

This is more than a clever analogy. It is Ambrose’s answer to pagan antiquity. The gospel may appear late in history, but lateness does not mean weakness. Harvest comes late. Fruit comes late. Maturity comes late. The final brightness of the day is not inferior to the first darkness of morning.

“Let them say, then, that all things ought to have remained in their first beginnings, and that the world covered with darkness should never have brightened with the shining sun.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 28, c. 384.

Ambrose presses the same point through the image of harvest. Christ’s faith, he says, is like the fruit of the last age. It does not arrive because the world was empty before; it arrives as fulfillment.

“Our harvest is the faith of souls; the grace of the Church is the vintage of merits, which from the beginning of the world flourished in the saints, but in the last age has spread itself over the peoples.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 29, c. 384.

Then Ambrose makes another devastating move. If old rites should be kept simply because they are old and ancestral, why had Rome herself adopted foreign gods? Roman religion had never been as pure, fixed, and ancestral as Symmachus implied. Rome had absorbed conquered gods, imported rites, and foreign cults. The appeal to unbroken ancestral religion was not as simple as it sounded.

“If the old rites pleased, why did Rome also take up foreign ones?”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 30, c. 384.

This argument matters because Ambrose is not only saying, “Christianity is true.” He is also saying, “Your own appeal to antiquity is selective.” Rome had changed before. Rome had imported before. Rome had revised its religious life before. The question was not whether Rome would change, but whether she would change toward truth.

Ambrose then turns directly to Victory herself. The altar’s defenders treated Victory as a goddess whose presence secured Rome’s greatness. Ambrose denies the premise. Victory is not a deity to be worshiped. It is an outcome granted by God and achieved through courage, discipline, and providence.

“They believed Victory was a goddess, though victory is certainly a gift, not a power. It is granted; it does not rule.”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 30, c. 384.

Finally, Ambrose addresses the practical issue of the altar in the Senate. This was not merely a question of whether pagans could privately worship. The altar stood in a shared political space where Christian senators also had to gather. To restore it would force Christian consciences into the smoke, oaths, and symbols of pagan sacrifice.

“To claim sacrifice on this one altar — what is it but to insult the faith? Is it to be borne that a pagan should sacrifice and a Christian be present?”

Ambrose, Letter 18 to Valentinian II, 31, c. 384.

So Ambrose’s reply to Symmachus is much richer than a simple rejection of paganism. Symmachus says, “Rome is old; respect her years.” Ambrose says, “Old age is honorable only when it can learn.” Symmachus says, “Our rites subdued the world.” Ambrose says, “Rome’s courage, not sacrificial entrails, won her victories.” Symmachus says, “So great a mystery cannot be reached by one road.” Ambrose says, “The mystery has spoken through God’s own truth.” Symmachus says, “Keep the ancestral rites.” Ambrose says, “All things grow toward what is better — day, moon, earth, year, human life, and the history of faith.”

The conflict over the Altar of Victory shows Ambrose standing at a turning point. Christianity was no longer merely asking to be tolerated. It was now shaping the public imagination of the empire. That brought dangers, and Ambrose did not always escape those dangers. But in this controversy, his answer to pagan antiquity was clear: the past is not eternal. Rome is not dishonored by conversion. The shame is not in learning late. The shame is in being too old to repent.


The Poor at the Door

Ambrose’s public courage was not limited to emperors and theological factions. He also preached fiercely about wealth. He had entered the episcopate from a world of privilege, but as bishop he gave away his wealth and spoke of possessions as something held under judgment.

This is one of the reasons Ambrose cannot be reduced to a power bishop. He did not simply protect church prerogatives. He also demanded that the Church remember the poor. For Ambrose, generosity was not optional decoration on the Christian life. It was justice. The poor were not intruders into the Christian imagination; they were the test of whether Christians understood creation, ownership, and mercy.

In On the Duties of the Clergy, a work modeled in part on Cicero but transformed for Christian ministry, Ambrose told clergy that wealth is best understood as a trust for others.

“It is better to be rich for others than for oneself.”

Ambrose, On the Duties of the Clergy, 2.4.14, c. 391.

That line is simple, but it cuts deeply. Ambrose does not say it is better to appear generous. He says the very meaning of riches changes when they become useful to the neighbor. Wealth hoarded for self becomes spiritually dangerous; wealth turned outward becomes an instrument of mercy.

Ambrose developed this theme with special force in On Naboth, his meditation on the Old Testament story of King Ahab, Queen Jezebel, and Naboth’s vineyard. Naboth refuses to surrender his ancestral vineyard. Ahab sulks. Jezebel schemes. False witnesses accuse Naboth, and Naboth is killed so the king can take what he wants. Ambrose read the story not as a distant royal scandal, but as a mirror held up to his own society.

“The story of Naboth is old, but it is repeated every day. It is not one Naboth who was slain; every day Naboth is struck down, every day the poor are killed.”

Ambrose, On Naboth, 1.1, c. 389.

Ambrose saw the violence of greed even when it wore legal clothing. The rich might not always murder with stones. They could murder through pressure, debt, eviction, bribery, and indifference. They could enlarge estates while the poor lost their inheritance. They could call it business, order, or necessity, but Ambrose saw Ahab’s shadow.

“Who among the rich does not daily covet another’s goods? Who among the wealthy does not labor to drive the poor man from his little plot and turn the needy away from the boundaries of his ancestral field?”

Ambrose, On Naboth, 1.2, c. 389.

His most famous statement on almsgiving overturns the way many people think about generosity. The rich man who gives to the poor is not merely being magnanimous with private surplus. He is returning what belongs, in a deeper sense, to the common good of God’s creation.

“You are not giving your own goods to the poor; you are returning what is theirs. What was given for the common use of all, you have taken for yourself alone.”

Ambrose, On Naboth, 12.53, c. 389.

That is not modern economic theory, and it should not be flattened into a slogan. Ambrose still lived within a world that recognized property, inheritance, and social hierarchy. But he placed all ownership under God. Creation was given by God for the good of all, and therefore the poor had a moral claim upon the abundance of the rich.

Ambrose’s concern for the poor also shaped his view of church wealth. Sacred vessels, gold, and ornament had their place, but they were not to be loved more than human beings. When captives needed ransom, Ambrose believed the Church’s treasures existed to serve mercy.

“The Church has gold, not to store it up, but to spend it on necessities and to help the poor.”

Ambrose, On the Duties of the Clergy, 2.28.136, c. 391.

Ambrose defended this practice by appealing to the Lord Himself. If Christ sent the apostles without gold, the Church must not treat gold as its true treasure. The glory of the Church is not metal locked away, but mercy poured out.

“Would not the Lord say, ‘Why did you allow so many helpless people to die of hunger? Surely you had gold. You should have given them food. Why were so many captives sold into death, and why were they not redeemed?’”

Ambrose, On the Duties of the Clergy, 2.28.137, c. 391.

The bishop who told emperors they were not above the Church also told the rich they were not above the poor. Both claims came from the same source. Christ is Lord. Therefore power must repent, wealth must become mercy, and the Church must not measure faithfulness by public splendor while the needy suffer outside its doors.


Callinicum: A Synagogue Burns, and Ambrose Fails the Neighbor

Ambrose’s courage before emperors is one of the reasons Christian history remembers him with admiration. But the same historical honesty that lets us admire him must also let us name his failures. Nowhere is that more necessary than in the Callinicum affair.

Around 388, in Callinicum on the Euphrates, Christians burned a Jewish synagogue. The episode was not a rumor of distant hostility with no consequences. Ambrose himself says that a report reached the emperor that the synagogue had been burned at the instigation of the local bishop. Theodosius responded as a ruler responsible for public order: he ordered punishment and required the synagogue to be rebuilt, apparently at the expense of the bishop. Ambrose intervened.

Paulinus, Ambrose’s biographer, gives the broad outline from the perspective of Ambrose’s later admirers. Even here, with all Paulinus’s admiration for Ambrose, the facts are stark: Christians burned the synagogue; Theodosius ordered rebuilding and punishment; Ambrose intervened to get the order reversed.

“In the East, in a certain fortress, a synagogue of the Jews and a grove of the Valentinians were burned by Christian men. When the count of the East reported this to the emperor, the emperor ordered that the synagogue should be rebuilt by the bishop of the place and that punishment should be inflicted on the monks.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 22, c. 422.

Paulinus then says Ambrose wrote to the emperor because he could not come in person. Ambrose argued that the imperial order had to be recalled, and Paulinus even presents Ambrose as ready to die over the matter.

“When the substance of this command reached the ears of the venerable bishop Ambrose, he sent a letter to the emperor, since he could not go quickly at that time, and urged him to revoke what had been decreed.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 22, c. 422.

In Letter 40, Ambrose writes directly to Theodosius. He begins with a principle that, in other situations, stands among the noblest parts of his legacy. A bishop must speak truth to power. A ruler should not fear honest counsel. The priest who sees danger and remains silent fails both God and the ruler.

“It is not the part of an emperor to refuse freedom of speech, nor of a priest not to say what he thinks. Good rulers love liberty; bad rulers love slavery.”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 2, c. 388.

The principle is strong. The problem is the use Ambrose makes of it. In this case, he uses episcopal freedom not to defend the injured Jewish community, but to protect the Christian bishop associated with the burning.

“A report was made by the military count of the East that a synagogue had been burned, and that this had been done at the instigation of the bishop. You ordered that the others should be punished, and that the synagogue should be rebuilt by the bishop himself.”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 6, c. 388.

Ambrose does not center the question on the Jewish community whose place of worship has been destroyed. He centers it on the Christian bishop who might be forced to pay. If the bishop rebuilds the synagogue, Ambrose argues, the bishop may betray the faith. If he refuses, he may suffer punishment. In Ambrose’s framing, the Christian perpetrator becomes the endangered party.

“Let us suppose that the bishop was too eager in burning the synagogue and too timid before the judgment seat. Are you not afraid, Emperor, that he may obey your sentence? Do you not fear that he may fail in his faith?”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 7, c. 388.

Then Ambrose sharpens the point. The emperor’s order, meant to restore what was destroyed, becomes in Ambrose’s rhetoric a kind of persecution. Theodosius may force the bishop into apostasy by making him rebuild a Jewish house of worship, or into martyrdom by punishing him if he refuses.

“You are forcing him either into apostasy or into martyrdom. You will have the bishop as a deserter or as a martyr; either result is contrary to your times, and either result is like persecution.”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 7, c. 388.

This is a revealing move. Ambrose does not deny that Christians burned the synagogue. Instead, he shifts the moral center. The question is no longer, “How shall justice be done for a wronged Jewish community?” The question becomes, “How can a Christian emperor avoid shaming or endangering a Christian bishop?”

Ambrose then imagines the bishop saying that he himself burned the synagogue. His point is not that arson would be wrong and must be confessed. His point is that the bishop might claim responsibility to protect others and gain martyrdom.

“Suppose that the bishop says he himself set the fire, gathered the crowd, and assembled the people, so that he would not lose the opportunity of martyrdom. O happy falsehood, by which one gains acquittal for others and grace for himself!”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 8, c. 388.

Then Ambrose goes even further. He does not merely imagine the local bishop as the responsible party. He says he himself would accept the guilt if the act is counted a crime. His reason is chilling: that there might not be a place where Christ is denied.

“This is what I also ask, Emperor: if you consider this a crime, lay it on me. I declare that I set fire to the synagogue, or at least that I ordered those who did it, so that there might not be a place where Christ is denied.”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 8, c. 388.

The rhetoric grows harsher as Ambrose imagines Christian resources being used to rebuild the synagogue. For him, this would not be restitution. It would be a scandalous transfer of Christian goods to Jewish unbelief.

“Shall a place be made for the unbelief of the Jews out of the spoils of the Church? Shall the inheritance gained for Christians by Christ be transferred to the treasuries of unbelievers?”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 10, c. 388.

Then comes one of the ugliest lines in the affair. Ambrose imagines an inscription over the rebuilt synagogue, not as a house restored after violence, but as a triumph over Christians.

“Shall the Jews write this inscription on the front of their synagogue: ‘The temple of impiety, built from the plunder of Christians’?”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 10, c. 388.

That phrase, “temple of impiety,” tells us how deeply Ambrose’s theology shapes his political judgment. He does not view the synagogue as the lawful worship space of a protected minority. He views it as a religious enemy. Once he frames it that way, restitution becomes compromise, public justice becomes betrayal, and the Jewish community’s loss becomes a Christian theological embarrassment.

Ambrose even states the principle directly: ordinary legal discipline must yield before his understanding of religion.

“The discipline of public order ought to yield to the claims of religion.”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 11, c. 388.

But in this case, that sentence does not mean mercy for the weak. It means that the normal claims of justice are suspended when the victims are Jews and the perpetrators are Christians. Ambrose’s anti-Jewish theology becomes a filter through which he interprets the entire event.

He presses the point further by minimizing the seriousness of the burning itself.

“There is no adequate reason for such commotion, that the people should be so severely punished for the burning of a building — and much less since it is the burning of a synagogue, a home of unbelief, a house of impiety, a receptacle of folly, which God Himself has condemned.”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 14, c. 388.

This is not merely supersessionism in the abstract. It is supersessionism applied to civic justice. Ambrose’s theological judgment on the synagogue becomes part of his argument against punishing those who destroyed it.

He also appeals to recent memory. He claims that under Julian, Jews had burned Christian churches in several cities and that Christians had not received comparable restoration or vengeance. Even if Ambrose believed these claims, the logic remains troubling. Past wrongs against Christians become a reason to deny restitution to Jews in the present.

“The buildings of our churches were burned by the Jews, and nothing was restored, nothing was asked back, nothing demanded. The Church was not avenged; shall the synagogue be?”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 15, 18, c. 388.

Ambrose then goes further still. He casts the Jewish community’s appeal for redress as a scheme, and he minimizes what they could have lost.

“What could the synagogue have possessed in a distant town? What could the scheming Jews have lost by the fire? These are the artifices of Jews who wish to slander us.”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 18, c. 388.

That sentence is especially revealing because it interprets the victims’ complaint as slander. Ambrose does not dwell on the communal or religious meaning of a synagogue being destroyed. He asks what they could really have lost, and then accuses them of plotting against Christians.

The climax of the letter comes when Ambrose describes justice for the synagogue as a Jewish triumph over the Church.

“Will you give this triumph over the Church of God to the Jews? This trophy over Christ’s people, this exultation to unbelievers, this rejoicing to the synagogue, this sorrow to the Church?”

Ambrose, Letter 40 to Theodosius, 20, c. 388.

That is the heart of the problem. Ambrose casts restoration for a Jewish community as defeat for Christians. Once the question is framed that way, restitution becomes betrayal, imperial law becomes religious compromise, and the injured community becomes a threatening rival.

Ambrose did not leave the matter with a letter. In Letter 41, written to his sister Marcellina, he describes how he pursued the question in church when Theodosius was present. This second letter is important because it shows Ambrose using not only written counsel, but also the liturgical setting itself to press the emperor.

“When it was reported that a synagogue of the Jews and a meeting-place of the Valentinians had been burned by Christians at the instigation of the bishop, an order was made while I was at Aquileia that the synagogue should be rebuilt and that the monks should be punished. I wrote to the emperor; and when he came to church, I delivered a discourse.”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 1, c. 388.

Ambrose begins the sermon with another principle that, in itself, is true and admirable. Priests must not speak merely to please rulers. They must say what is useful, even when it is bitter.

“The prophetic or priestly authority ought to be straightforward, advising not what is pleasant, but what is useful.”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 2, c. 388.

Again, the principle is noble. But the application is morally grave. Ambrose then preaches from the story of the sinful woman who washes Christ’s feet in the house of Simon the Pharisee. In his hands, Simon becomes a figure for Jewish unbelief, while the woman becomes a figure for the Church. The sermon develops a contrast between the synagogue and the Church, and in that contrast Ambrose’s anti-Jewish theology comes clearly into view.

“You hear a Jew praising the discipline of the Church, extolling its true grace, honoring the priests of the Church; but if you exhort him to believe, he refuses.”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 10, c. 388.

The image of the kiss becomes a symbol of love for Christ. The Church, represented by the forgiven woman, kisses Christ’s feet. The synagogue, in Ambrose’s reading, does not.

“The synagogue has no kiss, but the Church has one; she waited for Him, loved Him, and said, ‘Let Him kiss me with the kisses of His mouth.’”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 14, c. 388.

Then Ambrose sharpens the contrast.

“Where should the Jew have this kiss from, since he does not believe in the Bridegroom? Where should the Jew have kisses from, since he does not know that the Bridegroom has come?”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 18, c. 388.

Ambrose also uses the image of oil. The Church has oil for healing; the synagogue, he says, does not.

“The synagogue does not have this oil, because she does not have the olive, and did not understand the dove that brought back the olive branch after the flood.”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 21, c. 388.

These lines are not a side issue. They show why Ambrose responds as he does. The synagogue is not merely another community in the city. It is, in his theological imagination, the rejected rival of the Church. That belief shapes his response to a real act of violence.

The sermon then turns directly to Theodosius. Ambrose urges the emperor to show mercy to the Christians involved. He describes this mercy through the image of washing Christ’s feet, identifying Christ’s body with the Church.

“In love for His body, that is, the Church, give water for His feet; kiss His feet, so that you may not only pardon those who have been caught in sin, but also by your peacefulness restore them to concord and give them rest.”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 26, c. 388.

This is powerful preaching, but troubling application. The “body” being defended is the Church. The Christians implicated in the burning are treated as the ones needing pardon and rest. The Jewish community whose synagogue was burned does not receive the same pastoral tenderness.

After the sermon, Ambrose tells Marcellina, Theodosius understood that he was being addressed.

“When I came down from the pulpit, he said to me, ‘You spoke about me.’ I replied, ‘I dealt with matters intended for your benefit.’”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 27, c. 388.

Then Ambrose pressed the matter further. He did not simply preach and leave. He demanded a promise before proceeding calmly to the altar.

“I said to the emperor, ‘Let me offer for you without anxiety; set my mind at ease.’ He said he would amend the edict. I added that the whole investigation must be ended, lest the count use it to injure the Christians. He promised it would be so.”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 28, c. 388.

And then Ambrose gives the decisive line.

“I went to the altar, where I would not have gone unless he had given me a clear promise.”

Ambrose, Letter 41 to Marcellina, 28, c. 388.

Here the contrast with Ambrose’s later confrontation over Thessalonica becomes painful. After the massacre at Thessalonica, Ambrose used sacramental discipline to call an emperor to repentance for bloodshed. In the Callinicum affair, he used sacramental pressure to protect Christians after violence against Jews. The same bishop, the same emperor, the same moral courage — but not the same moral clarity.

The wider legal setting makes the episode even more important. Five years later, imperial law stated plainly that Judaism was not prohibited and that Christians who attacked synagogues under cover of religion should be restrained. This does not mean late Roman law treated Jews as equal citizens in any modern sense. It did not. But it does show that Ambrose’s position in Callinicum was not simply what Christian law required. The emperor’s first instinct — punish the perpetrators and restore the synagogue — was not irrational or anti-Christian. Ambrose made it a theological crisis.

“It is sufficiently established that the sect of the Jews is prohibited by no law. Therefore we are gravely disturbed by the restrictions imposed in some places on their assemblies. Repress with proper severity those who presume, under the name of the Christian religion, to commit illegal acts and attempt to destroy and despoil synagogues.”

Emperors Theodosius I, Arcadius, and Honorius, Theodosian Code, 16.8.9, September 29, 393.

This section of Ambrose’s life is essential, not optional. If we only tell the story of Ambrose rebuking Theodosius after Thessalonica, we get the inspiring picture of a bishop telling an emperor that even rulers must repent. But if we also tell Callinicum, we see the danger of Christian power when it defends its own people more fiercely than it defends justice.

Ambrose teaches us that bishops can speak bravely to rulers. Callinicum teaches us that brave speech can still be wrong. It can still be tribal. It can still fail the neighbor. And when Christian leaders speak of Christ while minimizing harm done to Jews, they do not become less responsible because their words are theological. They become more responsible, because they are claiming the authority of God.


Thessalonica: When the Emperor Was Called to Repent

The most famous moment in Ambrose’s life came in 390, after a massacre in Thessalonica. A riot had broken out in the city, and an imperial official was killed. In response, imperial forces carried out a brutal slaughter. The exact numbers were remembered differently, but the moral fact was clear: many had died, and the emperor Theodosius bore responsibility.

Ambrose did not rush into theatrical denunciation. He wrote to Theodosius privately, but with unmistakable firmness. The letter is extraordinary because it combines pastoral grief, moral courage, and spiritual seriousness. Ambrose does not flatter the emperor. He does not treat imperial anger as an unfortunate necessity of rule. He speaks to Theodosius as a Christian man whose soul is in danger.

Ambrose begins by explaining the burden of speech. Silence would be easier. Silence would be safer. But a bishop who remains silent when sin endangers a soul becomes guilty in another way.

“What should I do? Should I not hear? But I could not close my ears. Should I speak? I had to guard my words against what I feared in your commands, lest some bloody deed be done. Should I keep silent? Then my conscience would be bound, and my voice taken away — the most miserable condition of all.”

Ambrose, Letter 51 to Theodosius, 3, c. 390.

Ambrose did not deny Theodosius’s faith. He did not treat him as a pagan tyrant outside the Church. That is exactly why the rebuke mattered. Theodosius was a baptized Christian ruler, and therefore he must be judged by Christian repentance. He could not hide behind office.

“There has been done in the city of the Thessalonians what has no similar record. I was not able to prevent it, though I had often said beforehand that it would be most atrocious. What you yourself now show by revoking it too late, you judge to be grave; and I cannot make light of it after it has been done.”

Ambrose, Letter 51 to Theodosius, 6, c. 390.

Ambrose calls Theodosius to the example of David. David was a king. David sinned grievously. David confessed. Royal power did not exempt him from repentance.

“Are you ashamed, Emperor, to do what the royal prophet David did? He was told of his fault, and he said, ‘I have sinned against the Lord.’ Bear it without impatience, Emperor, if it is said to you: ‘You have done what was spoken to King David.’ If you say, ‘I have sinned against the Lord,’ it will also be said to you: ‘Since you repent, the Lord has put away your sin, and you shall not die.’”

Ambrose, Letter 51 to Theodosius, 7, c. 390.

This is the heart of Ambrose’s confrontation with Theodosius. The emperor is a man. He is not a god, not a sacred exception, not a soul beyond correction. He is a man who has sinned, and because he is a Christian man, he must repent.

Ambrose makes that point directly. Theodosius is powerful, but he is still human. Sin is not conquered by denial or office. It is conquered by tears and repentance.

“You are a man, and temptation has come upon you. Conquer it. Sin is not taken away except by tears and repentance. Neither angel nor archangel can do it. The Lord Himself forgives only those who repent.”

Ambrose, Letter 51 to Theodosius, 11, c. 390.

Ambrose then makes the consequence plain. He cannot offer the Eucharist in the emperor’s presence while the emperor refuses repentance for bloodshed.

“I dare not offer the sacrifice if you intend to be present. What is not allowed after the blood of one innocent person has been shed — shall it be allowed after the blood of many? I do not think so.”

Ambrose, Letter 51 to Theodosius, 13, c. 390.

Later tellings of this event became more dramatic, placing Ambrose at the church door physically barring the emperor from entrance. Whether or not every dramatic detail belongs to the earliest memory, Ambrose’s own letter is powerful enough. He did not merely scold Theodosius. He withheld sacramental fellowship until repentance was made visible.

Paulinus’s later biography preserves the same core memory: Ambrose denied the emperor entrance into ecclesial communion until repentance was made public.

“When the priest learned what had been done, he denied the emperor entrance into the Church, and did not judge him worthy of the assembly of the Church or the communion of the sacraments until he performed public repentance.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 24, c. 422.

Paulinus also preserves the famous David comparison in compressed form. Theodosius appealed to David’s sin; Ambrose told him to follow David not only in sin, but in correction.

“The emperor argued that David had committed adultery and murder. The reply came at once: ‘You have followed him in error; follow him also in correction.’”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 24, c. 422.

This was not the Church humiliating the state for political advantage. It was the Church insisting that even the emperor must come to God by the same road as everyone else: confession, tears, repentance, and mercy. The man who wore purple still needed forgiveness. The ruler who commanded armies still needed a bishop to tell him the truth.

And this is why Callinicum must remain in the story. Ambrose’s rebuke after Thessalonica shows him at his best: courageous, pastoral, sacramental, morally clear. Callinicum shows the same courage misdirected. Together, they reveal not a simple hero and not a simple villain, but a bishop of immense strength whose greatness was real and whose failures were also real.


Augustine in the Audience

While Ambrose was confronting emperors and shepherding Milan, a young North African intellectual was sitting under his preaching. Augustine arrived in Milan restless, ambitious, and spiritually divided. He had left behind the Manichaeans intellectually, but he had not yet embraced Catholic Christianity. He was drawn to Ambrose first by reputation and eloquence. Ambrose was a master speaker, and Augustine was a professional rhetorician. He knew talent when he heard it.

But over time, Augustine heard more than style. Ambrose’s way of reading Scripture began to loosen Augustine’s objections to the Old Testament. The crude readings Augustine had rejected were not the only readings available. Ambrose showed him a deeper Christian interpretation, one that made room for symbol, mystery, prophecy, and spiritual meaning.

Augustine’s mother Monica immediately understood Ambrose’s importance. She loved him because his preaching was helping bring her son nearer to the faith for which she had prayed so long.

“My mother hung upon Ambrose’s words, praying for the fountain of water that springs up to eternal life. She loved him as an angel of God, because she knew that by him I had been brought to that wavering and troubled state through which I would pass from sickness to health.”

Augustine, Confessions, 6.1.1, c. 397–401.

That phrase, a wavering and troubled state, is beautiful. Ambrose did not instantly convert Augustine. He unsettled him. He made unbelief less comfortable. He made Catholic faith intellectually possible. He helped move Augustine from confident rejection into holy instability, and from there toward surrender.

Augustine says that, at first, he listened to Ambrose more for style than substance. But God used the doorway of eloquence to bring in truth.

“I listened carefully to his speech, not with the right intention, but as though testing whether his eloquence matched his reputation. I hung on his words, but neglected the matter. Yet along with the words I loved, the things I neglected entered my mind.”

Augustine, Confessions, 5.13.23–14.24, c. 397–401.

That is the strange mercy of God in Augustine’s story. Augustine came to judge the preacher. The preaching began to judge Augustine. He came to evaluate Ambrose’s rhetoric. He left with his objections to Scripture slowly unraveling.

Ambrose also shaped Augustine through the worship of Milan. Augustine remembered the hymns with deep emotion. The singing that had strengthened the Milanese during the basilica crisis also entered Augustine’s soul.

“How greatly I wept in Your hymns and canticles, deeply moved by the voices of Your sweet-speaking Church. The voices flowed into my ears, truth was poured into my heart, devotion overflowed, and my tears ran, and I was blessed.”

Augustine, Confessions, 9.6.14, c. 397–401.

This is one of the great unseen fruits of Ambrose’s ministry. The bishop of Milan did not become important only because emperors feared his rebuke. He became important because a future doctor of the Church sat in his congregation, heard Scripture opened, heard hymns sung, and found his heart being drawn toward God.

Augustine’s baptism in Milan at Easter in 387 became one of the decisive moments in Christian history. Augustine remembers the sweetness of those days not as a public spectacle, but as the inward joy of receiving grace with his son Adeodatus and his friend Alypius.

“We were baptized, and anxiety over our past life fled from us. I could not be satisfied in those days with the wonderful sweetness of considering the depth of Your counsel concerning the salvation of the human race.”

Augustine, Confessions, 9.6.14, c. 397–401.

Ambrose baptized Augustine, but his influence was not merely sacramental at the final moment. It had been slow, public, scriptural, musical, and pastoral. Ambrose had opened Scripture in such a way that Augustine could hear it. He had guarded the Church in such a way that Augustine could see courage. He had led worship in such a way that Augustine could weep.

The moment connects two of the greatest figures in the Latin Church: Ambrose, the bishop formed in the furnace of imperial Milan, and Augustine, the restless seeker who would become the great theologian of grace.


The Mysteries: Teaching New Christians to See

Ambrose’s public conflicts can be so dramatic that they overshadow his sacramental teaching. But Ambrose was not merely a political bishop. He was a mystagogue, a teacher who led newly baptized Christians into the meaning of what had happened to them.

In On the Mysteries, Ambrose speaks to those who have just passed through baptism. He reminds them that before baptism he taught them morals from the patriarchs and Proverbs. Now, after they have received the sacraments, he can explain the mysteries more openly. This timing mattered. For Ambrose, the sacraments were not merely ideas to be understood in advance; they were realities into which Christians were initiated.

Ambrose says he did not explain everything before baptism because the mysteries are best opened to those who have received them. This was not secrecy for the sake of elitism. It was pastoral timing.

“The season now warns us to speak of the mysteries and to set forth the meaning of the sacraments. If we had thought it best to teach these things before baptism to those not yet initiated, we would have seemed to betray the mysteries rather than portray them.”

Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 1.2, c. 387.

He asks the newly baptized what they saw. The answer, at one level, is simple: water, ministers, a bishop. But Ambrose presses deeper. The visible sign is not empty. God is present and active.

“What did you see? Water, certainly, but not water alone. You saw the deacons ministering and the bishop questioning and consecrating. Believe that the presence of God is there. Do you believe the working and not the presence? From where would the working come, unless the presence came before?”

Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 3.8, c. 387.

Ambrose’s sacramental theology is full of biblical images: creation, the flood, the Red Sea, the waters of Marah, Naaman washing in the Jordan, Christ’s baptism, the Spirit descending. He wants Christians to see that baptism is not an isolated ritual. It is the fulfillment of a long divine pattern. God has always been working through water, judgment, rescue, cleansing, and new life.

“The Spirit moved upon the waters. He who moved upon the waters, was He not working upon the waters? Why should I say working? As regards His presence, He was moving.”

Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 3.9, c. 387.

Ambrose reads the crossing of the Red Sea as a figure of baptism. Pharaoh and his army represent sin and death. The people pass through the waters and come out free.

“You observe that in this crossing of the Hebrews there was already a figure of holy baptism. The Egyptian perished; the Hebrew escaped. What else are we taught daily in this sacrament, except that guilt is drowned and error abolished, while devotion and innocence pass through unharmed?”

Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 3.12, c. 387.

He then turns to the personal reality of baptism. The newly baptized have not merely watched a ceremony. They have died and risen.

“You died to the world and rose again to God. You were buried in that element of the world, dead to sin, and raised to eternal life. Believe, therefore, that these waters are not empty of power.”

Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 4.21, c. 387.

The same sacramental realism appears in Ambrose’s teaching on the Eucharist. The elements are not interpreted merely by what they look like before consecration. They are interpreted by the words of Christ and the action of God.

“Before the blessing of the heavenly words, another nature is named; after the consecration, the Body is signified. He Himself speaks of His Blood. Before the consecration it has another name; after it is called Blood. And you say, Amen — that is, It is true.”

Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 9.54, c. 387.

Ambrose wants the newly baptized to understand that grace is more powerful than nature. If God’s word created the world, then Christ’s word can give the sacrament its reality.

“If the word of Christ was able to make from nothing what did not exist, shall it not be able to change things that already exist into what they were not? It is no less to give new natures to things than to change them.”

Ambrose, On the Mysteries, 9.52, c. 387.

This is the spiritual center from which Ambrose’s courage flowed. He believed the invisible realities of God were more solid than imperial ceremony. He believed baptism remade human beings more deeply than public office exalted them. He believed the Eucharist stood at the center of Christian life, and therefore he could not offer it casually in the presence of unrepentant bloodshed.

Ambrose’s resistance to emperors was not detached from his sacramental theology. It was an expression of it. The emperor must repent because baptism is real. The basilica must not be surrendered because worship is real. The poor must be served because the body of Christ is real. The newly baptized must be taught to see because the world they now inhabit is charged with divine mystery.

And that makes Callinicum even more sobering. The same sacramental seriousness that made Ambrose brave before Theodosius could also become a tool of pressure when he was defending the wrong cause. Ambrose teaches us that theology does not automatically protect us from moral failure. Sometimes theology gives moral failure a sacred vocabulary. That is why Christian memory must be truthful, repentant, and alert.


Dying With a Good Lord

Ambrose died in 397, during Holy Week. By then he had become one of the defining bishops of the western Church. He had guided Milan through doctrinal conflict, resisted imperial demands, rebuked Theodosius, preached the Nicene faith, formed Augustine, instructed catechumens, strengthened congregational song, and left behind writings that would shape Latin Christianity for centuries.

Paulinus gives us the remembered words of Ambrose near the end. They are fitting because they do not sound like the words of a man trusting in his achievements. Ambrose had done much, but at death he placed his confidence in the goodness of the Lord.

“I have not lived among you in such a way that I am ashamed to live; and I do not fear to die, because we have a good Lord.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 45, c. 422.

The line holds together humility and confidence. Ambrose is not ashamed to keep serving if God wills it. He is not afraid to die if God calls him. The reason is not that Ambrose has been faultless. The reason is that the Lord is good.

Paulinus also remembers Ambrose’s final moments in a way that feels quiet after so much public struggle. The bishop who had argued before emperors and sung with besieged congregations died with prayer still moving silently across his lips.

“We saw his lips moving, but we could not hear his voice.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 47, c. 422.

Paulinus says that Honoratus, bishop of Vercelli, came and gave Ambrose the body of the Lord. After receiving it, Ambrose died.

“Honoratus, bishop of Vercelli, came down and offered him the body of the Lord. After he received it, Ambrose breathed his last.”

Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose, 47, c. 422.

Ambrose’s life began, at least as bishop, with a crowd crying his name. It ended with lips moving in unheard prayer. Between those two moments, he became one of the most consequential Christian leaders of the fourth century.


Conclusion

Ambrose matters because he shows what happens when Christian conviction becomes public without becoming merely political. He was not a private spiritual adviser tucked safely away from power. He was a bishop in an imperial city, and his ministry unfolded in the open. He had to decide what belonged to Caesar and what did not. He had to decide whether a ruler could be corrected. He had to decide whether the poor had a claim on the rich. He had to decide whether doctrine was worth conflict. He had to decide whether worship could become courage.

His answer, again and again, was that Christ is Lord.

That answer made him brave. It also made him dangerous to those who wanted Christianity to become a chaplaincy for imperial convenience. Ambrose could honor emperors, but he would not flatter them as though their souls were exempt from judgment. He could respect public order, but he would not surrender the Church’s confession to preserve official comfort. He could value beauty in worship, but he would melt gold for captives and tell the wealthy that the poor had been robbed by their excess.

And yet Ambrose also matters because his flaws warn us. His conduct in the Callinicum affair reminds us that bold speech is not automatically righteous speech. A bishop can resist imperial overreach and still fail in mercy toward vulnerable neighbors. A Christian leader can be courageous and still need correction from the gospel he preaches.

This does not mean Ambrose should be erased from Christian memory. It means he should be remembered truthfully. He was a great bishop, a defender of Nicene faith, a teacher of Augustine, a pastor of Milan, and a man capable of extraordinary courage. He was also a fourth-century Christian leader whose anti-Jewish rhetoric and political pressure helped deny justice to a Jewish community after its synagogue was burned.

Christian history is not made stronger by pretending the saints were flawless. It is made stronger by telling the truth about grace, sin, courage, blindness, repentance, and the mercy of God.

In Ambrose’s world, the empire had begun to call itself Christian. Ambrose’s task was to remind the empire what that meant. It meant that churches were not imperial property. It meant that emperors must repent. It meant that the poor were not disposable. It meant that songs could hold a frightened congregation together. It meant that doctrine mattered because worship mattered. It meant that the past was not automatically holy merely because it was old. It meant that the Lord who received Ambrose at death was the same Lord before whom governors, bishops, emperors, beggars, Christians, Jews, and all peoples stand.

Ambrose did not fear to die because, as he said, we have a good Lord. That was his final confidence. It was also the foundation of his courage.