From: Medieval Sourcebook [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/sbook.html]
O St. Peter, chief of the apostles, incline to us, I beg, thy holy ears,
and hear me thy servant whom thou has nourished from infancy, and whom,
until this day, thou hast freed from the hand of the wicked, who have hated
and do hate me for my faithfulness to thee. Thou, and my mistress the mother
of God, and thy brother St. Paul are witnesses for me among all the saints
that thy holy Roman church drew me to its helm against my will; that I
had no thought of ascending thy chair through force, and that I would rather
have ended my life as a pilgrim than, by secular means, to have seized
thy throne for the sake of earthly glory. And therefore I believe it to
be through thy grace and not through my own deeds that it has pleased and
does please thee that the Christian people, who have been especially committed
to thee, should obey me. And especially to me, as thy representative and
by thy favour, has the power been granted by God of binding and loosing
in Heaven and on earth. On the strength of this belief therefore, for the
honour and security of thy church, in the name of Almighty God, Father,
Son and Holy Ghost, I withdraw, through thy power and authority, from Henry
the king, son of Henry the emperor, who has risen against thy church with
unheard of insolence, the rule over the whole kingdom of the Germans and
over Italy. And I absolve all Christians from the bonds of the oath which
they have made or shall make to him; and I forbid any one to serve him
as king. For it is fitting that he who strives to lessen the honour of
thy church should himself lose the honour which belongs to him. And since
he has scorned to obey as a Christian, and has not returned to God whom
he had deserted-holding intercourse with the excommunicated; practising
manifold iniquities; spurning my commands which, as thou dost bear witness,
I issued to him for his own salvation; separating himself from thy church
and striving to rend it-I bind him in thy stead with the chain of the anathema.
And, leaning on thee, I so bind him that the people may know and have proof
that thou art Peter, and above thy rock the Son of the living God hath
built His church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it.
From Gregory VII, Reg. III, No. 10 a, translated in Ernest F. Henderson, Select Historical Documents of the Middle Ages, (London: George Bell and Sons, 1910), 376-377