DOC 31 -- Letter from the Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV
to
Pope Gregory VII (1076)
Henry, king not through usurpation but through the holy
ordination of God, to Hildebrand, at present not pope but
false monk. Such greeting as this hast thou merited through thy
disturbances, inasmuch as there is no grade in the
church which thou hast omitted to make a partaker not of
honour but of confusion, not of benediction but of
malediction. For, to mention few and especial cases out of
many, not only hast thou not feared to lay hands upon the
rulers of the holy church, the anointed of the Lord-the
archbishops, namely, bishops and priests-but thou hast
trodden them under foot like slaves ignorant of what their
master is doing. Thou hast won favour from the common herd
by crushing them; thou hast looked upon all of them as
knowing nothing, upon thy sole self, moreover, as knowing
all things. This knowledge, however, thou hast used not
for edification but for destruction; so that with reason
we believe that St. Gregory, whose name thou has usurped
for thyself, was prophesying concerning thee when he said:
"The pride of him who is in power increases the more, the
greater the number of those subject to him; and he thinks
that he himself can do more than all." And we, indeed,
have endured all this, being eager to guard the honour
of the apostolic see; thou, however, has understood our
humility to be fear, and hast not, accordingly, shunned
to rise up against the royal power conferred upon us by
God, daring to threaten to divest us of it. As if we had
received our kingdom from thee! As if the kingdom and
the empire were in thine and not in God's hand! And
this although our Lord Jesus Christ did call us to the
kingdom, did not, however, call thee to the priesthood.
For thou has ascended by the following steps. By wiles,
namely, which the profession of monk abhors, thou has
achieved money; by money, favour; by the sword, the throne
of peace. And from the throne of peace thou hast disturbed
peace, inasmuch as thou hast armed subjects against those
in authority over them; inasmuch as thou, who wert not
called, hast taught that our bishops called of God are to
be despised; inasmuch as thou hast usurped for laymen and
the ministry over their priests, allowing them to depose
or condemn those whom they themselves had received as
teachers from the hand of God through the laying on of
hands of the bishops. On me also who, although
unworthy to be among the anointed, have nevertheless
been anointed to the kingdom, thou hast lain thy hand;
me whoas the tradition of the holy Fathers teaches,
declaring that I am not to be deposed for any crime
unless, which God forbid, I should have strayed from the
faith-am subject to the judgment of God alone. For the
wisdom of the holy fathers committed even Julian the
apostate not to themselves, but to God alone, to be
judged and to be deposed. For himself the true
pope, Peter, also exclaims: "Fear God, honour the king."
But thou who does not fear God, dost dishonour in me his
appointed one. Wherefore St. Paul, when he has not spared
an angel of Heaven if he shall have preached otherwise,
has not excepted thee also who dost teach other-wise upon
earth. For he says: "If any one, either I or an angel from
Heaven, should preach a gospel other than that which has
been preached to you, he shall be damned." Thou,
therefore, damned by this curse and by the judgment of
all our bishops and by our own, descend and relinquish
the apostolic chair which thou has usurped. Let another
ascend the throne of St. Peter, who shall not practise
violence under the cloak of religion, but shall teach
the sound doctrine of St. Peter. I Henry, king by the
grace of God, do say unto thee, together with all our
bishops: Descend, descend, to be damned throughout the
ages.
From: Medieval Sourcebook [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/sbook.html]; From MG LL, folio II, pp. 47 ff; translated by Ernest F. Henderson, Select Historical Documents of the Middle Ages, (London: George Bell and Sons, 1910), pp. 372-372