SAINT LEO THE GREAT
SELECTED LETTERS CONTINUED
Translated
by Rev. Charles Lett Feltoe, M.A., late Fellow of Clare College,
Cambridge
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LETTERS 60-173
LETTER LX: TO PULCHERIA
AUGUSTA.
(He hopes for her
intercession to procure the condemnation of Eutyches.)
LETTER LXI: TO MARTINUS AND
FAUSTUS, PRESBYTERS.
(Reminding them of a former
letter he has written to them, viz. Lett. LI.)
(Letters LXII., LXIII., LXIV.,
are the Emperor Theodosius' answers (a) to Valentinian, (b) to Galla Placidia,
and (c) to Licinia Eudoxia (assuring them of his orthodoxy and care for the
Faith.)
LETTER LXV: FROM THE BISHOPS
OF THE PROVINCE OF ARLES.
(Asking Leo to confirm the
privileges of that city, which they allege date from the mission of Trophimus,
by S. Peter, and more recently ratified by the Emperor Constantine.)
LETTER LXVI: LEO'S REPLY TO
LETTER LXV.
Leo, the pope, to the
dearly-beloved brethren Constantinus, Armentarius, Audientius Severianus,
Valerianus, Ursus, Stephanus, Nectarius, Constantius, Maximus, Asclepius,
Theodorus, Justus Ingenuus, Augustalis, Superventor, Ynantius, Fonteius, and
Palladius.
I. The bishop of Vienne has
anticipated their appeal. He proposes to arbitrate with impartiality.
When we read your letter,
beloved, which was brought to us by our sons Petronius the presbyter and
Regulus the deacon, we recognized how affectionate is the regard in which you
hold our brother and fellow-bishop, Ravennius: for your request is that what
his predecessor[6] deservedly lost for his excessive presumption may be
restored to him. But your petition, brothers, was forestalled by the bishop of
Vienne, who sent a letter and legates with the complaint that the bishop of
Aries had unlawfully claimed the ordination of the bishop of Vasa.
Accordingly, as we had to show such respect both for the canons of the fathers
and for your good opinion of us, that in the matter of the churches'
privileges we should allow no infringement or deprivation, it were incumbent
on us to preserve the peace within the province of Vienne by employing such
righteous moderation as should disregard neither ancient usage nor your
desires.
II. The bishop of Vienne is
to retain jurisdiction over four neighbouring cities: the rest to belong to
Arles.
For alter considering the
arguments advanced by the clergy present on either side, we find that the
cities of Vienne and Arles within your province have always been so famous,
that in certain matters of ecclesiastical privilege, now one, now the other,
has alternately taken precedence, though the national tradition is that
formerly they had community of rights. And hence we suffer not the city of
Vienne to be altogether without honour, so far as concerns ecclesiastical
jurisdiction, especially as it already possesses the authority of our decree
for the enjoyment of its privilege: to wit the power which, when taken away
from Hilary, we thought proper to confer on the bishop of Vienne. And that he
seem not suddenly and unduly lowered, he shall hold rule over the four
neighbouring towns, that is, Valentia, Tarantasia, Genava and Gratianopolis,
with Vienne herself for the fifth, to the bishop of which shall belong the
care of all the said churches. But the other churches of the same province
shall be placed under the authority and management of the bishop of Arles, who
from his temperate moderation we believe will be so anxious for love and peace
as by no means to consider himself deprived of that which he sees conceded to
his brother. Dated 5th of May, in the consulship of Valentinianus Augustus
(7th time), and the most famous Avienus (450.)
LETTER LXVII[7]: TO
RAVENNIUS, BISHOP OF ARLES.
To his dearly-beloved
brother Ravennius, Leo the pope.
We have kept our sons
Petronius the presbyter, and Regulus the deacon, long in the City, both
because they deserved this from their favour in our eyes, and because the
needs of the Faith, which is now being assailed by the error of some, demanded
it. For we wished them to be present when we discussed the matter, and to
ascertain everything which we desire through you, beloved, should reach the
knowledge of all our brethren and fellow- bishops, specially deputing this to
you, dear brother, that through your watchful diligence our letter, which we
have issued to the East in defence of the Faith, or else[8] that of Cyril of
blessed memory, which agrees throughout with our views, may become known to
all the brethren; in order that being furnished with arguments they may
fortify themselves with spiritual strength against those who think fit to
insult the Lord's Incarnation with their misbeliefs. You have a favourable
opportunity, beloved brother, of recommending the commencement of your
episcopacy to all the churches and to our God, if you will carry out these
things in the way we have charged and enjoined you. But the matters which were
not to be committed to paper, in reliance on God's aid, you shall carry out
effectually, as we have said, and laudably, when you have learnt about them
from the mouths of our aforesaid sons. God keep you safe, dearest brother.
Dated 5th of May, in the consulship of the most glorious Valentinianus (for
the 7th time) and of the famous Avienus (450).
LETTER LXVIII: FROM THREE
GALLIC BISHOPS TO ST. LEO.
Ceretius, Salonius and
Veranus to the holy Lord, most blessed father, and pope most worthy of the
Apostolic See, Leo.
I. They congratulate and
thank Leo for the Tome.
Having perused your
Excellency's letter, which you composed for instruction in the Faith, and sent
to the bishop of Constantinople, we thought it our duty, being enriched with
so great a wealth of doctrine, to pay our debt of thanks by at least inditing
you a letter. For we appreciate your fatherly solicitude on our behalf, and
confess that we are the more indebted to your preventing care because we now
have the benefit of the remedy before experiencing the evils. For knowing that
those remedies are well-nigh too late which are applied after the infliction
of the wounds, you admonish us with the voice of loving forethought to arm
ourselves with those Apostolic means of defence. We acknowledge frankly, most
blessed pope[8a], with what singular loving-kindness you have imparted to us
the innermost thoughts of your breast, by the efficacy of which you secure the
safety of others: and while you extract the old Serpent's infused poison from
the hearts of others, standing as it were on the watch-tower of Love, with
Apostolic care and watchfulness you cry aloud, lest the enemy come on us
unawares and off our guard, lest careless security expose us to attack, O holy
Lord, most blessed father and pope, most worthy of the Apostolic See. Moreover
we; who specially belong to you[9], are filled with a great and unspeakable
delight, because this special statement of your teaching is so highly regarded
wherever the Churches meet together, that the unanimous opinion is expressed
that the primacy of the Apostolic See is rightfully there assigned, from
whence the oracles of the Apostolic Spirit still receive their
interpretations.
II. They ask him to correct
or add to their copy of the Tome.
Therefore, if you deem it
worth while, we entreat your holiness to run through and correct any mistake
of the copyist in this work, so valuable both now and in the future, which we
have had committed to parchment[10], in our desire to preserve it, or if you
have devised anything further in your zeal, which will profit all who read,
give orders in your loving care that it be added to this copy, so that not
only many holy bishops our brethren throughout the provinces of Gaul, but also
many of your sons among the laity, who greatly desire to see this letter for
the revelation of the Truth, may be permitted, when it is sent back to us,
corrected by your holy hand, to transcribe, read and keep it. If you think
fit, we are anxious that our messengers should return soon, in order that we
may the speedier have an account of your good health over which to rejoice:
for your well- being is our joy and health.
May Christ the Lord long
keep your eminence mindful of our humility, O holy Lord, most blessed father
and pope most worthy of the Apostolic See.
I, Ceretius, your adopted
(son?), salute your apostleship, commending me to your prayers.
I, Salonius, your adorer,
salute your apostleship, entreating the aid of your prayers.
I, Veranus, the worshipper
of your apostleship, salute your blessedness, and beseech you to pray for me.
LETTER LXIX: (TO THEODOSIUS
AUGUSTUS.)
Leo, the bishop, to
Theodosius ever Augustus.
I. He suspends his opinion
on the appointment of Anatolius till he has made open confession of the
catholic Faith.
In all your piously
expressed letters amid the anxieties, which we suffer for the Faith, you have
afforded us hope of security by supporting the Council of Nicaea so loyally as
not to allow the priests of the LORD to budge from it, as you have often
written us already. But lest I should seem to have done anything prejudicial
to the catholic defence, I thought nothing rash on either side ought meanwhile
to be written back on the ordination of him who has begun to preside over the
church of Constantinople, and this not through want of loving interest, but
waiting for the catholic Truth to be made clear. And I beg your clemency to
bear this with equanimity that when he has proved himself such as we desire
towards the catholic Faith, we may the more fully and safely rejoice over his
sincerity. But that no evil suspicion may assail him about our disposition
towards him, I remove all occasion of difficulty, and demand nothing which may
seem either hard or controvertible but make an invitation which no catholic
would decline. For they are well known and renowned throughout the world, who
before our time have shone in preaching the catholic Truth whether in the
Greek or the Latin tongue, to whose learning and teaching some even of our own
day have recourse, and from whose writings a uniform and manifold statement of
doctrine is produced: which, as it has pulled down the heresy of Nestorius, so
has it cut off this error too which is now sprouting out again. Let him then
read again what is the belief on the LORD'S Incarnation which the holy fathers
guarded and has always been similarly preached, and when he has perceived that
the letter of Cyril of holy memory, bishop of Alexandria, agrees with the view
of those who preceded him [wherein he wished to correct and cure Nestorius,
refuting his wrong statements and setting out more clearly the Faith as
defined at Nicaea, and which was sent by him and placed in the library of the
Apostolic See[1]], let him further reconsider the proceedings of the Ephesian
Synod[2] wherein the testimonies of catholic priests on the Lord's Incarnation
are inserted and maintained by Cyril of holy memory. Let him not scorn also to
read my letter[3] over, which he will find to agree throughout with the pious
belief of the fathers. And when he has realized that that is required and
desired from him which shall serve the same good end, let him give his hearty
assent to the judgment of the catholics, so that in the presence of all the
clergy and the whole people he may without any reservation declare his sincere
acknowledgment of the common Faith, to be communicated to the Apostolic See
and all the Lord's priests and churches, and thus the world being at peace
through the one Faith, we may all be able to say what the angels sang at the
Saviour's birth of the Virgin Mary, "Glory in the highest to God and on
earth peace to men of good will[4]."
II. He promises to accept
Anatolius on making this confession, and asks for a council in Italy to
finally define the Faith.
But because both we and our
blessed fathers, whose teaching we revere and follow, are in concord on the
one Faith, as the bishops of all the provinces attest, let your clemency's
most devout faith see to it that such a document as is due may reach us as
soon as may be from the bishop of Constantinople, as from an approved and
catholic priest, that is, openly and distinctly affirming that he will
separate from his communion any one who believes or maintains any other view
about the Incarnation of the Word of God than my statement and that of all
catholics lays down, that we may fairly be able to bestow on him brotherly
love in Christ. And that swifter and fuller effect, God aiding us, may be
given through your clemency's faith to our wholesome desires, I have sent to
your piety my brethren and fellow-bishops Abundius and Asterius, together with
Basilius and Senator presbyters, whose devotion is well proved to me, through
whom, when they have displayed the instructions which we have sent, you may be
able properly to apprehend what is the standard of our faith, so that, if the
bishop of Constantinople gives his hearty assent to the same confession, we
may securely, as is due, rejoice over the peace of the Church and no ambiguity
may seem to lurk behind which may trouble us with perhaps ungrounded
suspicions. But if any dissent from the purity of our Faith and from the
authority of the Fathers, the Synod which has met at Rome for that purpose
joins with me in asking your clemency to permit a universal council within the
limits of Italy; so that, if all those come together in one place who have
fallen either through ignorance or through fear, measures may be taken to
correct and cure them, and no one any longer may be allowed to quote the Synod
of Niches in a way which shall prove him opposed to its Faith; since it will
be of advantage both to the whole Church and to your rule, if one God, one
Faith and one mystery of man's Salvation, be held by the one confession of the
whole world.
Dated 17th July in the
consulship of the illustrious Valentinianus for the seventh time) and Avienus
(450).
LETTER LXX: TO PULCHERIA
AUGUSTA.
(In which he again says he
is waiting for Anatolius' acceptance of Cyril's and his own statement of the
Faith, and looks forward to a Synod in Italy.)
LETTER LXXI: TO THE
ARCHIMANDRITES OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Complaining of Anatolius'
silence.)
LETTER LXXII: TO FAUSTUS,
ONE OF THE ARCHIMANDRITES
AT CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Commending his faith and
exhorting him to steadfastness.)
LETTER LXXIII: FROM
VALENTINIAN AND MARCIAN.
(Announcing their election
as Emperors[5] (A.D. 450), and asking his prayers that (per celebrandam
synodum, te auctore), peace may be restored to the Church.)
LETTER LXXIV: TO MARTINUS,
ANOTHER OF THE ARCHIMANDRITES AT CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Commending his
steadfastness in the Faith.)
LETTER LXXV: TO FAUSTUS AND
MARTINUS TOGETHER.
(Condemning the Latrocinium
and maintaining that Eutyches equally with Nestorius promotes the cause of
Antichrist.)
LETTER LXXVI: FROM MARCIANUS
AUGUSTUS TO LEO.
(Proposing that he should
either attend a Synod at Constantinople or help in arranging some other more
convenient place of meeting.)
LETTER LXXVII: FROM
PULCHERIA AUGUSTA TO LEO.
(In which she expresses her
assurance that Anatolius is orthodox, and begs him to assist her husband in
arranging for the Synod, and announces that Flavian's body has been buried in
the Basilica of the Apostles at Constantinople and the exiled bishops
restored.)
LETTER LXXVIII: LEO'S ANSWER
TO MARCIANUS.
(Briefly thanking him.)
LETTER LXXIX: TO PULCHERIA
AUGUSTA.
Leo, bishop of the city of
Rome to Pulcheria Augusta.
I. He rejoices at
Pulcheria's zeal both against Nestorius and Eutyches.
That which we have always
anticipated concerning your Grace's holy purposes, we have now proved fully
true, viz. that, however varied may be the attacks of wicked men upon the
Christian Faith, yet when you are present and prepared by the LORD for its
defence, it cannot be disturbed. For God will not forsake either the mystery
of His mercy or the deserts of your labours, whereby you long ago repelled the
crafty foe of our holy religion from the very vitals of the Church: when the
impiety of Nestorius failed to maintain his heresy because it did not escape
you the handmaid and pupil of the Truth, how much poison was instilled into
simple folk by the coloured falsehoods of that glib fellow. And the sequel to
that mighty struggle was that through your vigilance the things which the
devil contrived by means of Eutyches, did not escape detection, and they who
had chosen to themselves one side in the twofold heresy, were overthrown by
the one and undivided power of the catholic Faith. This then is your second
victory over the destruction of Eutyches' error: and, if he had had any
soundness of mind, that error having been once and long ago routed and put to
confusion in the person of his instigators, he would easily have been able to
avoid the attempt to rekindle into life the smouldering ashes, and thus only
share the lot of those, whose example he had followed, most glorious Augusta.
We desire, therefore, to leap for joy and to pay due vows for your clemency's
prosperity to God, who has already bestowed on you a double palm and crown
through all the parts of the world, in which the Lord's Gospel is proclaimed.
II. He thanks her for her
aid to the catholic cause, and explains his wishes about the restoration of
the lapsed bishops.
Your clemency must know,
therefore, that the whole church of Rome is highly grateful for all your
faithful deeds, whether that you have with pious zeal helped our
representatives throughout and brought back the catholic priests, who had been
expelled from their churches by an unjust sentence, or that you have procured
the restoration with due honour of the remains of that innocent and holy
priest, Flavian, of holy memory, to the church, which he ruled so well. In all
which things assuredly your glory is increased manifold, so long as you
venerate the saints according to their deserts, and are anxious that the
thorns and weeds should be removed from the Lord's field. But we learn as well
from the account of our deputies as from that of my brother and fellow-bishop,
Anatolius, whom you graciously recommend to me, that certain bishops crave
reconciliation for those who seem to have given their consent to matters of
heresy, and desire catholic communion for them: to whose request we grant
effect on condition that the boon of peace should not be vouch-soled them
till, our deputies acting in concert with the aforesaid bishop, they are
corrected, and with their own hand condemn their evil doings; because our
Christian religion requires boil that true justice should constrain the
obstinate, and love not reject the penitent.
III. He commends certain
bishops and churches to her care.
And because we know how much
pious care your Grace deigns to bestow on catholic priests, we have ordered
that you should be informed that my brother and fellow-bishop, Eusebius, is
living with us, and sharing our communion, whose church we commend to you; for
he that is improperly asserted to have been elected in his place, is said to
be ravaging it. And this too we ask of you, Grace, which we doubt not you will
do of your own free will, to extend the favour which is due as well to my
brother and fellow-bishop, Julian, as to the clergy of Constantinople, who
clung to the holy Flavian with faithful loyalty. On all things we have
instructed your Grace by our deputies as to what ought to be done or arranged.
Dated April 13, in the consulship of the illustrious Adelfius (451).
LETTER LXXX: (TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.) Leo, the bishop, to Anatolius, the bishop.
I. He rejoices at Anatolius
having proved himself orthodox.
We rejoice in the Lord and
glory in the gift of His Grace, Who has shown you a follower of
Gospel-teaching as we have found from your letter, beloved, and our brothers'
account whom we sent to Constantinople: for now through the approved faith of
the priest, we are justifying in presuming that the whole church committed to
him will have no wrinkle nor spot of error, as says the Apostle, "for I
have espoused you to one husband to present you a pure virgin to
Christ[6]." For that virgin is the Church, the spouse of one husband
Christ, who suffers herself to be corrupted by no error, so that through the
whole world we have one entire and pure communion in which we now welcome you
as a fellow, beloved, and give our approval to the order of proceedings which
we have received, ratified, as was proper, with the necessary signatures. In
order, therefore, that your spirit in turn, beloved, might be strengthened by
words of ours, we sent back after the Easter festival with our letters, our
sons, Casterius, the Presbyter, and Patricius and Asclepias, the Deacons, who
brought your writings to us, informing you, as we said above, that we rejoice
at the peace of the church of Constantinople, on which we have ever spent such
care that we wish it to be polluted by no heretical deceit.
II. The penitents among the
backsliding bishops are to be received back into full communion upon some plan
to be settled by Anatolius and Leo's delegates.
But concerning the brethren
whom we learn from your letters, and from our delegates' ac count, to be
desirous of communion with us, on the ground of their sorrow that they did not
remain constant against violence and intimidation, but gave their assent to
another's crime when terror had so bewildered them, that with hasty
acquiescence they ministered to the condemnation of the catholic and guiltless
bishop (Flavian), and to the acceptance of the detestable heresy (of Eutyches),
we approve of that which was determined upon in the presence and with the co
operation of our delegates, viz., that they should be content meanwhile with
the communion of their own churches, but we wish our delegates whom we have
sent to consult with you, and come to some arrangement whereby those who
condemn their ill-doings with full assurances of penitence, and choose rather
to accuse than to defend themselves, may be gladdened by being at peace and in
communion with us; on condition that what has been received against the
catholic Faith is first condemned with complete anathema. For otherwise in the
Church of God, which is Christ's Body, there are neither valid priesthoods nor
true sacrifices, unless in the reality of our nature the true High Priest
makes atonement for us, and the true Blood of the spotless Lamb makes us
clean. For although He be set on the Father's right hand, yet in the same
flesh which He took from the Virgin, he carries on the mystery of
propitiation, as says the Apostle, "Christ Jesus Who died, yea, Who also
rose, Who is on the right hand of God, Who also maketh intercession for
us[7]." For our kindness cannot be blamed in any case where we receive
those who give assurance of penitence, and at whose deception we were grieved.
The boon of communion with us, therefore, must neither harshly be withheld nor
rashly granted, because as it is fully consistent with our religion to treat
the oppressed with a Christlike charity, so it is fair to lay the full blame
upon the authors of the disturbance.
III. The names of Dioscorus,
Juvenal, and Eustathius are not to be read aloud at the holy altar.
Concerning the reading out
of the names of Dioscorus, Juvenal, and Eustathius[8] at the holy altar, it
beseems you, beloved, to observe that which our friends who were there present
said ought to be done, and which is consistent with the honourable memory of
S. Flavian, and will not turn the minds of the laity away from you. For it is
very wrong and unbecoming that those who have harassed innocent catholics with
their attacks, should be mingled indiscriminately with the names of the
saints, seeing that by not forsaking their condemned heresy, they condemn
themselves by their perversity: such men should either be chastised for their
unfaithfulness; or strive hard after forgiveness.
IV. One or two instructions
about individuals.
But our brother and
fellow-bishop, Julian, and the clergy who adhered to Flavian of holy memory,
rendering him faithful service, we wish to adhere to you also beloved, that
they may know him who we are sure lives by the merits of his faith with our
God to be present with them in you. We wish you to know this too, beloved,
that our brother and fellow-bishop Eusebius[9], who for the Faith's sake
endured many dangers and toils, is at present staying with us and continuing
in our communion; whose church we would that your care should protect, that
nothing may be destroyed in his absence, and no one may venture to injure him
in anything until he come to you bearing a letter from us. And that our or
rather all Christian people's affection for you may be stirred up in greater
measure, we wish this that we have written to you, beloved, to come to all
men's knowledge, that they who serve our God may give thanks for the
consummation of the peace of the Apostolic See with you. But on other matters
and persons you will be more fully instructed, beloved, by the letter you will
have received through our delegates. Dated 13 April, in the consulship of the
illustrious Adelfius (451).
LETTER LXXXI: TO BISHOP
JULIAN.
(Warning him to be
circumspect in receiving the lapsed.)
LETTER LXXXII: TO MARClAN
AUGUSTUS.
I. After congratulating the
Emperor on his noble conduct, he deprecates random inquiries into the tenets
of the Faith.
Although I have replied[1]
already to your Grace by the hand of the Constantinopolitan clergy, yet on
receiving your clemency's mercy through the illustrious prefect of the city,
my son Tatian, I found still greater cause for congratulation, because I have
learnt your strong eagerness for the Church's peace. And this holy desire as
in fairness it deserves, secures for your empire the same happy condition as
you seek for religion. For when the Spirit of God establishes harmony among
Christian princes, a twofold confidence is produced throughout the world,
because the progress of love and faith makes the power of their arms in both
directions unconquerable, so that God being propitiated by one confession, the
falseness of heretics and the enmity of barbarians are simultaneously
overthrown, most glorious Emperor. The hope, therefore, of heavenly aid being
increased through the Emperor's friendship, I venture with the greater
confidence to appeal to your Grace on behalf of the mystery of man's
salvation, not to allow any one in vain and presumptuous craftiness to inquire
what must be held, as if it were uncertain. And although we may not in a
single word dissent from the teaching of the Gospels and Apostles, nor
entertain any opinion on the Divine Scriptures different to what the blessed
Apostles and our Fathers learnt and taught, now in these latter days unlearned
and blasphemous inquiries are set on foot, which of old the Holy Spirit
crushed by the disciples of the Truth, so soon as the devil aroused them in
hearts which were suited to his purpose.
II. The points to be settled
are only which of the lapsed shall be restored, and on what terms.
But it is most inopportune
that through the foolishness of a few we should be brought once more into
hazardous opinions, and to the warfare of carnal disputes, as if the wrangle
was to be revived, and we had to settle whether Eutyches held blasphemous
views, and whether Dioscorus gave wrong judgment, who in condemning Flavian of
holy memory struck his own death- blow, and involved the simpler folk in the
same destruction. And now that many, as we have ascertained, have betoken
themselves to the means of amendment, and entreat forgiveness for their weak
hastiness, we have to determine not the character of the Faith, but whose
prayers we shall receive, and on what terms. And hence that most religious
anxiety which you deign to feel for the proclamation of a Synod, shall have
fully and timely put before it all that I judge pertinent to the needs of the
case, by means of the deputies who will with all speed, if God permit, reach
your Grace. Dated the 23rd of April in the consulship of the illustrious
Adelfius (451).
LETTER LXXXIII: TO THE SAME
MARCIAN.
(Congratulating him on his
benefits to the Church, and deprecating a Synod as inopportune.)
LETTER LXXXIV: TO PULCHERIA
AUGUSTA.
(Announcing the despatch of
his legates to deal with the lapsed, and asking that Eutyches should be
superseded in his monastery by a catholic, and dismissed from Constantinople.)
LETTER LXXXV: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
Leo, the bishop, to the
bishop Anatolius.
I. Anatolius with Leo's
delegates is to settle the question of the receiving back of those who had
temporarily gone astray after Eutyches.
Although I hope, beloved,
you are devoted to every good work, yet that your activity may be rendered the
more effective, it was needful and fitting to despatch my brothers Lucentius
the bishop and Basil the presbyter, as we[2] promised, to ally themselves with
you, beloved, that nothing may be done either indecisively or lazily in
matters, which concern the welfare of the universal Church; for as long as you
are on the spot, to whom we have entrusted the carrying out of our will, all
things can be conducted with such moderation that the claims of neither
kindness nor justice may be neglected, but without the accepting of persons,
the Divine judgment may be considered in everything. But that this may be
properly observed and guarded, the integrity of the catholic Faith must first
of all be preserved, and, because in all cases "narrow" and steep
"is the way that leadeth unto life[3]," there must be no deviation
from its track, either to the right hand or to the left. And because the
evangelical and Apostolic Faith has to combat all errors, on the one side
casting down Nestorius, on the other crushing Eutyches and his accomplices,
remember the need of observing this rule, that all those who in that synod[4],
which cannot, and does not deserve to have the name of Synod, and in which
Dioscorus displayed his bad feeling, and Juvenal[5] his ignorance, grieve as
we learn from your account, beloved, that they were conquered by fear, and
being overcome with terror, were able to be forced to assent to that
iniquitous judgment, and who now desire to obtain catholic communion, are to
receive the peace of the brethren after due assurance of repentance, on
condition that in no doubtful terms they anathematize, execrate and condemn
Eutyches and his dogma and his adherents.
II. The case of the more
serious offenders must be reserved for the present.
But concerning those who
have sinned more gravely in this matter, and claimed for themselves a higher
place in the same unhappy synod, in order to irritate the simple minds of
their lowlier brethren by their pernicious arrogance, if they return to their
right mind, and ceasing to defend their action, turn themselves to the
condemnation of their particular error, if these men give such assurance of
penitence as shall seem indisputable, let their case be reserved for the
maturer deliberations of the Apostolic See, that when all things have been
sifted and weighed, the right conclusion may be arrived at about their real
actions. And in the Church over which the Lord has willed you to rule, let
none such as we have already written[6] have their names read at the altar
until the course of events shows what ought to be determined concerning them.
III. Anatolius is requested
to co-operate loyally with Leo's delegates.
But concerning the
address[7] presented to us by your clergy, beloved, there is no need to put my
sentiments into a letter: it is sufficient to entrust all to my delegates,
whose words shall carefully instruct you on every point. And so, dearest
brother, do your endeavour with these brethren whom we have chosen as suitable
agents in so great a matter faithfully and effectually to carry out what is
agreeable to the Church of God: especially as the very nature of the case, and
the promise of Divine aid incite you, and our most gracious princes show such
holy faith, such religious devotion, that we find in them not only the general
sympathy of Christians, but even that of the priesthood. Who assuredly in
accordance with that piety, whereby they boast themselves to be servants of
God, will receive all your suggestions for the benefit of the catholic Faith
in a worthy spirit, so that by their aid also the peace of Christendom can be
restored and wicked error destroyed. And if on any points more advice is
needed, let word be quickly sent to us, that after investigating the nature of
the case, we may carefully prescribe the rightful measures. Dated 9th of June
in the consulship of the illustrious Adelfius (451).
LETTER LXXXVI: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
(Begging him for
friendship's and the Church's sake to assist his legates in quelling the
remnants of heresy.)
LETTER LXXXVII: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Commending to him two
presbyters, Basil and John, who being accused of heresy had come to Rome, and
quite convinced Leo of their orthodoxy.)
LETTER LXXXVIII: TO
PASCHASINUS, BISHOP OF LILYBAEUM.
Leo, the bishop, to
Paschasinus, bishop of Lilybaeum.
I. He sends a copy of the
Tome and still further explains the heterodoxy of Eutyches.
Although I doubt not all the
sources of scandal are fully known to you, brother, which have arisen in the
churches of the East about the Incarnation of our LORD Jesus Christ, yet, test
anything might have chanced to escape your care, I have despatched for your
attentive perusal and study our letter[8], which deals with this matter in the
fullest way, which we sent to Flavian of holy memory, and which the universal
Church has accepted; in order that, understanding how completely this whole
blasphemous error has with God's aid been destroyed, you yourself also in your
love towards God may show the same spirit, and know that they are utterly to
be abhorred, who, following the blasphemy and madness of Eutyches, have dared
to say there are not two natures, i.e. perfect Godhead and perfect manhood, in
our LORD, the only-begotten Son of God, who took upon Himself to restore
mankind; and think they can deceive our wariness by saying they believe the
one nature of the Word to be Incarnate, whereas the Word of God in the Godhead
of the Father, and of Himself, and of the Holy Spirit has indeed one nature;
but when He took on Him the reality of our flesh, our nature also was united
to His unchangeable substance: for even Incarnation could not be spoken of,
unless the Word took on Him the flesh. And this taking on of flesh forms so
complete a union, that not only in the blessed Virgin's child-bearing, but
also in her conception, no division must be imagined between the Godhead and
the life-endowed flesh[9], since in the unity of person the Godhead and the
manhood came together both in the conception and in the childbearing of the
Virgin.
II. Eutyches might have been
warned by tire fate of former heretics.
A like blasphemy, therefore,
is to be abhorred in Eutyches, as was once condemned and overthrown by the
Fathers in former heretics: and their example ought to have benefited this
foolish fellow, in putting him on his guard against that which he could not
grasp by his own sense, lest he should render void the peerless mystery of our
salvation by denying the reality of human flesh in our LORD Jesus Christ. For,
if there is not in Him true and perfect human nature, there is no taking of us
upon Him, and the whole of our belief and teaching according to his heresy is
emptiness and lying. But because the Truth does not lie and the Godhead is not
possible, there abides in God the Word both substances in one Person, and the
Church confesses her Saviour in such a way as to acknowledge Him both
impossible in Godhead and possible in flesh, as says the Apostle,
"although He was crucified through (our) weakness, yet He lives by the
power of God[1]."
III. He sends quotations
from the Fathers, and announces that the churches of the East have accepted
the Tome.
And in order that you may be
the fuller instructed in all things, beloved, I have sent you certain
quotations from our holy Fathers, that you may clearly gather what they felt
and what they preached to the churches about the mystery of the Lord's
Incarnation, which quotations our deputies produced at Constantinople also
together with our epistle. And you must understand that the whole church of
Constantinople, with all the monasteries and many bishops, have given their
assent to it, and by their subscription have anathematized Nestorius and
Eutyches with their dogmas. You must also understand that I have recently
received the bishop of Constantinople's letter, which states that the bishop
of Antioch has sent instructions to all the bishops throughout his provinces,
and gained their assent to my epistle, and their condemnation of Nestorius and
Eutyches in like manner.
IV. He asks him to settle
the discrepancy between the Alexandrine and the Roman calculation of Easter
for 455, by consulting the proper authority.
This also we think necessary
to enjoin upon your care that you should diligently inquire in those quarters
where you are sure of information concerning that point in the reckoning of
Easter, which we have found in the table[2] of Theophilus, and which greatly
exercises us, and that you should discuss with those who are learned in such
calculations, as to the date, when the day of the Lord's resurrection should
be held four years hence. For, whereas the next Easter is to be held by God's
goodness on March 23rd, the year after on April 12th, the year after that on
April 4th, Theophilus of holy memory has fixed April 24th to be observed in
455, which we find to be quite contrary to the rule of the Church; but in our
Easter cycles[3] as you know very well, Easter that year is set down to be
kept on April 17th. And therefore, that all our doubts may be removed, we beg
you carefully to discuss this point with the best authorities, that for the
future we may avoid this kind of mistake. Dated June 24th in the consulship of
the illustrious Adelfius (451).
LETTER LXXXIX: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Appointing Paschasinus the
bishop and Boniface a presbyter, and Julian the bishop, his representatives at
the Synod, as the Emperor is determined it should be held at once.)
LETTER XC: TO MARClAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Assenting perforce to the
meeting of the Synod, but begging him to see that the Faith be not discussed
as doubtful.)
LETTER XCI: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Telling him that he has
appointed Paschasinus, Boniface, and Julian, bishop of Cos, to represent him
at the Synod.)
LETTER XCII: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
(Asking him to act as one of
his representatives at the Synod.) LETTER XCIII: TO THE SYNOD OF CHALCEDON,
Leo, the bishop of the city
of Rome, to the holy Synod, assembled at Nicaea[4].
I. He excuses his absence
from the Synod, and introduces his representatives.
I had indeed prayed, dearly
beloved, on behalf of my dear colleagues that all the Lord's priests would
persist in united devotion to the catholic Faith, and that no one would be
misled by favour or fear of secular powers into departure from the way of
Truth; but because many things often occur to produce penitence and God's
mercy transcends the faults of delinquents, and vengeance is postponed in
order that reformation may have place, we must make much of our most merciful
prince's piously intentioned Council, in which he has desired your holy
brotherhood to assemble for the purpose of destroying the snares of the devil
and restoring the peace of the Church, so far respecting the rights and
dignity of the most blessed Apostle Peter as to invite us too by letter to
vouchsafe our presence at your venerable Synod. That indeed is not permitted
either by the needs of the times or by any precedent. Yet in these brethren,
that is Paschasinus and Lucentius, bishops, Boniface and Basil, presbyters,
who have been deputed by the Apostolic See, let your brotherhood reckon that I
am presidings at the Synod; for my presence is not withdrawn from you, who am
now represented by my vicars, and have this long time been really with you in
the proclaiming of the catholic Faith: so that you who cannot help knowing
what we believe in accordance with ancient tradition, cannot doubt what we
desire.
II. He entreats them to
re-state the Faith as laid down in the Tome.
Wherefore, brethren most
dear, let all attempts at impugning the Divinely-inspired Faith be entirely
put down, and the vain unbelief of heretics be laid to rest: and let not that
be defended which may not be believed: since in accordance with the
authoritative statements of the Gospel, in accordance with the utterances of
the prophets, and the teaching of the Apostles, with the greatest fulness and
clearness in the letter which we sent to bishop Flavian of happy memory, it
has been laid down what is the loyal and pure confession upon the mystery of
our LORD Jesus Christ's Incarnation.
III. The ejected bishops
must be restored, and the Nestorian canons retain their force.
But because we know full
well that through evil jealousies the state of many churches has been
disturbed, and a large number of bishops have been driven from their Sees for
not receiving the heresy and conveyed into exile, while others have been put
into their places though yet alive, to these wounds first of all must the
healing of justice be applied, nor must any one be deprived of his own
possession that some one else may enjoy it: for if, as we desire, all forsake
their error, no one need lose his present rank, and those who have laboured
for the Faith ought to have their rights restored with every privilege. Let
the decrees specially directed against Nestorius of the former Synod of
Ephesus, at which bishop Cyril of holy memory presided; still retain their
force, lest the heresy then condemned flatter itself in aught because Eutyches
is visited with condign execration. For the purity of the Faith and doctrine
which we proclaim in the same spirit as our holy Fathers, equally condemns and
impugns the Nestorian and the Eutychian misbelief with its supporters.
Farewell in the Lord, brethren most dear. Dated 26th[5a], of June, in the
consulship of the illustrious Adelfius (451).
LETTER XCIV: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Commending his legates to
him and praying for the full success of the Synod, if it adhere to the Faith
once delivered to the saints.)
LETTER XCV: TO PULCHERIA
AUGUSTA BY THE HAND OF THEOCTISTUS THE MAGISTRIAN[6].
Leo, the bishop to Pulcheria
Augusta.
I. He informs the Empress
that he has loyally recognized the Council ordered by her, and sent
representatives with letters to it.
Your clemency's religious
care which you unceasingly bestow on the catholic Faith, I recognize in
everything, and give God thanks at seeing you take such interest in the
universal Church, that I can confidently suggest what I think agreeable to
justice and kindness, and so what thus far your pious zeal through the mercy
of Christ has irreproachably accomplished, may the more speedily be brought to
an issue which we shall be thankful for, O most noble Augusta. Your clemency's
command, therefore, that a Synod should be held at Nicaea[7], and your gently
expressed refusal of my request that it should be held in Italy, so that all
the bishops in our parts might be summoned and assemble, if the state of
affairs had permitted them, I have received in a spirit so far removed from
scorn as to nominate two of my fellow-bishops and fellow-presbyters
respectively to represent me, sending also to the venerable synod an
appropriate missive from which the brotherhood therein assembled might learn
the standard necessary to be maintained in their decision, lest any rashness
should do detriment either to the rules of the Faith, or to the provisions of
the canons, or to the remedies required by the spirit of loving kindness.
II. In the settlement of
this matter that moderation must be observed which was entirely absent at
Ephesus.
For, as I have very often
stated in letters from the beginning of this matter, I have desired that such
moderation should be observed in the midst of discordant views and carnal
jealousies that, whilst nothing should be allowed to be wrested from or added
to the purity of the Faith, yet the remedy of pardon should be granted to
those who return to unity and peace. Because the works of the devil are then
more effectually destroyed when men's hearts are recalled to the love of God
and their neighbours. But how contrary to my warnings and entreaties were
their actions then, it is a long story to explain, nor is the need to put down
in the pages of a letter all that was allowed to be perpetrated in that
meeting, not of judges but of robbers, at Ephesus; where the chief men of the
synod spared neither those brethren who opposed them nor those who assented to
them, seeing that for the breaking down of the catholic Faith and the
strengthening of execrable heresy, they stripped some of their rightful rank
and tainted others with complicity in guilt; and surely their cruelty was
worse to those whom by persuasion they divorced from innocence, than to those
whom by persecution they made blessed confessors.
III. Those who recant their
error must be treated with forbearance.
And yet because such men
have harmed themselves most by their wrong- doing, and because the greater the
wounds, the more careful must be the application of the remedy, I have never
in any letter maintained that pardon must be withheld even from them if they
came to their right mind. And although we unchangeably abhor their heresy,
which is the greatest enemy of Christian religion, yet the men themselves, if
they without any doubt amend their ways and clear themselves by full
assurances of repentance, we do not judge to be outcasts from the unspeakable
mercy of God: but rather we lament with those that lament, "we weep with
those that weep[7a]," and obey the requirements of justice in deposing
without neglecting the remedies of loving-kindness: and this, as your piety
knows, is not a mere word-promise, but is also borne out by our actions,
inasmuch as nearly all who had been either misled or forced into assenting to
the presiding bishops, by rescinding what they had decreed and by condemning
what they had written, have obtained complete acquittal from guilt and the
boon of Apostolic peace.
IV. Even the authors of the
mischief may find room far forgiveness by repentance.
If, therefore, your clemency
deigns to reflect upon my motives, it will be satisfied that I have acted
throughout with the design of bringing about the abolition of the heresy
without the loss of one soul; and that in the case of the authors of these
cruel disturbances I have modified my practice somewhat in order that their
slow minds might be aroused by some feelings of compunction to ask for lenient
treatment. For although since their decision, which is no less blasphemous
than unjust, they cannot be held in such honour by the catholic brotherhood as
they once were, yet they still retain their sees and their rank as bishops,
with the prospect either of receiving the peace of the whole Church, after
true and necessary signs of repentance or, if (which God forbid) they persist
in their heresy, of reaping the reward of their misbelief. Dated 20th of July,
in the consulship of the illustrious Adelfius (451).
LETTER XCVI: TO RAVENNIUS,
BISHOP OF ARLES.
(Requesting him to keep
Easter on March 23 in 452.)
LETTER XCVII: FROM EUSEBIUS,
BISHOP OF MILAN, TO LEO.
(Informing him that the Tome
has been approved by the Synod of Milan, and containing the subscriptions of
the bishops there assembled.)
LETTER XCVIII: FROM THE
SYNOD OF CHALCEDON TO LEO.
The great and holy and
universal Synod, which by the grace of God and the sanction of our most pious
and Christ-loving Emperors has been gathered together in the metropolis of
Chalcedon in the province of Bithynia, to the most holy and blessed archbishop
of Rome, Leo.
I. They congratulate Leo on
taking the foremost part in maintaining the Faith.
"Our mouth was filled
with joy and our tongue with exultation[8]." This prophecy grace has
fitly appropriated to us for whom the security of religion is ensured. For
what is a greater incentive to cheerfulness than the Faith? what better
inducement to exultation than the Divine knowledge which the Saviour Himself
gave us from above for salvation, saying, "go ye and make disciples of
all the nations, baptizing them into the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Ghost, teaching them to observe all things that I have
enjoined you[9]." And this golden chain leading down from the Author of
the command to us, you yourself have stedfastly preserved, being set as the
mouthpiece unto all of the blessed Peter, and imparting the blessedness of his
Faith unto all. Whence we too, wisely taking you as our guide in all that is
good, have shown to the sons of the Church their inheritance of Truth, not
giving our instruction each singly and in secret, but making known our
confession of the Faith in conceit, with one consent and agreement And we were
all delighted, revelling, as at an imperial banquet, in the spiritual food,
which Christ supplied to us through your letter: and we seemed to see the
Heavenly Bridegroom actually present with us. For if "where two or three
are gathered together in His name," He has said that "there He is in
the midst of them[1]," must He not have been much more particularly
present with 520 priests, who preferred the spread of knowledge concerning Him
to their country and their ease? Of whom you were, chief, as the head to the
members, showing your goodwill[2] in the person of those who represented you;
whilst our religious Emperors presided to the furtherance of due order,
inviting us to restore the doctrinal fabric of the Church, even as Zerubbabel
invited Joshua to rebuild Jerusalem[2a].
II. They detail Dioscorus'
wicked acts.
And the adversary would have
been like a wild beast outside the fold, roaring to himself and unable to
seize any one, had not the late bishop of Alexandria thrown himself for a prey
to him, who, though he had done many terrible things before, eclipsed the
former by the latter deeds; for contrary to all the injunctions of the canons,
he deposed that blessed shepherd of the saints at Constantinople, Flavian, who
displayed such Apostolic faith, and the most pious bishop Eusebius, and
acquitted by his terror-won votes Eutyches, who had been condemned for heresy,
and restored to him the dignity which your holiness had taken away from him as
unworthy of it, and like the strangest of wild beasts, falling upon the vine
which he found in the finest condition, He uprooted it and brought in that
which had been cast away as unfruitful, and those who acted like true
shepherds he cut off, and set over the flocks those who had shown themselves
wolves: and besides all this he stretched forth his fury even against him who
had been charged with the custody of the vine by the Saviour, we mean of
course your holiness, and purposed excommunication against one who had at
heart the unifying of the Church. And instead of showing penitence for this,
instead of begging mercy with tears, he exulted as if over virtuous actions,
rejecting your holiness' letter and resisting all the dogmas of the Truth.
III. We have deposed
Eutyches, treating him as mercifully as we could.
And we ought to have left
him in the position where he had placed himself: but, since we profess the
teaching of the Saviour "who wishes all men to be saved and to come to a
knowledge of the Truth[3]," as a fact we took pains to carry out this
merciful policy towards him, and called him in brotherly fashion to judgment,
not as if trying to cut him off but affording him room for defence and
healing; and we prayed that he might be victorious over the many charges they
had brought against him, in order that we might conclude our meeting in peace
and happiness and Satan might gum no advantage over us. But he, being
absolutely convicted by his own conscience[4], by shirking the trial gave
countenance to the accusations and rejected the three lawful summonses he
received. In consequence of which, we ratified with such moderation as we
could the vote which he had passed against himself by his blunders, stripping
the wolf of his shepherd's skin, which he had long been convicted of wearing
for a pretence. Thereupon our troubles ceased and straightway a time of
welcome happiness set in: and having pulled up one tare, we filled the whole
world to our delight with pure grain: and having received, as it were, full
power to root up and to plant, we limited the up-rooting to one and carefully
plant a crop of good fruit. For it was God who worked, and the triumphant
Euphemia who crowned the meeting as for a bridal[4a], and who, taking our
definition of the Faith as her own confession, presented it to her Bridegroom
by our most religious Emperor and Christ-loving Empress, appeasing all the
tumult of opponents and establishing our confession of the Truth as acceptable
to Him, and with hand and tongue setting her seals to the votes of us all in
proclamation thereof These are the things we have done, with you present in
the spirit and known to approve of us as brethren, and all but visible to us
through the wisdom of your representatives.
IV. They announce their
decision that Constantinople should take precedence next to Rome, and ask
Leo's consent to it.
And we further inform you
that we have decided on other things also for the good management and
stability of church matters, being persuaded that your holiness will accept
and ratify them, when you are told. The long prevailing custom, which the holy
Church of God at Constantinople had of ordaining metropolitans for the
provinces of Asia, Pontus and Thrace, we have now ratified by the votes of the
Synod, not so much by way of conferring a privilege on the See of
Constantinople as to provide for the good government of those cities, because
of the frequent disorders that arise on the death of their bishops, both
clergy and laity being then without a leader and disturbing church order. And
this has not escaped your holiness, particularly in the case of Ephesus, which
has often caused you annoyance[6]. We have ratified also the canon of the 150
holy Fathers who met at Constantinople in the time of the great Theodosius of
holy memory, which ordains that after your most holy and Apostolic See, the
See of Constantinople shall take precedence, being placed second: for we are
persuaded that with your usual care for others you have often extended that
Apostolic prestige which belongs to you, to the church in Constantinople also,
by virtue of your great disinterestedness in sharing all your own good things
with your spiritual kinsfolk. Accordingly vouchsafe most holy and blessed
father to accept as your own wish, and as conducing to good government the
things which we have resolved on for the removal of al confusion and the
confirmation of church order. For your holiness' delegates, the most pious
bishops Paschasinus and Lucentius, and with them the right Godly presbyter
Boniface, attempted vehemently to resist these decisions, from a strong desire
that this good work also should start from your foresight, in order that the
establishment of good order as well as of the Faith should be put to your
account. For we duly regarding our most devout and Christ loving Emperors, who
delight therein, and the illustrious senate and, so to say, the whole imperial
city, considered it opportune to use the meeting of this ecumenical Synod for
the ratification of your honour, and confidently corroborated this decision as
if it were initiated by you with your customary fostering zeal, knowing that
every success of the children rebounds to the parent's glory. Accordingly, we
entreat you, honour our decision by your assent, and as we have yielded to the
head our agreement on things honourable, so may the head also fulfil for the
children what is fitting. For thus will our pious Emperors be treated with due
regard, who have ratified your holiness' judgment as law, and the See of
Constantinople will receive its recompense for having always displayed such
loyalty on matters of religion towards you, and for having so zealously linked
itself to you in full agreement. But that you may know that we have done
nothing for favour or in hatred, but as being guided by the Divine Will, we
have made known to you the whole scope of our proceedings to strengthen our
position and to ratify and establish what we have done[7].
LETTER XCIX: FROM RAVENNUS
AND OTHER GALLIC BISHOPS.
(Announcing that the Tome
has been accepted in Gaul also as a definitive statement of the Faith, with
the bishops' subscriptions.)
LETTER C: FROM THE EMPEROR
MARCIAN.
(Dealing much more briefly
with the same subjects as Letter XCVIII. above.)
LETTER CI: FROM ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE, TO LEO.
(Dealing with much the same
subjects as Letter XCVIII. from Anatolius' own standpoint: Chap. iii. is
translated in extenso as illustrating XCVIII., chap. iii.)
III. He describes the
circumstances under which the doctrine of the Incarnation had been formulated
by the Synod.
But since after passing
judgment upon him we had to come to an agreement with prayers and tears upon a
definition of the right Faith; for that was the chief reason for the Emperor's
summoning the holy Synod, at which your holiness was present in the spirit
with us, and wrought with us by the God-fearing men who were sent from you;
we, having the protection of the most holy and beautiful martyr Euphemia, have
all given ourselves to this important matter with all deliberateness. And as
the occasion demanded that all the assembled holy bishops should publish a
unanimous decision for clearness and for an explicit statement of the Faith in
our Lord-Jesus Christ the LORD God who is found and revealed even to those who
seek Him not, yes, even to those who ask not for Him[8], in spite of some
attempts to resist at first, nevertheless showed us His Truth, and ordained
that it should be written down and proclaimed by all unanimously and without
gainsaying, which thus confirmed the souls of the strong, and invited into the
way of Truth all who were swerving therefrom. And, indeed, after unanimously
setting our names to this document, we who have assembled in this ecumenical
Synod in the name of the Faith of the same most holy and triumphant martyr,
Euphemia, and of our most religious and Christ-loving Emperor Marcian, and our
most religious and in all things most faithful daughter the Empress Pulcheria
Augusta, with prayer and joy and happiness, having laid on the holy altar the
definition written in accordance with your holy epistle for the confirmation
of our Fathers' Faith, presented it to their pious care; for thus they had
asked to receive it, and, having received it, they glorified with us their
Master Christ, who had driven away all the mist of heresy and had graciously
made clear the word of Truth. And in this way was simultaneously established
the peace of the Church and the agreement of the priests concerning the pure
Faith by the Saviour's mercy.
LETTER CII: TO THE GALLIC
BISHOPS.
(Thanking them for their
letter (viz. XCIX.) to him, and announcing the result of the Synod of
Chalcedon.)
LETTER CIII: TO THE GALLIC
BISHOPS.
(Written later: enclosing a
copy of the sentence against Eutyches and Dioscorus.)
LETTER CIV: (To Marcian
Augustus, about the presumption of Anatolius, by the hand of Lucian the bishop
and Basil the deacon.)
Leo, the bishop, to Marcian
Augustus.
I. He congratulates the
Emperor on his share in the triumph of the catholic Faith.
By the great bounty of God's
mercy the joys of the whole catholic Church were multiplied when through your
clemency's holy and glorious zeal the most pestilential error was abolished
among us; so that our labours the more speedily reached their desired end,
because your God-serving Majesty bad so faithfully and powerfully assisted
them. For although the liberty of the Gospel had to be defended against
certain dissentients in the power of the Holy Ghost, and through the
instrumentality of the Apostolic See, yet God'S grace has shown itself more
manifestly (than we could have hoped) by vouchsafing to the world that in the
victory of the Truth only the authors of the violation of the Faith should
perish[9] and the Church restored to her soundness. Accordingly the war which
the enemy of our peace had stirred up, was so happily ended, the Lord's right
hand fighting for us, that when Christ triumphed all His priests shared in the
one victory, and when the light of Truth shone forth, only the shades of
error, with its champions, were dispelled. For as in believing the LORD'S own
resurrection, with a view to strengthen the beginnings of Faith, confidence
was much increased by the fact that certain Apostles doubted of the bodily
reality of our LORD Jesus Christ, and by examining the prints of the nails and
the wound of the spear with sight and touch removed the doubts of all by
doubting; so now, too, while the misbelief of some is refuted, the hearts of
all hesitaters are strengthened, and that which caused blindness to some few
avails for the enlightenment of the whole body. In which work your clemency
duly and rightly rejoices, having faithfully and properly provided that the
devil's snares should do no hurt to the Eastern churches, but that to
propitiate God everywhere more acceptable holocausts should be offered; seeing
that through the mediator between God and man, the Man Christ Jesus, one and
the self-same creed is held by people, priests, and princes, O most glorious
son and most clement Augustus.
II. Considering all the
circumstances Anatolius might have been expected to show more modesty.
But now that these things,
about which so great a concourse of priests assembled, have been brought to a
good and desirable conclusion, I am surprised and grieved that the peace of
the universal Church which had been divinely restored is again being disturbed
by a spirit of self-seeking. For although my brother Anatolius seems
necessarily to have consulted his own interest in forsaking the error of those
who ordained him, and with salutary change of mind accepting the catholic
Faith, yet he ought to have taken care not to mar by any depravity of desire
that which he is known to have obtained through your means[1]. For we, having
regard to your faith and intervention, though his antecedents were suspicious
on account of those who consecrated him[2], wished to be kind rather than just
towards him, that by the use of healing measures we might assuage all
disturbances which through the operations of the devil had been excited; and
this ought to have made him modest rather than the opposite. For even if he
had been lawfully and regularly ordained for conspicuous merit, and by the
wisest selection yet without respect to the canons of the Fathers, the
ordinances of the Holy Ghost, and the precedents of antiquity, no votes could
have availed in his favour. I speak before a Christian and a truly religious,
truly orthodox prince (when I say that) Anatolius the bishop detracts greatly
from his proper merits in desiring undue aggrandizement.
III. The City of
Constantinople, royal though it be, can never be raised to Apostolic rank.
Let the city of
Constantinople have, as we desire, its high rank, and under the protection of
God's right hand, long enjoy your clemency's rule. Yet things secular stand on
a different basis from things divine: and there can be no sure building save
on that rock which the Lord has laid for a foundation. He that covets what is
not his due, loses what is his own. Let it be enough for Anatolius that by the
aid of your piety and by my favour and approval he has obtained the bishopric
of so great a city. Let him not disdain a city which is royal, though he
cannot make it an Apostolic See[3]; and let him on no account hope that he can
rise by doing injury to others. For the privileges of the churches determined
by the canons of the holy Fathers, and fixed by the decrees of the Nicene
Synod, cannot be overthrown by any unscrupulous act, nor disturbed by any
innovation. And in the faithful execution of this task by the aid of Christ I
am bound to display an unflinching devotion; for it is a charge entrusted to
me, and it tends to my condemnation if the rules sanctioned by the Fathers and
drawn up under the guidance of God's Spirit at the Synod of Nicaea for the
government of the whole Church are violated with my connivance (which God
forbid), and if the wishes of a single brother have more weight with me than
the common good of the Lord's whole house.
IV. He asks the Emperor to
express his disapproval of Anatolius' self- seeking spirit.
And therefore knowing that
your glorious clemency is anxious for the peace of the Church and extends its
protection and approval to those measures which conduce to pacific unity, I
pray and beseech you with earnest entreaty to refuse all sanction and
protection to these unscrupulous attempts against Christian unity and peace,
and put a salutary check upon my brother Anatolius' desires, which will only
injure himself, if he persists: that he may not desire things which are
opposed to your glory and the needs of the times, and wish to be greater than
his predecessors, and that it may be free for him to be as pre-eminent as he
can in virtues, in which he will be partaker only if he prefer to be adorned
with love rather than puffed up with ambition. The conception of this
unwarrantable wish he ought indeed never to have received within the secret of
his heart, but when my brothers and fellow-bishops who were there to represent
me withstood him, he might at least have desisted from his unlawful
self-seeking at their wholesome opposition. For both your gracious Majesty and
his own letter affirm that the legates of the Apostolic See opposed him as
they ought with the most justifiable resistance, so that his presumption was
the less excusable in that not even when rebuked did it restrain itself.
V. And to try to bring him
to a right mind.
And hence, because it
becomes your glorious faith that, as heresy was overthrown, God acting through
you, so now all self-seeking should be defeated, do that which beseems both
your Christian and your kingly goodness, so that the said bishop may obey the
Fathers, further the cause of peace, and not think he had any right to ordain
a bishop[4] for the Church of Antioch, as he presumed to do without any
precedent and contrary to the provisions of the canons: an act which from a
longing to re- establish the Faith and in the interests of peace we have
determined not to cancel. Let him abstain therefore from doing despite to the
rules of the Church and shun unlawful excesses, lest in attempting things un-favourable
to peace he cut himself off from the universal Church. I had much liefer love
him for acting blamelessly than find him persist in this presumptuous frame of
mind which may separate him from us all. My brother and fellow- bishop,
Lucian, who with my son, Basil the deacon, brought your clemency's letter to
me, has fulfilled the duties he undertook as legate with all devotion: for he
must not be reckoned to have failed in his mission, the course of events
having rather failed him. Dated the 22nd of May in the consulship of the
illustrious Herculanus (452).
LETTER CV: (TO PULCHERIA
AUGUSTA ABOUT THE SELF-SEEKING OF ANATOLIUS.)
Leo the bishop to Pulcheria
Augusta.
I. He congratutates the
Empress on the triumph of the Faith, but regrets the introduction of a new
controversy into the Church.
We rejoice ineffably with
your Grace that the catholic Faith has been defended against heretics and
peace restored to the whole Church through your clemency's holy and
God-pleasing zeal: giving thanks to the Merciful and Almighty God that He has
suffered none save those who loved darkness rather than light to be defrauded
of the gospel-truth: so that by the removal of the mists of error the purest
light might arise in the hearts of all, and that darkness-loving foe might not
triumph over certain weak souls, whom not only those who stood unhurt but also
those whom he had made to totter have overcome, and that by the abolition of
error the true Faith might reign throughout the world, and "every tongue
might confess that the LORD Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the
Father[5]." But when the whole world had been confirmed in the unity of
the Gospel, and the hearts of all priests had been guided into the same
belief, it had been better that besides those matters for which the holy Synod
was assembled, and which were brought to a satisfactory agreement through your
Grace's zeal, nothing should be introduced to counteract so great an
advantage, and that a council of bishops should not be made an occasion for
the inopportune advancing of an illegitimate desire.
II. The Nicene canons are
unalterable and binding universally.
For my brother and
fellow-bishop Anatolius not sufficiently considering your Grace's kindness and
the favour of my assent, whereby he gained the priesthood of the church of
Constantinople, instead of rejoicing at what he has gained, has been inflamed
with undue desires beyond the measure of his rank, believing that his
intemperate self-seeking could be advanced by the assertion that certain
persons had signified their assent thereto by an extorted signature:
notwithstanding that my brethren and fellow-bishops, who represented me,
faithfully and laudably expressed their dissent from these attempts which are
doomed to speedy failure. For no one may venture upon anything in opposition
to the enactments of the Fathers' canons which many long years ago in the city
of Nicaea were founded upon the decrees of the Spirit, so that any one who
wishes to pass any different decree injures himself rather than impairs them.
And if all pontiffs will but keep them inviolate as they should, there will be
perfect peace and complete harmony through all the churches: there will be no
disagreements about rank, no disputes about ordinations, no controversies
about privileges, no strifes about taking that which is another's; but by the
fair law of love a reasonable order will be kept both in conduct and in
office, and he will be truly great who is found free from all self-seeking, as
the Lord says, "Whosoever will become greater among you, let him be your
minister, and whosoever will be first among you shall be your slave; even as
the Son of Man came not to be ministered unto but to minister[6]." And
yet these precepts were at the time given to men who wished to rise from a
mean estate and to pass from the lowest to the highest things; but what more
does the ruler of the church of Constantinople covet than he has gained? or
what will satisfy him, if the magnificence and renown of so great a city is
not enough? It is too arrogant and intemperate thus to step beyond all proper
bounds and trampling on ancient custom to wish to seize another's right: to
increase one man's dignity at the expense of so many metropolitans' primacy,
and to carry a new war of confusion into peaceful provinces which were long
ago set at rest by the enactments of the holy Nicene Synod: to break through
the venerable Fathers' decrees by alleging the consent of certain bishops,
which even the course of so many years has not rendered effective. For it is
boasted that this has been winked at for almost 60 years now, and the said
bishop thinks that he is assisted thereby; but it is vain for him to look for
assistance from that which, even if a man dared to wish for it, yet he could
never obtain.
III. Only by imitating his
predecessor will he regain Leo's confidence: the assent of the bishops is
declared null and void.
Let him realize what a man
he has succeeded, and expelling all the spirit of pride let him imitate
Flavian's faith, Flavian's modesty, Flavian's humility, which has raised him
right to a confessor's glory. If he will shine with his virtues, he will merit
all praise, and in all quarters he will win an abundance of love not by
seeking human advancement but by deserving Divine favour. And by this careful
course I promise he will bind my heart also to him, and the love of the
Apostolic See, which we have ever bestowed on the church of Constantinople,
shall never be violated by any change. Because if sometimes rulers fall into
errors through want of moderation, yet the churches of Christ do not lose
their purity. But the bishops' assents, which are opposed to the regulations
of the holy canons composed at Nicaea in conjunction with your faithful Grace,
we do not recognize, and by the blessed Apostle Peter's authority we
absolutely dis- annul in comprehensive terms, in all ecclesiastical cases
obeying those laws which the Holy Ghost set forth by the 318 bishops for the
pacific observance of all priests in such sort that even if a much greater
number were to pass a different decree to theirs, whatever was opposed to
their constitution would have to be held in no respect.
IV. He requests the Empress
to give his letter her favourable consideration.
And so I request your Grace
to receive in a worthy spirit this lengthy letter, in which I had to explain
my views, at the hands of my brother and fellow-bishop Lucianus, who, as far
as in him lies, has faithfully executed the anxious duties of his undertaking
as my delegate, and of my son Basil, the deacon. And because it is your habit
to labour for the peace and unity of the Church, for his soul's health keep my
brother Anatolius the bishop, to whom I have extended my love by your advice,
within those limits which shall be profitable to him, that as your clemency's
glory is magnified already for the restoration of the Faith, so it may be
published abroad for the restraint of self-seeking. Dated the 22nd of May, in
the consulship of the illustrious Herculanus (452).
LETTER CVI: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE, IN REBUKE OF HIS SELF- SEEKING.
Leo, the bishop, to
Anatolius, the bishop.
I. He commends Anatolius far
his orthodoxy, but condemns him far his presumption.
Now that the light of Gospel
Truth has been manifested, as we wished, through God's grace, and the night of
most pestilential error has been dispelled from the universal Church, we are
unspeakably glad in the Lord, because the difficult charge entrusted to us has
been brought to the desired conclusion, even as the text of your letter
announces, so that, according to the Apostle's teaching, "we all speak
the same thing, and that there be no schisms among us: but that we be perfect
in the same mind and in the same knowledge[7]." In devotion to which work
we commend you, beloved, for taking part: for thus you benefited those who
needed correction by your activity, and purged yourself from all complicity
with the transgressors. For when your predecessor Flavian, of happy memory,
was deposed for his defence of catholic Truth, not unjustly it was believed
that your ordainers seemed to have consecrated one like themselves, contrary
to the provision of the holy canons. But God's mercy was present in this,
directing and confirming you, that you might make good use of bad beginnings,
and show that you were promoted not by men's judgment, but by God's
loving-kindness: and this may be accepted as true, on condition that you lose
not the grace of this Divine gift by another cause of offence. For the
catholic, and especially the Lord's priest, must not only be entangled in no
error, but also be corrupted by no covetousness; for, as says the Holy
Scripture, "Go not after thy lusts, and decline from thy desire[8]"
Many enticements of this world, many vanities must be resisted, that the
perfection Of true self-discipline may be attained the first blemish of which
is pride, the beginning of transgression and the origin of sin. For the mind
greedy of power knows not either how to abstain from things forbidden nor to
enjoy things permitted, so long as transgressions go unpunished and run into
undisciplined and wicked excesses, and wrong doings are multiplied, which were
only endured in our zeal for the restoration of the Faith and love of
harmony[9].
II. Nothing can cancel or
modify the Nicene canons.
And so after the not
irreproachable beginning of your ordination, after the consecration of the
bishop of Antioch, which you claimed for yourself contrary to the regulations
of the canons. I grieve, beloved, that you have fallen into this too, that you
should try to break down the most sacred constitutions of the Nicene
canons[1]: as if this opportunity had expressly offered itself to you for the
See of Alexandria to lose its privilege of second place, and the church of
Antioch to forego its right to being third in dignity, in order that when
these places had been subjected to your jurisdiction, all metropolitan bishops
might be deprived of their proper honour. By which unheard of and never before
attempted excesses you went so far beyond yourself as to drag into an occasion
of self-seeking, and force connivance from that holy Synod which the zeal of
our most Christian prince had convened, solely to extinguish heresy and to
confirm the catholic Faith: as if the unlawful wishes of a multitude could not
be rejected, and that state of things which was truly ordained by the Holy
Spirit in the canon of Nicaea could in any part be overruled by any one. Let
no synodal councils flatter themselves upon the size of their assemblies, and
let not any number of priests, however much larger, dare either to compare or
to prefer themselves to those 318 bishops, seeing that the Synod of Nicaea is
hollowed by God with such privilege, that whether by fewer or by more
ecclesiastical judgments are supported, whatever is opposed to their authority
is utterly destitute of all authority.
III. The Synod of Chalcedon,
which met for one purpose, ought never to have been used for another.
Accordingly these things
which are found to be contrary to those most holy canons are exceedingly
unprincipled and misguided. This haughty arrogance tends to the disturbance of
the whole Church, which has purposed so to misuse a synodal council, as by
wicked arguments to over-persuade, or by intimidation to compel, the brethren
to agree with it, when they had been summoned simply on a matter of Faith, and
had come to a decision on the subject which was to engage their care. For it
was on this ground that our brothers sent by the Apostolic see, who presided
in our stead at the synod with commendable firmness, withstood their illegal
attempts, openly protesting against the introduction of any reprehensible
innovation contrary to the enactments of the Council of Nicaea. And there can
be no doubt about their opposition, seeing that you yourself in your epistle
complain of their wish to contravene your attempts. And therein indeed you
greatly commend them to me by thus writing, whereas you accuse yourself in
refusing to obey them concerning your unlawful designs, vainly seeking what
cannot be granted, and craving what is bad for your soul's health, and can
never win our consent. For may I never be guilty of assisting so wrong a
desire, which ought rather to be subverted by my aid, and that of all who
think not high things, but agree with the lowly.
IV. The Nicene canons are
for universal application and not to be wrested to private interpretations.
These holy and venerable
fathers who in he city of Nicaea, after condemning the blasphemous Arius with
his impiety, laid down a code of canons for the Church to last till the end of
the world, survive not only with us but with the whole of mankind in their
constitutions; and, if anywhere men venture upon what is contrary to their
decrees, it is ipso facto null and void; so that what is universally laid down
for our perpetual advantage can never be modified by any change, nor can the
things which were destined for the common good be perverted to private
interests; and thus so long as the limits remain, which the Fathers fixed, no
one may invade another's right but each must exercise himself within the
proper and lawful bounds, to the extent of his power, in the breadth of love;
of which the bishop of Constantinople may reap the fruits richly enough, if he
rather relies on the virtue of humility than is puffed up with the spirit of
self-seeking.
V. The sanction alleged to
have been accorded 60 years ago to the supremacy of Constantinople over
Alexandria and Antioch is worthless.
"Be not highminded,"
brother, "but fear(2)," and cease to disquiet with unwarrantable
demands the pious ears of Christian princes, who I am sure will be better
pleased by your modesty than by your pride. For your purpose is in no way
whatever supported by the written assent of certain bishops given, as you
allege, 60 years ago(3), and never brought to the knowledge of the Apostolic
See by your predecessors; and this transaction, which from its outset was
doomed to fall through and has now long done so, you now wish to bolster up by
means that are too late and useless, viz., by extracting from the brethren an
appearance of consent which their modesty from very weariness yielded to their
own injury. Remember what the Lord threatens him with, who shall have caused
one of the little ones to stumble, and get wisdom to understand what a
judgment of GOD he will have to endure who has not feared to give occasion of
stumbling to so many churches and so many priests. For I confess I am so fist
bound by love of the whole brotherhood that I will not agree with any one in
demands which are against his own interests, and thus you may clearly perceive
that my opposition to you, beloved, proceeds from the kindly intention to
restrain you from disturbing the universal Church by sounder counsel. The
rights of provincial primates may not be overthrown nor metropolitan bishops
be defrauded of privileges based on antiquity. The See of Alexandria may not
lose any of that dignity which it merited through S. Mark, the evangelist and
disciple of the blessed Peter, nor may the splendour of so great a church be
obscured by another's clouds, Dioscorus having fallen through his persistence
in impiety. The church of Antioch too, in which first at the preaching of the
blessed Apostle Peter the Christian name arose(4), must continue in the
position assigned it by the Fathers, and being set in the third place must
never be lowered therefrom. For the See is on a different footing to the
holders of it; and each individual's chief honour is his own integrity. And
since that does not lose its proper worth in any place, how much more glorious
must it be when placed in the magnificence of the city of Constantinople,
where many priests may find both a defence of the Fathers' canons and an
example of uprightness in observing you?
VI. Christian love demands
self-denial not self-seeking.
In thus writing to you,
brother, I exhort and admonish you in the Lord, laying aside all ambitious
desires to cherish rather a spirit of love and to adorn yourself to your
profit with the virtues of love, according to the Apostle's teaching. For love
"is patient and kind, and envies not, acts not iniquitously, is not
puffed up, is not ambitious, seeks not its owns(5)." Hence if love seeks
not its own, how greatly does he sin who covets another's? From which I desire
you to keep yourself altogether, and to remember that sentence which says,
"Hold what thou hast, that no other take thy crown(6)." For if you
seek what is not permitted, you will deprive yourself by your own action and
judgment of the peace of the universal Church. Our brother and fellow-bishop
Lucian and our son Basil the deacon, attended to your injunctions with all the
zeal they possessed, but justice refused to give effect to their pleadings.
Dated the 22nd of May in the consulship of the illustrious Herculanus (452).
LETTER CVII: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
(Expostulating with him for
putting personal considerations before the good of the Church in the matter of
the precedence of the See of Constantinople.)
LETTER CVIII: TO THEODORE,
BISHOP OF FORUM JULII: Leo, the bishop, to Theodore, bishop of Forum Julii.
I. Theodosus should not have
approached him except through his metropolitan.
Your first proceeding, when
anxious, should have been to have consulted your metropolitan on the point
which seemed to need inquiry, and if he too was unable to help you, beloved,
you should both have asked to be instructed (by us); for in matters, which
concern all the Lord's priests as a whole, no inquiry ought to be made without
the primates. But in order that the consulter's doubts may in any case be set
at rest, I will not keep back the Church's rules about the state of penitents.
II. The grace of penitence
is for those who fall after baptism.
The manifold mercy of God so
assists men when they fall, that not only by the grace of baptism but also by
the remedy of penitence is the hope of eternal life revived, in order that
they who have violated the gifts of the second birth, condemning themselves by
their own judgment, may attain to remission of their crimes, the provisions of
the Divine Goodness having so ordained that GOD'S indulgence cannot be
obtained without the supplications of priests. For the Mediator between GOD
and men, the Man Christ Jesus, has transmitted this power to those that are
set over the Church that they should both grant a course of penitence(7) to
those who confess, and, when they are cleansed by wholesome correction admit
them through the door of reconciliation to communion in the sacraments. In
which work assuredly the Saviour Himself unceasingly takes part and is never
absent from those things, the carrying out of which He has committed to His
ministers. saying: "Lo, I am with you all the days even to the completion
of the age(8):" so that whatever is accomplished through our service in
due order and with satisfactory results we doubt not to have been vouchsafed
through the Holy Spirit.
III. Penitence is sure only
in this life.
But if any one of those for
whom we entreat God be hindered by some obstacle and lose the benefit of
immediate absolution, and before he attain to the remedies appointed, end his
days in the course of nature, he will not be able when stripped of the flesh
to gain that which when yet in the body he did not receive. And there will be
no need for us to weigh tile merits and acts of those who have thus died,
seeing that the LORD our God, whose judgments cannot be found out, has
reserved for His own decision that which our priestly ministry could not
complete: for He wishes His power to be so feared that this fear may benefit
all, and every one may dread that which happens to the lukewarm or careless.
For it is most expedient and essential that the guilt of sins should be loosed
by priestly supplication before the last day of life.
IV. And yet penitence and
reconciliation must not be refused to men in extremis.
But to those who in time of
need and in urgent danger implore the aid first of penitence, then of
reconciliation, must neither means of amendment nor reconciliation be
forbidden: because we cannot place limits to God's mercy nor fix times for Him
with whom true conversion suffers no delay of forgiveness, as says God's
Spirit by the prophet, "when thou hast turned and lamented, then shalt
thou be saved(9);" and elsewhere, "Declare thou thy iniquities
beforehand, that thou may'st be justified(1);" and again, "For with
the Lord there is mercy, and with Him is plenteous redemption(2)." And so
in dispensing God's gifts we must not be hard, nor neglect the tears and
groans of self-accusers, seeing that we believe the very feeling of penitence
springs from the inspiration of God, as says the Apostle, "lest perchance
God will give them repentance that they may recover themselves from the snares
of the devil, by whom they are held captive at his will(3)."
V. Hazardous as deathbed
repentance is, the grace of absolution must not be refused even when it can be
asked for only by signs.
Hence it behoves each
individual Christian to listen to the judgment of his own conscience, lest he
put off the turning to God from day to day and fix the time of his amendment
at the end of his life; for it is most perilous for human frailty and
ignorance to confine itself to such conditions as to be reduced to the
uncertainty of a few hours, and instead of winning indulgence by fuller
amendment, to choose the narrow limits of that time when space is scarcely
found even for the penitent's confession or the priest's absolution. But, as I
have said, even such men's needs must be so assisted that the free action of
penitence and the grace of communion be not denied them, if they demand it
even when their voice is gone, by the signs of a still clear intellect. And if
they be so overcome by the stress of their malady that they cannot signify in
the priest's presence what just before they were asking for, the testimony of
believers standing by must prevail for them, that they may obtain the benefit
of penitence and reconciliation simultaneously, so long as the regulations of
the Fathers' canons be observed in reference to those persons who have sinned
against God by forsaking the Faith.
VI. He is to bring this
letter to the notice of the metropolitan.
These answers, brother,
which I have given to your questions in order that nothing different be done
under the excuse of ignorance, you shall bring to the notice of your
metropolitan; that if there chance to be any of the brethren who before now
have thought there was any doubt about these points, they may be instructed by
him concerning what I have written to you. Dated June 11th in the consulship
of the illustrious Herculanus (452).
LETTER CIX: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
Leo, the pope, to Julian,
the bishop.
I. He laments over the
recent rioting in Palestine.
The information which you
give, brother, about the riotous doings of the false monks(4) is serious and
to no slight degree lamentable; for they are due to the war which the wicked
Eutyches by the madness of deceivers is waging against the preaching of the
Gospel and the Apostles, though it will end in his own destruction and that of
his followers but this is delayed by the long-suffering of God, in order that
it may appear how greatly the enemies of the cross of Christ are enslaved to
the devil; because heretical depravity, breaking through its ancient veil of
pretence can no longer restrain itself within the limits of its hypocrisy, and
has poured forth all its long-concealed poison, raging against the disciples
of the Truth not only with pen but also with deeds of violence(5), in order to
wrest consent from unlearned simplicity or from panic-stricken faith. But the
sons of light ought not to be so afraid of the sons of darkness, as being sane
to acquiesce in the ideas of madmen or to think that any respect should be
shown to men of this kind; for, if they would rather perish than recover their
senses, provision must be made lest their escape from punishment should do
wider harm, and long toleration of them should lead to the destruction of
many.
II. The ringleaders must be
removed to a distance.
I am not unaware what love
and favour is due to our sons, those holy and true monks, who forsake not the
moderation of their profession, and carry into practice what they promised by
their vows. But these insolent disturbers, who boast of their insults and
injuries to priests(6), are to be held not the slaves of Christ, but the
soldiers of Antichrist, and must be chiefly humiliated in the person of their
leaders, who incite the ignorant mob to uphold their insubordination. And
hence, seeing that our most merciful Prince loves the catholic Faith with all
the devotion of a religious heart, and is greatly offended at the effrontery
of these rebel heretics, as is everywhere reported, we must appeal to his
clemency that the instigators of these seditions be removed from their mad
congregations; and not only Eutyches and Dioscorus but also any who have been
forward in aiding their wrongheaded madness, be placed where they can hold no
intercourse with their partners in blasphemy: for the simpleness of some may
chance to be healed by this method, and men will be more easily recalled to
soundness of mind, if they be set free from the incitements of pestilential
teachers.
III. He sends a letter of S.
Athanasius to show that the present heresy is only a revival of former
exploded heresies.
But lest the instruction
necessary for the confirmation of faithful spirits or the refutation of
heretics should be wanting or not expressed, I have sent the letter of bishop
Athanasius of holy memory addressed to bishop Epictetus(7), whose testimony
Cyril of holy memory made use of at the Synod of Ephesus against Nestorius,
because it has so clearly and carefully set forth the Incarnation of the
Word', as to overthrow both Nestorius and Eutyches by anticipation in the
heresies of those times. Let the followers of Eutyches and Dioscorus dare to
accuse such an authority as this of ignorance or of heresy, who assert that
our preaching goes astray from the teaching and the knowledge of the Fathers.
But it ought to avail for the confirmation of the minds of all the Lord's
priests, who, having been already detected and condemned of heresy in respect
of the authorities they followed, now begin more openly to set forth their
blasphemous dogma, lest, if their meaning were hid beneath the cloke of
silence it might still be doubtful whether the triple error of Apollinaris(8),
and the mad notion of the Manichees was really revived in them. And as they no
longer seek to hide themselves but rise boldly against the churches of Christ,
must we not take care to destroy all the strength of their attempts,
observing. as I have said, such discrimination as to separate the incorrigible
from the more docile spirits: for "evil conversations corrupt good
manners(9)," and "the wise man will be sharper than the pestilent
person who is chastised(1);" in order that in whatever way the society of
the wicked is broken up, some vessels may be snatched from the devil's hand?
For we ought not to be so offended at scurrilous and empty words as to have no
care for their correction.
IV. He expresses a hope that
Juvenal's timely acknowledgment of error will be imitated by the rest.
But bishop Juvenal, whose
injuries are to be lamented, joined himself too rashly to those blasphemous
heretics, and by embracing Eutyches and Dioscorus, drove many ignorant folk
headlong by his example, albeit he afterwards corrected himself by wiser
counsels. These men, however, who drank in more greedily the wicked poison,
have become the enemies of him, whose disciples they had been before, so that
the very food he had supplied them was turned to his own ruin: and yet it is
to be hoped they will imitate him in amending his ways, if only the holy
associations of the neighbourhood in which they dwell will help them to
recover their senses. But the character of him(2) who has usurped the place of
a bishop still living cannot be doubted from the character of his actions, nor
is it to be disputed that he who is loved by the assailants of the Faith must
be a misbeliever. Meanwhile, brother, do not hesitate to continue with anxious
care to keep me acquainted with the course of events by more frequent letters.
Dated November 25th in the consulship of Herculanus (452).
LETTER CX: FROM MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Expressing surprise that
Leo has not by now confirmed the acts of the Synod, and asking for a speedy
confirmation.)
LETTER CXI: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(About Anatolius' mistake in
deposing Actions from the office of archdeacon and putting in Andrew instead.)
LETTER CXII: TO PULCHERIA
AUGUSTA.
(On the same subject more
briefly.)
LETTER CXIII: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
Leo, bishop of Rome, to
Julian, bishop of Cos.
I. After thanks for Julian's
sympathy he complains of the deposition of Aetius from the archdeaconry.
I acknowledge in your
letter, beloved, the feelings of brotherly love, in that you sympathize with
us in true grief at the many grievous evils we have borne: But we pray that
these things which the LORD has either allowed or wished us to suffer, may
avail to the correction of those who live through them(3), and that
adversities may cease through the cessation of offences. Both which results
will follow through the mercy of God, if only He remove the scourge and turn
the hearts of His people to Himself. But as you, brother, are saddened by the
hostilities which have raged around us, so I am made anxious because, as your
letter indicates, the treacherous attacks of heretics are not set at rest in
the church of Constantinople, and men seek occasion to persecute those who
have been the defenders of the catholic Fairly. For so long as Aetius is
removed from his office of archdeacon under pretence of promotion(4) and
Andrew is taken into his place, who had been cast off for associating with
heretics; so long as respect is shown to the accusers of Flavian of holy
memory, and the partners or disciples of that most pious confessor are put
down, it is only too clearly shown what pleases the bishop of the church
itself. Towards whom I put off taking action till I hear the merits of the
case and await his own dealing with me in the letter our son Aetius tells me
he will send, giving opportunity for voluntary correction, whereby I desire my
vexation to be appeased. Nevertheless, I have written to our most clement
Prince and the most pious Augusta about these things which concern the peace
of the Church; and I do not doubt they will in the devoutness of their faith
take heed lest a heresy already condemned should succeed in springing up again
to the detriment of their own glorious work.
II. He asks Julian to act
for him as Anatolius is deficient in vigour.
See then, beloved brother,
that you bestow the necessary thought on the cares of the Apostolic See, which
by her rights as your mother commends to you, who were nourished at her
breast, the defence of the catholic Truth against Nestorians and Eutychians,
in order that, supported by the Divine help, you may not cease to watch the
interests of the city of Constantinople, lest at any time the storms of error
arise within her. And because the faith of our glorious Princes is so great
that you may confidently suggest what is necessary to them, use their piety
for the benefit of the universal Church. But if ever you consult me, beloved,
on things which you think doubtful, my reply shall not fail to supply
instruction, so that, apart from cases which ought to be decided by the
inquiries of the bishops of each particular church, you may act as my legate
and undertake the special charge of preventing the Nestorian or Eutychian
heresy reviving in any quarter; because the bishop of Constantinople does not
possess catholic vigour, and is not very jealous either for the mystery of
man's salvation or for his own reputation: whereas if he had any spiritual
activity, he ought to have considered by whom he was ordained, and whom he
succeeded in such a way as to follows the blessed Flavian rather than the
instruments of his promotion. And, therefore, when our most religious Princes
deign in accordance with my entreaties to reprimand our brother Anatolius on
those matters, which deservedly come under blame, join your diligence to
theirs, beloved, that all causes of offences may be removed by the application
of the fullest correction and he cease from injuring our son Aetius. For with
a catholic- minded bishop even though there was something which seemed
calculated to annoy in his archdeacon, it ought to have been passed over from
regard for the Faith, rather than that the most worthless heretic should take
the place of a catholic. And so when I have learnt the rest of the story, I
shall then more clearly gather what ought to be done. For, meanwhile, I have
thought better to restrain my vexation and to exercise patience that there
might be room for forgiveness.
III. He asks for further
information about the rioting in Palestine and in Egypt.
But with regard to the monks
of Palestine, who are said this long time to be in a state of mutiny, I know
not by what spirit they are at present moved. Nor has any one yet explained to
me what reasons they seem to bring forward for their discontent: whether for
instance, they wish to serve the Eutychian heresy by such madness, or whether
they are irreconcilably vexed that their bishop could have been misled into
that blasphemy, whereby, in spite of the very associations of the holy spots,
from which issued instruction for the whole world, he has alienated himself
from the Truth of the Lord's Incarnation, and in their opinion that cannot be
venial in him which in others had to be wiped out by absolution. And therefore
I desire lobe more fully informed about these things that proper means may he
taken for their correction; because it is one thing to arm oneself wickedly
against the Faith, and another thing to be immoderately disturbed on behalf of
it. You must know, too, that the documents which Aetius the presbyter told me
before had been dispatched, and the epitome of the Faith which you say you
have sent, have not yet arrived. Hence, if an opportunity offers itself of a
more expeditious messenger, I shall be glad for any information that may seem
expedient to be sent me as soon as possible. I am anxious to know about the
monks of Egypt(5), whether they have regained their peacefulness and their
faith, and about the church of Alexandria, what trustworthy tidings reaches
you: I wish you to know what I wrote to its bishop or his ordainers, or the
clergy, and have therefore sent you a copy of the letter. You will learn also
what I have said to our most clement Prince and our most religious Empress
from the copies sent.
IV. He asks for a Latin
translation of the acts of Chalcedon.
I wish to know whether my
letter(6) has been delivered to you, brother, which I sent you by Basil the
deacon, upon the Faith of the Lord's Incarnation, while Flavian of holy memory
was still alive; for I fancy you have never made any comment on its contents.
We have no very clear information about the acts of the Synod, which were
drawn up at the time of the council at Chalcedon, on account of the difference
of language(7). And therefore i specially enjoin upon you, brother, that you
have the whole collected into one volume, accurately translated of course into
Latin, that we may not be in doubt on any portion of the proceedings, and that
there may be no manner of uncertainty after you have taken pains to bring it
fully within my understanding. Dated March 11th, in the consulship of the
illustrious Opilio (453).
LETTER CXIV: TO THE BISHOPS
ASSEMBLED IN SYNOD AT CHALCEDON.
(In answer to their Letter (XCVIII.),
approving of their acts in the general so long as nothing is contrary to the
canons of Nicaea.)
LETTER CXV: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Congratulating him upon the
restoration of peace to the Church, and the suppression of the riotous monks;
giving his consent also, as a liege subject of the Emperor's, to the acts of
Chalcedon, and asking him to make this known to the Synod.)
LETTER CXV: TO PULCHERIA
AUGUSTA.
(Commending her pious zeal
and informing her of Iris assent to the acts of Chalcedon.)
LETTER CXVII: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
Leo to Julian the bishop.
I. He wishes his assent to
the Acts of Chalcedon to be widely known.
How watchfully and how
devotedly you guard the catholic Faith, brother, the tenor of your letter
shows, and my anxiety is greatly relieved by the information it contains;
supplemented as it is by the most religious piety of our religious Emperor,
which is clearly shown to be prepared by the Lord for the confirmation of the
whole Church; so that, whilst Christian princes act for the Faith with holy
zeal, the priests of the Lord may confidently pray for their realm.
What therefore our most
clement Emperor deemed needful I have willingly complied with, by sending
letters to all the brethren who were present at the Synod of Chalcedon, in
which to show that I approved of what was resolved upon by our holy brethren
about the Rule of Faith; on their account to wit, who in order to cloke their
own treachery, pretend to consider invalid or doubtful such conciliar
ordinances as are not ratified by my assent albeit, after the return of the
brethren whom I had sent in my stead, I dispatched a letter to the bishop of
Constantinople; so that, if he had been minded to publish it, abundant proof
might have been furnished thereby how gladly I approved of what the synod had
passed concerning the Faith. But, because it contained such an answer as would
have run counter to his self-seeking, he preferred my acceptance of the
brethren's resolutions to remain unknown, lest at the same time my reply
should become known on the absolute authority of the Nicene canons. Wherefore
take heed, beloved, that you warn our most gracious prince by frequent
reminders that he add his words to ours and order the letter of the Apostolic
See to be sent round to the priests of each single province, that hereafter no
enemy of the Truth may venture to excuse himself under cover of my silence.
II. He expresses his thanks
for the zeal shown by the Emperor and the Empress.
And as to the edict of the
most Christian Emperor, in which he has shown what the ignorant folly of
certain monks deserved and as to the reply of the most gracious Augusta, in
which she rebuked the heads of the monasteries, I wish my great rejoicing to
be known, being assured that this fervour of faith is bestowed upon them by
Divine inspiration, in order that all men may acknowledge their superiority to
rest not only on their royal state but also on their priestly holiness: whom
both now and formerly I have asked to treat you with full confidence, being
assured of their good will, and that they will not refuse to give ear to
necessary suggestions.
III. He wishes to know the
effect of his letter to the Empress Eudocia.
And, because the most
clement Emperor has been pleased to charge me secretly by our son Paulus with
the task of admonishing our daughter the most clement Augusta Eudocia(8), I
have done what he wished, in order that from my letter she may learn how
profitable it will be to her if she espouses the cause of the catholic Faith,
and have managed that she should further be admonished by a letter from that
most clement prince her son; nothing doubting that she herself, too, will set
to work with pious zeal to bring the leaders of sedition to a knowledge of the
consequences of their action, and, if they understand not the utterances of
those who teach them, to make them at least afraid of the powers of those who
will punish them. And so what effect this care of ours produces, I with to
know at once by a letter from you, beloved, and whether their ignorant
contumacy has at length subsided: as to which if they think there is any doubt
about our teaching, let them at least not reject the writings of such holy
priests as Athanasius, Theophilus and Cyril of Alexandria, with whom our
statement of the Faith so completely harmonizes that any one who professes
consent to them disagrees in nothing with us. IV. Aetius must be content at
present with the Emperor's favour.
With our son Aetius(9) the
presbyter we sympathize in his sorrow; and, as one has been put into his place
who had previously been judged worthy of censure, there is no doubt that this
change tends to the injury of catholics. But these things must be borne
patiently meanwhile, lest we should be thought to exceed the measure of our
usual moderation, and for the present Aetius must be content with the
encouragement of our most clement prince's favour, to whom I have but lately
so commended him by letter that I doubt not his good repute has been increased
in their most religious minds.
V. Anatalius shows no
contrition in his subsequent acts.
This too we would have you
know, that bishop Anatolius after our prohibition so persisted in his rash
presumption as to call upon the bishops of Illyricum to subscribe their names:
this news was brought us by the bishop who was sent by the bishop of
Thessalonica(1) to announce his consecration. We have declined to write to
Anatolius about this, although you might have expected us to do so, because we
perceived he did not wish to be reformed. I have made two versions of my
letter to the Synod, one with a copy of my letter to Anatolius subjoined, one
without it; leaving it to your judgment to deliver the one which you think
ought to be given to our most clement prince and to keep the other. Dated 21st
March, in the consulship of the illustrious Opilio (453).
LETTER CXVIII: TO THE SAME
JULIAN, BISHOP OF COS.
(In which, after speaking of
his own efforts for the Faith, he objects to monks being permitted to preach,
especially if heretically inclined, and asks Julian to stir up the Emperor's
zeal for the Faith.)
LETTER CXIX: TO MAXIMUS,
BISHOP OF ANTIOCH, BY THE HAND OF MARIAN THE PRESBYTER, AND OLYMPIUS THE
DEACON.
Leo to Maximus of Antioch.
I. The Faith is the mean
between the two extremes of Eutyches and Nestorius.
How much, beloved, you have
at heart the most sacred unity of our common Faith and the tranquil harmony of
the Church's peace, the substance of your letter shows, which was brought me
by our sons, Marian the presbyter and Olympius the deacon, and which was the
more welcome to us because thereby we can join as it were in conversation, and
thus the grace of GOD becomes more and more known and greater joy is felt
through the whole world over the revelation of catholic Truth. And yet we are
sore grieved at some who still (so your messengers indicate) love their
darkness; and though the brightness of day has arisen everywhere, even still
delight in the obscurity of their blindness, and abandoning the Faith, remain
Christians in only the empty name, without knowledge to discern one error from
another, and to distinguish the blasphemy of Nestorius from the impiety of
Eutyches. For no delusion of theirs can appear excusable, because they
contradict themselves in their perverseness. For, though Eutyches' disciples
abhor Nestorius, and the followers of Nestorius anathematize Eutyches, yet in
the judgment of catholics both sides are condemned and both heresies alike are
cut away from the body of the Church: because neither falsehood can be in
unison with us. Nor does it matter in which direction of blasphemy they
disagree with the truth of the LORD's Incarnation, since their erroneous
opinions hold neither with the authority of the Gospel nor with the
significance of the mystery(2).
II. Maximus is to keep the
churches of the East free from these two opposite heresies.
And therefore, beloved
brother, you must with all your heart consider over which church the LORD has
set you to preside, and remember that system of doctrine of which the chief of
all the Apostles, the blessed Peter, laid the foundation, not only by his
uniform preaching throughout the world, but especially by his teaching in the
cities of Antioch and Rome: so that you may understand that he demands of him
who is set over the home of his own renown those institutions which he handed
down, as he received them from the Truth Itself, which he confessed. And in
the churches of the East, and especially in those which the canons of the most
holy Fathers at Nicaea(3) assigned to the See of Antioch, you must not by any
means allow unscrupulous heretics to make assaults on the Gospel, and the
dogmas of either Nestorius or Eutyches to be maintained by any one. Since, as
I have said, the rock (petra) of the catholic Faith, from which the blessed
Apostle Peter took his name at the LORD'S hands, rejects every trace of either
heresy; for it openly and clearly anathematizes Nestorius for separating the
nature of the Word and of the flesh in the blessed Virgin's conception, for
dividing the one Christ into two, and for wishing to distinguish between the
person of the Godhead and the person of the Manhood: because He is altogether
one and the same who in His eternal Deity was born of the Father without time,
and in His true flesh was born of His mother in time; and similarly it eschews
Eutyches for ignoring the reality of the human flesh in the LORD Jesus Christ,
and asserting the transformation of the Word Himself into flesh, so that His
birth, nurture, growth, suffering, death and burial, and resurrection on the
third day, all belonged to His Deity only, which put on not the reality but
the semblance of the form of a slave.
III. Antioch as the third
See in Christendom is to retain her privileges.
And so it behoves you to use
the utmost vigilance, lest these depraved heretics dare to assert themselves;
for you must resist them with all the authority of priests, and frequently
inform us by your reports what is being done for the progress of the churches.
For it is right that you should share this responsibility with the Apostolic
See, and realize that the privileges of the third See in Christendom(4) give
you every confidence in action, privileges which no intrigues shall in any way
impair: because my respect for the Nicene canons is such that I never have
allowed nor ever will the institutions of the holy Fathers to be violated by
any innovation. For different sometimes as are the deserts of individual
prelates, yet the rights of their Sees are permanent: and although rivalry may
perchance cause some disturbance about them, yet it cannot impair their
dignity. Wherefore, brother, if ever you consider any action ought to be taken
to uphold the privileges of the church of Antioch, be sure to explain it in a
letter of your own, that we may be able to reply to your application
completely and appropriately.
IV. Anatolius' attempts to
subvert the decisions of Nicaea are futile.
But at the present time let
it be enough to make a general proclamation on all points, that if in any
synod any one makes any attempt upon or seems to take occasion of wresting an
advantage against the provisions of the Nicene canons, he can inflict no
discredit upon their inviolable decrees: and it will be easier for the
compacts of any conspiracy to be broken through than for the regulations of
the aforesaid canons to be in any particular invalidated. For intrigue loses
no opportunity of stealing an advantage, and whenever the course of things
brings about a general assembly of priests, it is difficult for the greediness
of the unscrupulous not to try to gain some unfair point: just as in the Synod
of Ephesus which overthrew the blasphemous Nestorius with his dogma, bishop
Juvenal believed that he was capable of holding the presidency of the province
of Palestine, and ventured to rally the insubordinate by a lying letter(5). At
which Cyril of blessed memory, bishop of Alexandria, being properly dismayed,
pointed out in his letter to me(6) to what audacity the other's cupidity had
led him: and with anxious entreaty begged me hard that no assent should be
given his unlawful attempts. For be it known to you that we found the original
document of Cyril's letter which was sought for in our book- case, and of
which you sent us copies. On this, however, my judgment lays especial stress
that, although a majority of priests through the wiliness of some came to a
decision which is found opposed to those constitutions of the 318 fathers, it
must be considered void on principles of justice: since the peace of the whole
Church cannot otherwise be preserved, except due respect be invariably shown
to the canons.
V. If Leo's legates in any
way exceeded their instructions, they did so ineffectually.
Of course, if anything is
alleged to have been done by those brethren whom I sent in my stead to the
holy Synod, beyond that which was germane to the Faith, it shall he of no
weight at all: because they were sent by the Apostolic See only for the
purpose of extirpating heresy and upholding the catholic Faith. For whatever
is laid before bishops for inquiry beyond the particular subjects which come
before synodal councils may admit of a certain amount of free discussion, if
the holy Fathers have laid down nothing thereon at Nicaea. For anything that
is not in agreement with their rules and constitutions can never obtain the
assent of the Apostolic See. But how great must be the diligence with which
this rule is kept, you will gather from the copies of the letter which we sent
to the bishop of Constantinople, restraining his cupidity; and you shall take
order that it reach the knowledge of all our brethren and fellow- priests.
VI. No one but priests are
allowed to preach.
This too it behaves you,
beloved, to guard against, that no one except those who are the LORD'S priests
dare to claim the right of teaching or preaching, be he monk or layman(7), who
boasts himself of some knowledge. Because although it is desirable that all
the Church's sons should understand the things which are right and sound, yet
it is permitted to none outside the priestly rank to assume the office of
preacher, since in the Church of GOD all things ought to be orderly, that in
Christ's one body the more excellent members should fulfil their own duties,
and the lower not resist the higher. Dated the 11th of June, in the consulship
of the illustrious Opilio (453).
LETTER CXX: TO THEODORET,
BISHOP OF CYRUS, ON PERSEVERANCE IN THE FAITH.
Leo, the bishop, to his
beloved brother Theodoret, the bishop.
I. He congratulates
Theodoret on their joint victory, and expresses his approval of an hottest
inquiry which leads to good results.
On the return of our
brothers and fellow-priests, whom the See of the blessed Peter sent to the
holy council, we ascertained, beloved, the victory you and we together had won
by assistance from on high over the blasphemy of Nestorius, as well as over
the madness of Eutyches. Wherefore we make our boast in the LORD, singing with
the prophet: "our help is in the name of the LORD, who hath made heaven
and earth(8):" who has suffered us to sustain no harm in the person of
our brethren, but has corroborated by the irrevocable assent of the whole
brotherhood what He had already laid down through our ministry: to show that,
what had been first formulated by the foremost See of Christendom, and then
received by the judgment of the whole Christian world, had truly proceeded
from Himself: that in this, too, the members may be at one with the Head. And
herein our cause for rejoicing grows greater when we see that the more
fiercely the foe assailed Christ's servants, the more did he afflict himself.
For lest the assent of other Sees to that which the LORD of all has appointed
to take precedence of the rest might seem mere complaisance, or lest any other
evil suspicion might creep in, some were found to dispute our decisions before
they were finally accepted(9). And while some, instigated by the author of the
disagreement, rush forward into a warfare of contradictions, a greater good
results through his fall under the guiding hand of the Author of all goodness.
For the gifts of GOD's grace are sweeter to us when they are gained with
mighty efforts: and uninterrupted peace is wont to seem a lesser good than one
that is restored by labours. Moreover, the Truth itself shines more brightly,
and is more bravely maintained when what the Faith had already taught is
afterwards confirmed by further inquiry. And still further, the good name of
the priestly office gains much in lustre where the authority of the highest is
preserved without it being thought that the liberty of the lower ranks has
been at all infringed. And the result of a discussion contributes to the
greater glory of GOD when the debaters exert themselves with confidence in
overcoming the gainsayers: that what of itself is shown wrong may not seem to
be passed over in prejudicial silence.
II. Christ's victory has won
back many to the Faith.
Exult therefore, beloved
brother, yes, exult triumphantly in the only- begotten Son of GOD. Through us
He has conquered for Himself the reality of Whose flesh was denied. Through us
and for us He has conquered, in whose cause we have conquered. This happy day
ranks next to the LORD'S Advent for the world. The robber is laid low, and
there is restored to our age the mystery of the Divine Incarnation which the
enemy of mankind was obscuring with his chicaneries, because the facts would
not let him actually destroy it. Nay, the immortal mystery had perished from
the hearts of unbelievers, because so great salvation is of no avail to
unbelievers, as the Very Truth said to His disciples: "he that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be
condemned(1)." The rays of the Sun of Righteousness which were obscured
throughout the East by the clouds of Nestorius and Eutyches, have shone out
brightly from the West, where it has reached its zenith in the Apostles and
teachers of the Church. And yet not even in the East is it to be believed that
it was ever eclipsed where noble confessors(2) have been found among your
ranks: so that, when the old enemy was trying afresh, through the impenitent
heart of a modern Pharaoh(3), to blot out the seed of faithful Abraham and the
sons of promise, he grew weary, through GOD's mercy, and could harm no one
save himself. And in regard to him the Almighty has worked this wonder also,
in that He has not overwhelmed with the founder of the tyranny those who were
associated with him in the slaughter of the people of Israel, but has gathered
them into His own people; and as the Source of all mercy knew to be worthy of
Himself and possible for Himself alone, He has made them conquerors with us
who were conquered by us. For whilst the spirit of falsehood is the only true
enemy of the human race, it is undoubted that all whom the Truth has won over
to His side share in His triumph over that enemy. Assuredly it now is clear
how divinely authorized are these words of our Redeemer, which are so
applicable to the enemies of the Faith that one may not doubt they were said
of them: "You," He says, "are of your father the devil, and the
lusts of your father it is your will to fulfil. He was a murderer from the
beginning and stood not in the truth, because the truth is not in him. When he
speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar and the father
thereof(4)."
III. Dioscorus, who in his
madness has attacked even the bishop of Rome, has shown himself the instrument
of Satan.
It is not to be wondered,
then, that they who have accepted a delusion as to our nature in the true GOD
agree with their father on these points also, maintaining that what was seen,
heard, and in fact, by the witness of the gospel, touched and handled in the
only Son of GOD, belonged not to that to which it was proved to belong(5), but
to an essence co-eternal and consubstantial with the Father: as if the nature
of the Godhead could have been pierced on the Cross, as if the Unchangeable
could grow from infancy to manhood, or the eternal Wisdom could progress in
wisdom, or GOD, who is a Spirit, could thereafter be filled with the Spirit.
In this, too, their sheer madness betrayed its origin, because, as far as it
could, it attempted to injure everybody. For he, who afflicted you with his
persecutions, led others wrong by driving them to consent to his wickedness.
Yea, even us too, although he had wounded us in each one of the brethren (for
they are our members), even us he did not exempt from special vexation in
attempting to inflict an injury upon his Head with strange and unheard of and
incredible effrontery(6). But would that he had recovered his senses even
after all these enormities, and had not saddened us by his death and eternal
damnation. There was no measure of wickedness that he did not reach: it was
not enough for him that, sparing neither living nor dead, and forswearing
truth and allying himself with falsehood, he imbrued his hands, that had been
already long polluted, in the blood of a guiltless, catholic priest(7). And
since it is written: "he that hateth his brother is a murderer(8):"
he has actually carried out what he was said already to have done in hate, as
if he had never heard of this nor of that which the LORD says, "learn of
Me; for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls:
for My yoke is easy and My burden is light(9)." A worthy preacher of the
devil's errors has been found in this Egyptian plunderer, who, like the
cruellest tyrant the Church has had, forced his villainous blasphemies on the
reverend brethren through the violence of riotous mobs and the blood-stained
hands of soldiers. And when our Redeemer's voice assures us that the author of
murder and of lying is one and the same, He has carried out both equally: as
if these things were written not to be avoided but to be perpetrated: and thus
does he apply to the completion of his destruction the salutary warnings of
the Son of GOD, and turns a deaf ear to what the same LORD has said, "I
speak that which I have seen with My Father; and ye do that which ye have seen
with your father(1)."
IV. Those who undertake to
speak authoritatively an doctrine, must preserve the balance between the
extremes.
Accordingly while he strove
to cut short Flavian of blessed memory's life in the present world, he has
deprived himself of the light of true life. While he tried to drive you out of
your churches, he has cut off himself from fellowship with Christians. While
he drags and drives many into agreement with error, he has stabbed his own
soul with many a wound, a solitary convicted offender beyond all, and through
all and for all, for he was the cause of all men's being accused. But,
although, brother, you who are nurtured on solid food, have little need of
such reminders yet that we may fulfil what belongs to our position according
to that utterance of the Apostle who says, "Besides these things that are
without, that which presseth on me daily, anxiety for all the churches. Who is
weakened and I am not weak? Who is made to stumble and I burn not(2)?" we
believe this admonition ought to be given especially on the present occasion,
that whenever by the ministration of the Divine grace we either overwhelm or
cleanse those who are without, in the pool of doctrine, we go not away in
aught from those rules of Faith which the Godhead of the Holy Ghost brought
forward at the Council of Choicedon, and weigh our words with every caution so
as to avoid the two extremes of new false doctrine(3): not any longer (GOD
forbid it) as if debating what is doubtful, but with full authority laying
clown conclusions already arrived at; for in the letter which we issued from
the Apostolic See, and which has been ratified by the assent of the entire
holy Synod, we know that so many divinely authorised witnesses are brought
together, that no one can entertain any further doubt, except one who prefers
to enwrap himself in the clouds of error, and the proceedings of the Synod
whether those in which we read the formulating of the definition of Faith, or
those in which the aforesaid letter of the Apostolic See was zealously
supported by you, brother, and especially the address of the whole Council to
our most religious Princes, are corroborated by the testimonies of so many
fathers in the past that they must persuade any one, however unwise and
stubborn his heart, so long as he be not already joined with the devil in
damnation for his wickedness.
V. Theodoret's orthodoxy has
been happily and thoroughly vindicated.
Wherefore this, too, it is
our duty to provide against the Church's enemies, that, as far as in us lies,
we leave them no occasion for slandering us, nor yet, in acting against the
Nestorians or Eutychians, ever seem to have retreated before the other side,
but that we shun and condemn both the enemies of Christ in equal measure, so
that whenever the interests of the hearers in any way require it, we may with
all promptitude and clearness strike down them and their doctrines with the
anathema that they deserve, lest if we seem to do this doubtfully or tardily,
we be thought to act against our will(4). And although the facts themselves
are sufficient to remind your wisdom of this, yet now actual experience has
brought the lesson home. But blessed be our GOD, whose invincible Truth has
shown you free from all taint of heresy in the judgment of the Apostolic
See(5). To whom you will repay due thanks for all these labours, if you keep
yourself such a defender of the universal Church as we have proved and do
still prove you. For that GOD has dispelled all calumnious fallacies, we
attribute to the blessed Peter's wondrous care of us all, for after
sanctioning the judgment of his See in defining the Faith, he allowed no
sinister imputation to rest on any of you, who have laboured with us for the
catholic Faith: because the Holy Spirit adjudged that no one could fail to
come out conqueror of those whose Faith had now conquered.
VI. He asks Theodoret for
his continued cooperation, and refers him to a letter which he has written to
the bishop of Antioch.
It remains that we exhort
you to continue your co-operation with the Apostolic See, because we have
learnt that some remnants of the Eutychian and Nestorian error still linger
amongst you. For the victory which Christ our LORD has vouchsafed to His
Church, although it increases our confidence, does not yet entirely destroy
our anxiety, nor is it granted us to sleep but to work on more calmly. Hence
it is we wish to be assisted in this too by your watchful care, that you
hasten to inform the Apostolic See by your periodic reports what progress the
LORD's teaching makes in those regions; to the end that we may assist the
priests of that district in whatever way experience suggests.
On those matters which were
mooted in the often-quoted council, in unlawful opposition to the venerable
canons of Nicaea, we have written to our brother and fellow-bishop. the
occupant of the See of Antioch(6), adding that too which you had given us
verbal information about by your delegates with reference to the
unscrupulousness of certain monks, and laying down strict injunctions that no
one, be he monk(7) or layman, that boasts himself of some knowledge, should
presume to preach except the LORD'S priests. That letter, however, we wish to
reach all men's knowledge for the benefit of the universal Church through our
aforesaid brother and fellow-bishop Maximus; and for that reason we have not
thought fit to add a copy of it to this; because we have no doubt of the due
carrying out of our injunctions to our aforesaid brother and fellow-bishop.
(In another hand.) GOD keep thee safe, beloved brother. Dated 11 June in the
consulship of the illustrious Opilio (453).
LETTERS CXXI. AND CXXII: THE
FORMER TO MARCIAN AUGUSTUS, AND THE OTHER TO JULIAN THE BISHOP.
Asking him for further
inquiries and information about the proper date for Easter in 455; cf. Letter
LXXXVIII. chap. 4, above.
LETTER CXXIII: TO EUDOCIA
AUGUSTA(8), ABOUT THE MONKS OF PALESTINE(9).
Leo, the bishop, to Eudocia
Augusta.
I. A request that she should
use her influence with the monks of Palestine in reducing them to order.
I do not doubt that your
piety is aware how great is my devotion to the catholic Faith, and with what
care I am bound, GOD helping me, to guard against the Gospel of truth being
withstood at any time by ignorant or disloyal men. And, therefore, after
expressing to you my dutiful greetings which your clemency is ever bound to
receive at my hands, I entreat the LORD to gladden me with the news of your
safety, and to bring aid evermore and more by your means to the maintenance of
that article of the Faith over which the minds of certain monks within the
province of Palestine have been much disturbed; so that to the best of your
pious zeal all confidence in such heretical perversity may be destroyed. For
what but sheer destruction was to be feared by men who were not moved either
by the principles of GOD's mysteries(1), or by the authority of the
Scriptures, or by the evidence of the sacred places themselves(2). May it
advantage then the Churches, as by GOD'S favour it does advantage them, and
may it advantage the human race itself which the Word of GOD adopted at the
Incarnation, that you have conceived the wish to take up your abode in that
country(3) where the proofs of His wondrous acts and the signs of His
sufferings speak to you of our Loan Jesus Christ as not only true GOD but also
true Man.
II. They are to be told that
the catholic Faith rejects both the Eutychian and the Nestorian extremes. He
wishes to be informed how far she succeeds.
If then the aforesaid revere
and love the name of "catholic," and wish to be numbered among the
members of the LORD'S body, let them reject the crooked errors which in their
rashness they have committed, and let them show penitence(4) for their wicked
blasphemies and deeds of bloodshed(5). For the salvation of their souls let
them yield to the synodal decrees which have been confirmed in the city of
Choicedon. And because nothing but true faith and quiet humility attains to
the understanding of the mystery of man's salvation, let them believe what
they read in the Gospel, what they confess in the Creed, and not mix
themselves up with unsound doctrines. For as the catholic Faith condemns
Nestorius, who dared to maintain two persons in our one LORD Jesus Christ, so
does it also condemn Eutyches and Dioscorus(6) who deny that the true human
flesh was assumed in the Virgin Mother's womb by the only-begotten Word of
GOD.
If your exhortations have
any success in convincing these persons, which will win for you eternal glory,
I beseech your clemency to inform me of it by letter; that I may have the joy
of knowing that you have reaped the fruit of your good work, and that they
through the LORD'S mercy have not perished. Dated the 15th of June, in the
consulship of the illustrious Opilio (453).
LETTER CXXIV: TO THE MONKS
OF PALESTINE.
Leo, the bishop, to the
whole body of monks settled throughout Palestine.
I. They have possibly been
misled by a wrong translation of his letter on the Incarnation to Flavian.
The anxious care, which I
owe to the whole Church and to all its sons, has ascertained from many sources
that some offence has been given to your minds, beloved, through my
interpreters(7), who being either ignorant, as it appears, or malicious, have
made you take some of my statements in a different sense to what I meant, not
being capable of turning the Latin into Greek with proper accuracy, although
in the explanation of subtle and difficult matters, one who undertakes to
discuss them can scarcely satisfy himself even in his own tongue. And yet this
has so far been of advantage to me, that by your disapproving of what the
catholic Faith rejects, we know you are greater friends to the true than to
the false: and that you quite properly refuse to believe what I myself also
abhor, in accordance with ancient doctrine(8). For although my letter
addressed to bishop Flavian, of holy memory, is of itself sufficiently
explicit, and stands in no need either of correction or explanation, yet other
of my writings harmonize with that letter, and in them my position will be
found similarly set forth. For necessity was laid upon me to argue against the
heretics who have thrown many of Christ's peoples into confusion, both before
our most merciful princes and the holy synodal Council, and the church of
Constantinople, and thus I have laid down what we ought to think and feel on
the Incarnation of the Word according to the teaching of the Gospel and
Apostles, and in nothing have I departed from the creed of the holy Fathers:
because the Faith is one, true, unique, catholic, and to it nothing can be
added, nothing taken away: though Nestorius first, and now Eutyches, have
endeavoured to assail it from an opposite standpoint, but with similar
disloyalty, and have tried to impose on the Church of GOD two contradictory
heresies, which has led to their both being deservedly condemned by the
disciples of the Truth; because the false view which they both held in
different ways was exceedingly mad and sacrilegious.
II. Eutyches, who confounds
the persons, is as much to be rejected as Nestorius, who separates them(9).
Nestorius, therefore, must
be anathematized for believing the Blessed Virgin Mary to be mother of His
manhood only, whereby he made the person of His flesh one thing, and that of
His Godhead another, and did not recognize the one Christ in the Word of GOD
and in the flesh, but spoke of the Son of GOD as separate and distinct from
the son of man: although, without losing that unchangeable essence which
belongs to Him together with the Father and the Holy Spirit from all eternity
and without respect of time, the "Word became flesh" within the
Virgin's womb in such wise that by that one conception and one parturition she
was at the same time, in virtue of the union of the two substances, both
handmaid and mother of the LORD. This Elizabeth also knew, as Luke the
evangelist declares, when she said: "Whence is this to me that the mother
of my LORD should come to me(1)?" But Eutyches also must be stricken with
the same anathema, who, becoming entangled in the treacherous errors of the
old heretics, has chosen the third dogma of Apollinaris(2): so that he denies
the reality of his human flesh and Soul, and maintains the whole of our LORD
Jesus Christ to be of one nature, as if the Godhead of the Word had turned
itself into flesh and soul: and as if to be conceived and born, to be nursed
and grow, to be crucified and die, to be buried and rise again, and to ascend
into heaven and to sit on the Father's right hand, from whence He shall come
to judge the living and the dead--as if all those things belonged to that
essence only which admits of none of them without the reality of the flesh:
seeing that the nature of the Only-begotten is the nature of the Father, the
nature of the Holy Spirit, and that the undivided unity and consubstantial
equality of the eternal Trinity is at once impassible and unchangeable. But
if(3) this heretic withdraws from the perverse views of Apollinaris, lest he
be proved to hold that the Godhead is passible(4) and mortal: and yet dares to
pronounce the nature of the Incarnate Word that is of the Word made Flesh one,
he undoubtedly crosses over into the mad view of Manichaeus(5) and Marcion(6),
and believes that the man Jesus Christ, the mediator between GOD and men, did
all things in an unreal way, and had not a human body, but that a phantom-like
apparition presented itself to the beholders' eyes.
III. The acknowledgment of
our nature in Christ is necessary to orthodoxy.
As these iniquitous lies
were once rejected by the catholic Faith, and such men's blasphemies condemned
by the unanimous votes of the blessed Fathers throughout the world, whoever
these are that are so blinded and strange to the light of truth as to deny the
presence of human, that is our, nature in the Word of GOD from the time of the
Incarnation, they must show on what ground they claim the name of Christian,
and in what way they harmonize with the true Gospel, if the child-bearing of
the blessed Virgin produced either the flesh without the Godhead or the
Godhead without the flesh. For as it cannot be denied that "the Word
became flesh and dwelt in us(7)," so it cannot be denied that "GOD
was in CHRIST, reconciling the world to Himself(8)." But what
reconciliation can there be, whereby GOD might be propitiated for the human
race, unless the mediator between GOD and man took up the cause of all? And in
what way could He properly fulfil His mediation, unless He who in the form of
GOD was equal to the Father, were a sharer of our nature also in the form of a
slave: so that the one new Man might effect a renewal of the old: and the bond
of death fastened on us by one man's wrong-doing(9) might be loosened by the
death of the one Man who alone owed nothing to death. For the pouring out of
the blood of the righteous on behalf of the unrighteous was so powerful in its
effect(1), so rich a ransom that, if the whole body of us prisoners only
believed in their Redeemer, not one would be held in the tyrant's bonds: since
as the Apostle says, "where sin abounded, grace also did much more
abound(2)." And since we, who were born under the imputation(3) of sin,
have received the power of a new birth unto righteousness, the gift of liberty
has become stronger than the debt of slavery.
IV. They only benefit by the
blood of Christ who truly share in His death and resurrection.
What hope then do they, who
deny the reality of the human person in our Saviour's body, leave for
themselves in the efficacy of this mystery? Let them say by what sacrifice
they have been reconciled, by what blood- shedding brought back. Who is He
"who gave Himself for us an offering and a victim to GOD for a sweet
smell(4):" or what sacrifice was ever more hallowed than that which the
true High priest placed upon the altar of the cross by the immolation of His
own flesh? For although in the sight of the LORD the death of many of His
saints has been precious(5), yet no innocent's death was the propitiation of
the world. The righteous have received, not given, crowns: and from the
endurance of the faithful have arisen examples of patience, not the gift of
justification. For their deaths affected themselves alone, and no one has paid
off another's debt by his own death(6): one alone among the sons of men, our
Load Jesus Christ, stands out as One in whom all are crucified, all dead, all
buried, all raised again. Of them He Himself said "when I am lifted from
the earth, I will draw all (things) unto Me(7)." True faith also, that
justifies the transgressors and makes them just, is drawn to Him who shared
their human natures and wins salvation in Him, in whom alone man finds himself
not guilty; and thus is free to glory in the power of Him who in the
humiliation of our flesh engaged in conflict with the haughty foe, and shared
His victory with those in whose body He had triumphed.
V. The actions of Christ's
two natures must be kept distinct.
Although therefore in our
one LORD Jesus Christ, the true Son of GOD and man, the person of the Word and
of the flesh is one, and both beings have their actions in common(8): yet we
must understand the character of the acts themselves, and by the contemplation
of sincere faith distinguish those to which the humility of His weakness is
brought from those to which His sublime power is inclined: what it is that the
flesh without the Word or the Word without the flesh does not do. For
instance, without the power of the Word the Virgin would not have conceived
nor brought forth: and without the reality of the flesh His infancy would not
have laid wrapt in swaddling clothes. Without the power of the Word the Magi
would not have adored the Child that a new star had pointed out to them: and
without the reality of the flesh that Child would not have been ordered to be
carried away into Egypt and withdrawn from Herod's persecution. Without the
power of the Word the Father's voice uttered from the sky would not have said,
"This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased(9):" and without
the reality of the flesh John would not have been able to point to Him and
say: "Behold the Lamb of GOD, behold Him that beareth away the sins of
the world(1)." Without the power of the Word there would have been no
restoring of the sick to health, no raising of the dead to life: and without
the reality of the flesh He would not have hungered and needed food, nor grown
weary and needed rest. Lastly, without the power of the Word, the LORD would
not have professed Himself equal to the Father, and without the reality of the
flesh He would not also have said that the Father was greater than He: for the
catholic Faith upholds and defends both positions, believing the only Son of
GOD to be both Man and the Word according to the distinctive properties of His
divine and human substance.
VI. There is no confusion of
the two natures in Christ(2).
Although therefore from that
beginning whereby in the Virgin's womb "the Word became flesh," no
sort of division ever arose between the Divine and the human substance, and
through all the growth and changes of His body, the actions were of one Person
the whole time, yet we do not by any mixing of them up confound those very
acts which were done inseparably: and from the character of the acts we
perceive what belonged to either form. For neither do His Divine acts
affect(3) His human, nor His human acts His Divine, since both concur in this
way and to this very end that in their operation His twofold qualities be not
absorbed the one by the other, nor His individuality doubled. Therefore let
those Christian phantom-mongers(4) tell us, what nature of the Saviour's it
was that was fastened to the wood of the Cross, that lay in the tomb, and that
on the third day rose in the flesh when the stone was rolled away from the
grave: or what kind of body Jesus presented to His disciples' eyes entering
when the doors were shut upon them: seeing that to drive away the beholders'
disbelief, He required them to inspect with their eyes and to handle with
their hands the still open prints of the nails and the flesh wound of His
pierced side. But if in spite of the truth being so clear, their persistence
in heresy will not abandon their position in the darkness, let them show
whence they promise themselves the hope of eternal life, which no one can
attain to, save through the mediator between GOD and man, the man Jesus
Christ. For "there is not another name given to men under heaven, in
which they must be saved(5)." Neither is there any ransoming of men from
captivity, save in His blood, "who gave Himself a ransom for
all(6):" who, as the blessed apostle proclaims, "when He was in the
form of GOD, thought it not robbery that He was equal with GOD; but emptied
Himself, receiving the form of a slaves Icing made in the likeness of men, and
being found in fashion as a man He humbled Himself, being made obedient even
unto death, the death of the cross. For which reason GOD also exalted Him, and
gave Him a name which is above every name: that in the name of Jesus every
knee may bow of things in heaven, of things on the earth, and of things under
the earth, and that every tongue may confess that the Lord Jesus Christ is in
the glory of GOD the Father(7)."
VII. It was as being
"in form of a slave," not as Son of God that He was exalted.
Although therefore the LORD
Jesus Christ is one, and the true Godhead and true Manhood in Him forms
absolutely one and the same person, and the entirety of this union cannot be
separated by any division, yet the exaltation wherewith "GOD exalted
Him," and "gave Him a name which excels every name," we
understand to belong to that form which needed to be enriched by this increase
of glory(9). Of course "in the form of GOD" the Son was equal to the
Father, and between the Father and the Only-begotten there was no distinction
in point of essence, no diversity in point of majesty: nor through the
mystery(1) of the Incarnation had the Word been deprived of anything which
should be restored Him by the Father's gift. But "the form of a
slave" by which the impassible Godhead fulfilled a pledge of mighty
loving-kindness(2), is human weakness which was lifted up into the glory of
the divine power, the Godhead and the manhood being right from the Virgin's
conception so completely united that without the manhood the divine acts, and
without the Godhead the human acts were not performed. For which reason as the
LORD of majesty is said to have been crucified, so He who from eternity is
equal with GOD is said to have been exalted. Nor does it matter by which
substance Christ is spoken of, since the unity of His person inseparably
remaining He is at once both wholly Son of man according to the flesh and
wholly Son of GOD according to His Godhead, which is one with the Father.
Whatever therefore Christ received in time, He received in virtue of His
manhood, on which are conferred whatsoever it had not. For according to the
power of the Word, "all things that the Father hath" the Son also
hath indiscriminately, and what "in the form of a slave" He received
from the Father, He also Himself gave in the form of the Father. He is in
Himself at once both rich and poor; rich, because "in the beginning was
the Word, and the Word was with GOD, and GOD was the Word. This was in the
beginning with GOD. All things were made through Him, and without Him was made
nothing:" and poor because "the Word became flesh and dwelt in
us(3)." But what is that emptying of Himself, or that poverty except the
receiving of the form of a slave by which the majesty of the Word was veiled,
and the scheme for man's redemption carried out? For as the original chains of
our captivity could not be loosed, unless a man of our race and of our nature
appeared who was not under the prejudice of the old debt, and who with his
untainted blood might blot out the bond of death(4), as it had from the
beginning been divinely fore-ordained, so it came to pass in the fulness of
the appointed time that the promise which had been proclaimed in many ways
might reach its long expected fulfilment, and that thus, what had been
frequently announced by one testimony after another, might have all
doubtfulness removed.
VIII. A protest against
their faithlessness and inconsistency in this matter.
And so, as all these
heresies have been destroyed, which through the holy devotion of the presiding
Fathers have been cut off from the body of the catholic unity, and which
deserved to be exiles from Christ, because they have made the Incarnation of
the Word, which is the one salvation of those who believe aright, a stone of
offence and a stumbling-block to themselves, I am surprised that you, beloved,
have any difficulty in discerning the light of the Truth. And since it has
been made clear by numerous explanations that the Christian Faith was right in
condemning both Nestorius and Eutyches with Dioscorus, and that a man cannot
be called a Christian who gives his assent to the blasphemous opinion of
either the one or the other, I am grieved that you are, as I hear, doing
despite to the teaching of the Gospel and the Apostles by stirring up the
various bodies of citizens with seditions, by disturbing the churches, and by
inflicting not only insults, but even death, upon priests and bishops, so that
you lose sight of your resolves and profession s through your fury and
cruelty. Where is your rule of meekness and quietness? where is the
long-suffering of patience? where the tranquillity of peace? where the firm
foundation of love and courage of endurance? what evil persuasion has carried
you off, what persecution has separated you from the gospel of Christ? or what
strange craftiness of the Deceiver has shown itself that, forgetting the
prophets and apostles, forgetting the health-giving creed and confession which
you pronounced before many witnesses when you received the sacrament of
baptism you should give yourselves up to the the Devil's deceits? what effect
would "the Claws(6)" and other cruel tortures have had on you if the
empty comments of heretics have had so much weight in taking the purity of
your faith by storm? you think you are acting for the Faith and yet you go
against the Faith. You arm yourselves in the name of the Church and yet fight
against the Church. Is this what you have learnt from prophets, evangelists,
and apostles? to deny the true flesh of Christ, to subject the ,very essence
of the Word to suffering and death, to make our nature different from His who
repaired it, and to reckon all that the cross uplifted, that the spear
pierced, that the stone on the tomb received and gave back, to be only the
work: of Divine power, and not also of human humility? It is in reference to
this humility that the Apostle says, "For I do not blush for the
Gospel(7)," inasmuch as he knew what a slur was cast upon Christians by
their enemies. And, therefore, the LORD also made proclamation, saying:
"he that shall confess Me before men him will I also confess before My
Father(8)." For these will not be worthy of the Son and the Father's
acknowledgment in whom the flesh of Christ awakens no respect: and they will
prove themselves to have gained no virtue from the sign of the cross(9) who
blush to avow with their lips what they have consented to bear upon their
brows.
IX. An exhortation to accept
the catholic view of the Incarnation.
Give up, my sons, give up
these suggestions of the devil. GOD's Truth nothing can impair, but the Truth
does not save us except in our flesh. For, as the prophet says, "truth is
sprung out of the earth(1)," and the Virgin Mary conceived the Word in
such wise that she ministered flesh of her substance to be united to Him
without the addition of a second person, and without the disappearance of her
nature: seeing that He who was in the form of GOD took the form of a slave in
such wise that Christ is one and the same in both forms: GOD bending Himself
to the-weak things of man, and man rising up to the high things of the
Godhead, as the Apostle says, "whose are the fathers, and from whom,
according to the flesh is Christ, who is above all things GOD blessed for
ever. Amen(2)."
LETTER CXXV: TO JULIAN, THE
BISHOP, BY COUNT RODANUS.
(Asking him to write
quickly, and not keep him in suspense.)
LETTER CXXVI: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Congratulating him on the
restoration of peace in Palestine.)
LETTER CXXVII: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
(About (1) affairs in
Palestine, (2) a letter from Proterius, (3) the date of Easter, (4) his reply
to the Synod of Chalcedon, (5) the deposition of Aetius.)
LETTER CXXVII: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Professing readiness to be
reconciled to Anatolius if he will abide by the canons and not infringe the
prerogatives of others.)
LETTER CXXIX: TO PROTERIUS,
BISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA.
Leo to Proterius, bishop of
Alexandria.
I. He commends his
persistent loyalty to the Faith.
Your letter, beloved, which
our brother and fellow-bishop Nestorius duly brought us, has caused me great
joy. For it was seemly that such an epistle should be sent by the head of the
church of Alexandria to the Apostolic See, as showed that the Egyptians had
from the first learnt from the teaching of the most blessed Apostle Peter
through his blessed disciple Mark(3), that which it is agreed the Romans have
believed, that beside the LORD Jesus Christ "there is no other name given
to men under heaven, in which they must be saved(4)." But because
"all men have not faith(5)" and the crafty Tempter never delights so
much in wounding the hearts of men as when he can poison their unwary minds
with errors that are opposed to Gospel Truth, we must strive by the mighty
teaching of the Holy Ghost to prevent Christian knowledge from being perverted
by the devil's falsehoods. And against this danger it behoves the rulers of
the churches especially to guard and to avert from the minds of simple folk
lies which are coloured by a certain show of truth(6). "For narrow and
steep is the way which leads to life(7)." And they seek to entrap men not
so much by watching their actions as by nice distinctions of meaning,
corrupting the force of sentences by some very slight addition or alteration,
whereby sometimes a statement, which made for salvation, by a subtle change is
turned to destruction. But since the Apostle says, "there must be
heresies, that they which are approved may be made manifest among
you(8)," it tends to tile progress of the whole Church, that, whenever
wickedness reveals itself in setting forth wrong opinions, the things which
are harmful be not concealed, and that what will inevitably end in ruin may
not injure the innocence of others. Wherefore they must put down. their blind
wanderings and downfalls to themselves, who with rash obstinacy prefer to
glory: in their shame than to accept the offered remedy. You do right,
brother, to be displeased at their stubbornness, and we commend. you for
holding fast that teaching which has; come down to us from the blessed
Apostles and the holy Fathers.
II. Let him fortify the
faithful by the public reading aloud of quotations from the Fathers bearing on
the question and of the Tome.
For there is no new
preaching in the letter which I wrote in reply to Flavian of holy memory, when
be consulted me about the Incarnation of our LORD Jesus Christ; for in nothing
did I depart from that rule of Faith which was outspokenly maintained by your
ancestors and ours. And if Dioscorus had been willing to follow and imitate
them, he would have abided in the Body of Christ, having in the works of
Athanasius(9) of blessed memory the materials for instruction, and in the
discourses of Theophilus(9) and Cyril(9) of holy remembrance the means rather
of praise- worthily opposing the already condemned dogma than of choosing to
consort with Eutyches in his blasphemy. This therefore, beloved brother, I
advise in my anxiety for our common Faith that, because the enemies of
Christ's cross lie in watch for all our words and syllables, we give them not
the slightest occasion for falsely asserting that we agree with the Nestorian
doctrine. And you must so diligently exhort the laity and clergy and all the
brotherhood to advance in the Faith as to show that you teach nothing new but
instil into all men's breasts those things, which the Fathers of revered
memory have with harmony of statement taught, and with which in all things our
epistle agrees. And this must be shown not only by your words but also by the
actually reading aloud of previous statements, that GOD's people may know that
what the Fathers received from their predecessors and handed on to their
descendants, is still instilled into them in the present day. And to this end,
when the statements of the aforesaid priests have first been read, then lastly
let my writings also be recited, that the ears of the faithful may attest that
we preach nothing else than what we received from our forefathers. And because
their understandings are but little practised in discerning these things, let
them at least learn from the letters of the Fathers, how ancient this evil is,
which is now condemned by us in Nestorius as well as in Eutyches, who have
both been ashamed to preach the gospel of Christ according to the LORD'S own
teaching.
III. The ancient precedents
are to be maintained throughout.
Accordingly, both in the
rule of Faith and in the observance of discipline, let the standard of
antiquity be maintained throughout, and do thou, beloved, display the firmness
of a prudent ruler, that the church of Alexandria may get the benefit of my
earnest resistance to the unprincipled ambition of certain people in
maintaining its ancient privileges, and of my determination that all
metropolitans should retain their dignity undiminished, as you will ascertain
from the tenor of my letters, which I have addressed, whether to the holy
Synod or to the most Christian Emperor, or to the Bishop of Constantinople;
for you will perceive that I have made it my special care to allow no
deviation from the rule of Faith in the LORD-churches, nor any diminution of
their privileges through any individual's unscrupulousness. And as this is so,
hold fast, brother, to the custom of your predecessors, and keep due authority
over your comprovincial bishops, who by ancient constitution are subject to
the See of Alexandria; so that they resist not ecclesiastical usage, and
refuse not to meet together under your presidency, either at fixed times or
when any reasonable cause demands it: and that if anything has to be discussed
in a general meeting which will be to the benefit of the Church, when the
brethren have thus met together, they may unanimously come to some resolution
thereupon. For there is nothing which ought to recall them from this
obedience, seeing that both for faith and conduct we have such good knowledge
of you, brother, that we will not allow you to lose any of your predecessor's
authority, nor to be slighted with impunity. Dated March 10th, in the
consulship of the illustrious Aetius and Studius (454).
LETTER CXXX: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Praising the orthodoxy of
Proterius, advocating the public recital by him of passages bearing on the
present controversy from the writings of Athanasius and others, and also of
the Tome itself in a new Greek translation.)
LETTER CXXXI: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
(Telling him he has received
Proterius' letter, and asking for (1) a new Greek translation of the Tome; (2)
a report on the Easter difficulty of the next year (455)).
LETTER CXXXII: FROM
ANATOLIUS, BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE, TO LEO.
(In which he complains of
the intermission in their correspondence, maintains his allegiance to Rome,
announces the restitution of Aetius, deprecates the charge of personal
ambition, and remits the proceedings of Chalcedon for his approval.)
LETTER CXXXIII: FROM
PROTERIUS, BISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA, TO LEO.
(Upon the Easter difficulty
of 455.)
LETTER CXXXIV: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Suggesting that Eutyches
should be banished to a still remoter place, where he cannot do so much harm
by his false teaching.)
LETTER CXXXV: TO ANATOLIUS.
(In answer to CXXXII.)
LETTER CXXXVI: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Simultaneously with CXXXV.,
on the subject of his reconciliation with Anatolius.)
LETTER CXXXVII: TO THE SAME,
AND ON THE SAME DAY,
(On the subject of Easter,
acknowledging the trouble Proterius has taken, -- to which is joined a request
that the accounts of the aeconomi (1) should be audited by priests, not lay
persons.)
LETTER CXXXVIII: TO THE
BISHOPS OF GAUL AND SPAIN. (On Easter.)
LETTER CXXXIX: To JUVENAL,
BISHOP OF JERUSALEM.
Leo, bishop of the city of
Rome, to Juvenal, bishop of Jerusalem.
I. He rejoices over
Juvenal's return to orthodoxy, though chiding him far having gone astray.
When I received your letter,
beloved, which our sons Andrew the presbyter and Peter the deacon brought me,
I rejoiced indeed that you had been allowed to return to the seat of your
bishopric; but when all the reasons came to my remembrance, which brought you
into such excessive troubles, I grieved to think you had been yourself the
source of your adversities by failing in persistency of opposition to the
heretics: for men can but think you were not bold enough to refute those with
whom when in error you professed yourself satisfied. For the condemnation of
Flavian of blessed memory, and the acceptance of the most unholy Eutyches,
what was it but the denial of our LORD Jesus Christ according to the flesh?
which He Himself of His great mercy caused to be overthrown, when by the
authority of the holy Council of Chalcedon He brought to nought that accursed
judgment of the Synod of Ephesus without debarring any of the attainted from
being healed by correction. And therefore, because in the tithe of
long-suffering, you have chosen return to wisdom rather than persistency in
folly, I rejoice that you have so sought the heavenly remedies as at last to
have become a defender of the Faith which is assailed by heretics. For, though
no priest ought to be ignorant of that which he preaches (2), yet any
Christian living at Jerusalem is more inexcusable than all the ignorant,
seeing that he is taught to understand the power of the Gospel, not only by
the written word but by the witness of the places themselves, and what
elsewhere may not be disbelieved, cannot there remain unseen. Why is the
understanding in difficulty, where the eyes are its instructors? And why are
things read or heard doubtful, where all the mysteries of man's salvation
obtrude themselves upon the sight and touch? As if to each individual doubter
the LORD still used His human voice and said, why are "ye disturbed and
why do thoughts arise into your hearts? see My hands and My feet that it is I
myself. Handle Me and see because (or that) a spirit hath not bones and flesh,
as ye see Me have (3)."
II. Let him be strengthened
in his faith by the holy associations of life place where he lives.
Make use, therefore, beloved
brother, of these incontrovertible proofs of the catholic Faith and support
the preaching of the Evangelists by the testimony of the holy places in which
you live. In your country is Bethlehem, in which the Light of Salvation sprang
from the womb of the Virgin of the house of David (4), whom wrapped in
swaddling clothes the manger of the crowded inn received. In your country was
the Saviour's infancy announced by angels, adored by magi, sought by Herod
through the death of many infants. In your country was it that His boyhood
grew, His youth ripened, and His true man's nature reached to perfect manhood
by the increase of the body, not without food for hunger, not without sleep
for rest, not without tears of pity, not without fear and dread: for He is one
and the same Person, who in the form of GOD wrought great miracles of power,
and in the form of a slave underwent the cruelty of the passion. This the very
cross unceasingly says to you: this the stone of the sepulchre cries out,
under which the LORD in human condition lay, and from which by Divine power He
rose. And when you approach the mount of Olivet, to venerate the place of the
Ascension, does not the angel's voice ring in your ears, which says to those
who were dumb-founded at the LORD'S uplifting, "ye men of Galilee, why
stand ye gazing into heaven? this Jesus, Who was taken up from you into
heaven, shall so come, as ye saw Him going into heaven (5)."
III. The facts of the Gospel
attest the Incarnation.
The true birth of Christ,
therefore, is confirmed by the true cross; since He is Himself born in our
flesh, Who is crucified in our flesh, which, as no sin entered into it., could
not have been mortal, unless it had been that of our race. But in order that
He might restore life to all, He undertook the cause of all and rendered void
the force of the old bond, by paying it for all, because He alone of us all
did not owe it: that, as by one man's guilt all had become sinners, so by one
man's innocence all might become innocent, righteousness being bestowed upon
men by Him Who had undertaken man's nature. For in no way is He outside our
true bodily nature, of Whom the Evangelist in beginning his story says,
"the book of the generation of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of
Abraham (6),'' with which the blessed Apostle Paul's teaching agrees, when he
says "whose are the fathers and of whom is Christ according to the flesh,
Who is above all GOD blessed for ever (7)," and so to Timothy
"remember," he says, "that Jesus Christ has risen from the
dead, of the seed of David (8)."
IV. Those who are still in
error must be thoroughly instructed in the historic Faith.
But how many are the
authorities, both in the New and Old Testaments, by which this truth is
declared, as befits the antiquity of your See, you clearly understand, seeing
that the belief of the Fathers and my letter written to Flavian, of holy
memory, of which you yourself made mention, confirmed, as they have been, by
the universal synod, are sufficient for you. And therefore it behoves you,
beloved, to take heed that no one raise a murmur against the unspeakable
mystery of our Redemption and Hope. But if there are any who are still in the
darkness of ignorance or the discord of perversity, let them be instructed by
the authority of those whose doctrine in GOD'S Church was apostolical and
clear, that they may recognize that on the Incarnation of GOD's Word we
believe what they did, and may not by their obstinacy place themselves outside
the Body of Christ, in which we died and rose with Him: because neither
loyalty to the Faith nor the plan of the mystery admits that either the
Godhead should be possible in its own essence. or the reality be falsified in
His taking on Him of our flesh. Dated 4th September, in the consulship of the
illustrious Aetius and Studius (454).
LETTER CXL: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
(Now that Dioscorus is dead,
the peace of the Church will be more easily restored.)
LETTER CXLI: TO THE SAME.
(On several minor points of
detail)
LETTER CXLII: TO MARCIAN
AUGUSTUS.
(Inter alia thanking him for
the trouble he has taken about the Easter of 455.)
LETTER CXLIII: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Briefly asking him to
extirpate all remains of heresy.)
LETTER CXLIV: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS. (Speaking of run, ours which have reached him of disturbances
at Alexandria, and begging of him to be on the alert.)
LETTER CXLV: TO LEO AUGUSTUS
(9).
(Asking him to help the
church of Alexandria in appointing a good bishop in place of the murdered
Proterius (1).)
LETTER CXLVI: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Begging him to take
precautions lest the change of Emperor should be made the occasion for fresh
outbreaks of heresy.)
LETTER CXLVII: TO JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS, AND AETIUS, THE PRESBYTER.
(Charging him to uphold the
acts of Chalcedon, and to help in choosing a good successor to Proterius.)
LETTER CXLVIII: TO LEO
AUGUSTUS.
(Thanking him for assurances
made that he would guard the interests of the Church.)
LETTER CXLIX: TO BASIL,
BISHOP OF ANTIOCH.
(Asking him to give no
countenance to the demand for a new Synod.)
LETTER CL: TO EUXITHEUS,
BISHOP OF THESSALONICA (AND OTHERS).
(To the same effect.)
LETTER CLI: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(He is to keep the church of
Constantinople free from all heresy.)
LETTER CLII: To JULIAN,
BISHOP OF COS.
(Charging him to see that
the preceding letters reach their destination.)
LETTER CLIII: To AETIUS,
PRESBYTER ,OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Asking him to assist in the
distribution of these letters.)
LETTER CLIV: TO THE EGYPTIAN
BISHOPS. (See Letter CLVIII.)
LETTER CLV: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(In which he incites him to
watchfulness, and complains that certain of the clergy in Constantinople are
in collusion with the adversary.)
LETTER CLVI. TO LEO
AUGUSTUS.
Leo, the bishop, to Leo
Augustus.
1. There is no need to open
the question of doctrine again now.
Your clemency's letter,
which was full of vigorous faith and of the light of truth, I have
respectfully received, which I wish I could obey, even in the matter of my
personal attendance, which your Majesty thinks necessary; for then I should
gain the greater advantage from the sight of your splendour. But I believe you
will approve of my view when reason has shown it preferable. For since with
holy and spiritual zeal you consistently maintain the Church's peace, and
nothing is more conducive to the defence of the Faith than to adhere to those
things which have been incontrovertibly defined under tile unceasing guidance
of the Holy Spirit, we shall seem (2) to be doing our best to upset the
decrees, and at the bidding of a heretic's petition to overthrow the
authorities which the universal Church has adopted, and thus to remove all
limits from the conflicts of Churches, and giving full rein to rebellion, to
extend rather than appease contentions. And hence because after the
disgraceful scenes at the synod of Ephesus, whereat through the wickedness of
Dioscorus the catholic Faith was rejected, and Eutyches' heresy accepted,
nothing more useful could be devised for the preservation of the Christian
Faith than that the holy Synod of Chalcedon should rescind his wicked acts,
and that such care should be bestowed thereat on heavenly doctrine, that
nothing should linger in any one's mind in disagreement with the utterances of
either the Prophets or the Apostles, such moderation of course being observed
that only the persistent rebels should be east off from the unity of the
Church, and no one who was penitent should be denied pardon, what more in
accordance with men's expectations or with religion will your Majesty be able
to decree, than that no one henceforth be permitted to attack what has been
determined by decrees which are Divine rather than human, lest they be truly
worthy but to lose GOD's gift, who have dared to doubt concerning His Truth?
II. The proposal to
reconsider the question proceeds from antichrist or the devil himself.
Since, therefore, the
universal Church has become a rock (petra) through the building up of that
original Rock (3), and the first of the Apostles, the most blessed Peter,
heard the voice of the LORD saying, "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock (petra)
I will build My Church (4)," who is there who dare assail such
impregnable strength, unless he be either antichrist or the devil, who,
abiding unconverted in his wickedness, is anxious to sow lies by the vessels
of wrath which are suited to his treachery, whilst under the false name of
diligence he pretends to be in search of the Truth. And his unrestrained
madness and blind wickedness has deservedly brought contempt and disrepute on
himself, so that while he rages against the holy church of Alexandria with
diabolical purpose, men may learn the character of those who desire to
reconsider the Synod of Chalcedon. For it cannot possibly have been that an
opinion was there expressed contrary to the holy Synod of Nicaea, as the
heretics falsely maintain, who pretend that they hold the faith of the Nicene
Council, in which our holy and venerable fathers, being assembled against
Arius, affirmed not that the LORD's Flesh, but that the Son's Godhead was
homoousion with the Father, whereas in the Council of Chalcedon against the
blasphemy of Eutyches, it was defined that the LORD Jesus Christ took the
reality of our body from the substance of the Virgin-mother.
III. All the bishops of
Christendom agree with him in this.
Therefore in addressing our
most Christian Emperor, who is worthy to be classed among the champions of
Christ, I use the freedom of the catholic Faith and fearlessly exhort you to
throw in your lot with Apostles and Prophets; firmly to despise and reject
those who have deprived themselves of their Christian name, and not to let
blasphemous parricides, who, it is agreed, wish to annul the Faith, discuss
that Faith under treacherous pretexts. For since the LORD has enriched your
clemency with such insight into His mystery, you ought unhesitatingly to
consider that the kingly power has been conferred on you not for the
governance of the world alone but more especially for the guardianship of the
Church: that by quelling wicked attempts you may both defend that which has
been rightly decreed, and restore true peace where there has been disturbance,
that is to say by deposing usurpers (5) of the rights of others and
reinstating the ancient Faith in the See of Alexandria, that by your reforms
GOD's wrath may be appeased, and so He take not vengeance for their doings on
a people hitherto religious, but forgive them. Set before the eyes of your
heart, venerable Emperor, the fact that all the LORD'S priests which are in
all the world, are beseeching you on behalf of that Faith, wherein is
Redemption for the whole world. In which those maintainers of the Apostolic
Faith more particularly appeal to you who have presided over the Church of
Alexandria, entreating your Majesty not to allow heretics who have rightfully
been condemned for their perversity, to continue in their usurpation (6); for,
whether you look at the wickedness of their error or consider the deed which
their madness has perpetrated, not only are they unable to be admitted to the
dignity of the priesthood, but they even deserve to be cut off from the name
of Christian. For -- and I entreat your Majesty's forgiveness for saying so --
they to some extent dim your own splendour, most glorious Emperor, when such
treacherous parricides dare to ask for that which even the guiltless could not
lawfully obtain.
IV. The difference between
the two petitions which have been presented to the Emperor.
Petitions have been
presented to your Majesty (7), copies of which you subjoined to your letter.
But in that which comes in deprecation from the catholics, a list of
signatures is contained: and because their case had good reason in it, the
names of individuals, and even their dignified rank is confidently disclosed.
But in that, which heretical intrusion has not feared to offer to our orthodox
Emperor under the vague sanction of a motley body, all particular names are
withheld for this reason, lest not only the paucity of members but also their
worth might be discovered. For they think it expedient to conceal their
number, though their quality is indicated, and not improperly they are afraid
to proclaim their position, seeing that they deserve to be condemned. In the
one document therefore is contained the petition of catholics, in the other
the fictions of heretics are set forth. Here the overthrow of the LORD's
priests, of the whole Christian people, and of the monasteries is bemoaned:
there is displayed the continuance of gigantic wrongs, so that what ought
never to have been heard of (8) is allowed to be widely extended.
V. It is a great opportunity
for the Emperor to show his faith.
Is it not clear which side
you ought to support and which to oppose, if the Church of Alexandria, which
has always been the "house of prayer," is not now to be "a den
of robbers (8a)?" For surely it is manifest that through the cruellest
and maddest savagery all the light of the heavenly mysteries is extinguished.
The offering of the sacrifice is cut off, the hallowing of the chrism has
failed (9), and from the murderous hands of wicked men all the mysteries have
withdrawn themselves. Nor can there be any manner of doubt what decree ought
to be passed on these then, who after unutterable acts of sacrilege, after
shedding the blood of a most highly reputed priest, and scattering the ashes
of his burnt body to be the sport of the winds of heaven, dare to demand for
themselves the rights of a usurped dignity and to arraign before councils the
inviolable Faith of the Apostolic teaching. Great, therefore, is the
opportunity for you to add to your diadem from the LORD'S hand the crown of
faith also, and to triumph over the Church's foes: for, if it be matter of
praise to you to vanquish the armies of opposing nations, how great will be
the glory of freeing from its mad tyrant the church of Alexandria, the
affliction of which is an injury to all Christians?
VI. He promises more
detailed statements an the Faith subsequently, and begs him to correct certain
things in which Anatolius is remiss.
But in order that my
correspondence may have the effect on your Majesty of a mouth to mouth
colloquy, I have seen that whatever suggestions I would make about our common
Faith, must be conveyed in subsequent communications (1). And lest the pages
of this epistle reach too great a length, I have comprised in another letter
what is agreeable to the maintenance of the catholic Faith, in order that,
though the published statements of the Apostolic See were sufficient, yet
these additional statements might also break down the snares of the heretics.
For your Majesty's priestly and Apostolic mind ought to be still further
kindled to righteous vengeance by this pestilential evil, which mars the
purity of the church of Constantinople, in which are found certain clerics,
who agree with the interpretations of the heretics and within the very heart
of the Church assist them by their support (2). In removing whom if my brother
Anatolius is found remiss through too good-natured leniency, vouchsafe to show
your laith by administering this remedy also to the Church, that such men be
driven not only from the ranks of the clergy, but also from dwelling in the
city. I commend to you your Majesty's loyal subjects, bishop Julian and
presbyter Aetius, with a request that you will deign to listen quietly to
their suggestions in defence of the catholic Faith, because they are in good
truth men who may be found helpful to your faith in all things. Dated the 1st
of Dec. in the consulship of the illustrious Constantine and Rufus (457).
LETTER CLVII: TO ANATOLIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(Urging him to active
measures in certain specified matters.)
LETTER CLVIII (3): TO THE
CATHOLIC BISHOPS OF EGYPT SOJOURNING IN CONSTANTINOPLE.
Leo to the catholic Egyptian
bishops sojourning in Constantinople.
He encourages them in their
sufferings for the Faith, and in their entreaties for redress to the Emperor.
I have before now been so
saddened by tidings of the crimes committed in Alexandria, and my spirit has
been so wounded by the atrocity of the deed itself, that I know not what tears
to show and what lamentation to utter over it, and am fain to use the
prophet's language, "who will give waters to my head and a fountain of
tears to my eyes (4)?" Yet anticipating your complaint, beloved, I have
entreated our most clement and Christian Emperor for a remedy of these great
evils, and by our sons and assistants Gerontius and Olympius have at a
different time demanded that he should make haste to purge of a heresy already
condemned the church of that city, in which so many Catholic teachers have
flourished, and not allow murderous spirits whom no reverence for place or
time s could deter from shedding their ruler's blood, to gain anything from
his clemency, more particularly when they desire to reconsider the council of
Chalcedon to the overthrow of the Faith. Accordingly the same reason, beloved,
which drove you from your own Sees, ought to console you for your sufferings;
for it, is certain that afflicted souls, that suffer adversity for His name,
are in no wise deprived of the LORD'S protection. Bear it therefore bravely,
and mindful of that country which is yours, rejoice over your present sojourn
in a strange land. Abstain from grieving over your exile and indulge not in
sorrow for your present weariness, ye who know that the Apostle glories even
in his many perils on behalf of the LORD's Faith. You have One who knows your
conflicts and has prepared the rewards of recompense. Let no one shrink from
this labour, whose guerdon is to reign and 6 live for ever. Let the feet of
all who fight be fixed in the halls of Jerusalem; for in the hope of that
retribution they will have no cause to fear the camp nor the onsets of the
enemy. Victory is never hard nor triumph difficult over the remnants of an
abject foe who has been routed by the whole world alike, especially over those
whose ringleaders you see already prostrate. With unceasing prayers, therefore
(even as I also have not failed to do), entreat the favour of the most
Christian Emperor, who in GOD's mercy is ready to hear: that in accordance
with the letter I have sent (7), he may strengthen the cause of the common
Faith with that devotion of mind, which we are well assured he possesses, and
in his piety may remove all the harmful charges which the madness of heretics
has invented, and arrange for your return, beloved, and so may cause each
several province and all the churches with their priests to rejoice in the
unshaken peace of Christ. Dated the 1st of Dec. in the consulship of
Constantine and Rufus (457).
LETTER CLIX: TO NICAETAS,
BISHOP OF AQUILEIA.
(Leo, the bishop, to
Nicaetas, bishop of Aquileia, greeting.)
I. Prefatory
My son Adeodatus, deacon of
our See, on returning to us has delivered your request, beloved, to receive
from us the authority of the Apostolic See upon matters which seem indeed to
be hard to decide, but which we must make provision for with a view to the
necessities of the times that the wounds which have been inflicted by the
attacks of the enemy may be healed chiefly by the agency of religion.
II. About the women who
married again when their husbands were taken prisoners.
As then you say that through
the disasters of war and through the grievous inroads of the enemy families
have in certain cases been so broken up that the husbands have been carried
off into captivity and their wives remain forsaken, and these latter thinking
their own husbands either dead or never likely to be freed from their masters,
have contracted another marriage under stress of loneliness, and as, now that
the state of things has improved through the Lord's help, some of those who
were thought to have perished have returned, you seem, dear brother, naturally
to be in doubt what ought to be settled by us about women thus joined to other
husbands. But because we know it is written that "a woman is joined to a
man by God(8)," and again, we are aware of the precept that "what
God hath joined, man may not put asunder(9)," we are bound to hold that
the compact of the lawful marriage must be renewed, and after the removal of
the evils inflicted by the enemy, what each lawfully had must be restored to
him; and we must take every pains that each should recover what is his own.
III. Whether he is blameable
who has taken the prisoner's wife?
But notwithstanding let him
not be held blameable and treated as the invader of another's right, who took
the place of the husband, who was thought no longer alive. For thus many
things which belonged to those led into captivity happened to pass into the
possession of others, and yet it is altogether fair that on their return their
property should be restored. And if this is duly observed in the case of
slaves or of lands, or even of houses and personal goods, how much more ought
it to be done in the restoration of wives, that what has been disturbed by the
necessitities of war may be restored by the remedy of peace?
IV. The wife must be
restored to her first husband.
And, therefore, if husbands
who have returned after a long captivity still feel such affection for their
wives as to desire them to return to partnership(1), that, which necessity
brought about, must be passed over and judged blameless and the demands of
fidelity satisfied.
V. Women must be
excommunicated who refuse to return.
And if any women are so
possessed by love of their later husbands as to prefer to remain with them
than to return to their lawful partners, they are deservedly to be branded: so
that they be even deprived of the Church's communion; for in a pardonable
matter they have chosen to taint themselves with crime, showing that they have
sought their own pleasure in their incontinence, when a rightful restitution
could have obtained their forgiveness. Let them return then to their former
state and make voluntary reparation, nor let that which a condition of
necessity extorted from them be by any means turned into disgrace through evil
desires; because, as those women who refuse to return to their husbands are to
be held unholy, so they who return to an affection entered on with God's
sanction are deservedly to be praised.
VI. About captives, who were
compelled to eat of sacrificial food.
Concerning those Christians
who are asserted to have been polluted with sacrificial food, while among
those by whom they were taken prisoners, we have thought it right to make this
reply to your enquiry, dear brother, that they be purged by a satisfactory
penitence which is to be measured not so much by the duration of the process
as by the intensity of the feeling. And whether their compliance was wrung
from them by terror or hunger, there need be no hesitation at acquitting them,
since the food was taken from fear or want, not from superstitious reverence.
VII. About those who in fear
or by mistake were re-baptized
But as to those about whom
you thought. beloved, we ought likewise to be consulted who were either forced
by fear or led by mistake to repeat their baptism, and now understand that
they acted contrary to the ordinances of the catholic Faith, such moderation
must be observed towards them that they be received into full communion with
us, but not without the healing of penitence and the imposition of the
bishop's hands, the length of the penance (with due regard to moderation)
being left to your judgment, as you shall perceive the minds of the penitents
to be disposed: in which you must not forget to consider old age, illness, and
other risks. For if a man be in so dangerous a case that his life is despaired
of, while he is still under penance, he should receive the gracious aid of
communion by the priest's tender care.
VIII. About baptism by
heretics.
For they who have received
baptism from heretics, not having been previously baptized, are to be
confirmed by imposition of hands with only the invocation of the Holy Ghost,
because they have received the bare form of baptism without the power of
sanctification(2). And this regulation, as you know; we require to be kept in
all the churches, that the font once entered may not be defiled by repetition,
as the Lord says, "One Lord, one faith, one baptism." And that
washing may not be polluted by repetition, but, as we have said, only the
sanctification of the Holy Ghost invoked, that what no one can receive from
heretics may be obtained from catholic priests. This letter of ours, which we
have sent in reply to the inquiries of the brotherhood you shall bring to the
knowledge of all your brethren and fellow-bishops of the province, that our
authority, now that it is given, may avail for the general observance. Dated
21st March, in the consulship of Majorian Augustus (458).
LETTER CLX (See Letter
CLVIII.)
LETTER CLXI: To The
Presbyters, Deacons and Clergy of the Church of Constantinople.
(Exhorting them to remain
stedfast in the Faith as fixed at Chalcedon, and to have no dealings with
Atticus and Andrew unless they recant.)
LETTER CLXII: To Leo
Augustus.
By the hand of Philoxenus
agens in rebus(2a) . Leo the Bishop to Leo Augustus.
I. The decrees of Chalcedon
and Nicaea are identical and final.
With much joy my mind exults
in the Lord, and great is my cause for thankfulness, now that I perceive your
clemency's most excellent faith to be in all things enlarged by the gifts of
heavenly grace, and I experience by increased diligence the devotion of a
priestly mind in you. For in your Majesty's communications! it is beyond doubt
revealed what the Holy Spirit is working through you for the good of the whole
Church, and how greatly it is to be desired by the prayers of all the faithful
that your empire may be everywhere extended with glory, seeing that besides
your care for things temporal you so perseveringly exercise a religious
foresight in the service of what is divine and eternal: to wit that the
catholic Faith, which alone gives life to and alone in hallows mankind, may
abide in the one confession, and the dissensions which spring from the variety
of earthly opinions may be driven away, most glorious Emperor, from that solid
Rock, on which the city of God is built. And these gifts of God will at last
be granted us from Him, if we be not found ungrateful for what has been
vouchsafed, and as though what we have gained were naught, we seek not rather
the very opposite. For to seek what has been discovered, to reconsider what
has been completed, and to demolish what has been defined, what else is it but
to return no thanks for things gained and to indulge the unholy longings of
deadly lust on the food of the forbidden tree? And hence by deigning to show a
more careful regard for the peace of the universal Church, you manifestly
recognize what is the design of the heretics' mighty intrigues that a more
careful discussion should take place between the disciples of Eutyches and
Dioscorus and the emissary of the Apostolic See, as if nothing had already
been defined, and that what with the glad approval of the catholic priests of
the whole world was determined at the holy Synod of Chalcedon should be
rendered invalid to the detriment also of the most sacred Council of Nicaea.
For what in our own days at Chalcedon was determined concerning our Lord Jesus
Christ's Incarnation, was also so defined at Nicaea by that mystic number of
Fathers 3, lest the confession of catholics should believe that God's
Only-begotten Son was in aught unequal to the Father, or that when He was made
Son of man He had not the true nature of our flesh and soul.
II. The wicked designs of
heretics must be stedfastly resisted.
Therefore we must abhor and
persistently avoid what heretical deceit is striving to obtain, nor must what
has been well and fully defined be brought again under discussion, lest we
ourselves should seem at the will of condemned men to have doubts concerning
things which it is clear agree throughout with the authority of Prophets,
Evangelists, and Apostles. And hence, if there are any who disagree with these
heaven-inspired decisions, let them be left to their own opinions and depart
from the unity of the Church with that perverse sect which they have chosen.
For it can in no wise be that men who dare to speak against divine mysteries
are associated in any communion with us. Let them pride themselves on the
emptiness of their talk and boast of the cleverness of their arguments against
the Faith: we are pleased to obey the Apostle's precepts, where he says,
"See that no one deceive you with philosophy and vain seductions of
men(4)." For according to the same Apostle, "if I build up those
things which I destroyed, I prove myself a transgressors(5)," and subject
myself to those conditions of punishment which not only the authority of
Prince Marcian of blessed memory, but I myself also by my consent have
accepted. Because as you have justly and truthfully maintained perfection
admits of no increase nor fulness of addition. And hence, since I know you,
venerable Prince, imbued as you are with the purest light of truth, waver in
no part of the Faith, but with just and perfect judgment distinguish right
from wrong, and separate what is to be embraced from what is to be rejected, I
beseech you not to think that my humility is to be blamed 'for want of
confidence, since my cautiousness is not only in the interests of the
universal Church but also for the furtherance of your own glory, that under
your reign the unscrupulousness of heretics may not seem to be advanced and
the security of catholics disturbed.
IlI. He promises to send
envoys not to discuss with the Eutychians, but to explain the Faith to the
Emperor.
Although, therefore, I am
very confident of the piety of your heart in all things, and perceive that
through the Spirit of Gov dwelling in you, you are sufficiently instructed,
nor can any error delude your faith, yet I will endeavour to follow your
bidding so far as to send certain of my brothers to represent my person before
you, and to set forth what the Apostolic rule of Faith is, although, as I have
said, it is well known to you, in all things making it clear and certain that
they are not in any way to be reckoned among catholics, who do not accept the
definitions of the venerable Synod of Nicaea or the ordinances of the holy
Council of Chalcedon, inasmuch as it is evident the holy decrees of both
proceed from the Evangelical and Apostolical source, and whatever is not of
Christ's watering is like a snake-poisoned draught(6). Your Majesty should
understand beforehand, most venerable Emperor, that those whom I undertake to
send will come from the Apostolic See, not to fight with the enemies of the
Faith nor to strive against any, because of matters already settled as it has
pleased God both at Nicaea and at Chalcedon we dare not enter upon any
discussion, as if what so great an authority has fixed by the Holy Spirit were
doubtful or weak.
IV. The heretics must be
formed to give up their usurpations and left to the judgment of God.
But we do not refuse the
assistance of our ministry for the instruction of our little ones, who after
being fed with milk desire to be satisfied with more solid food: and as we do
not scorn the simple folk, so we will have no dealings with rebel heretics,
remembering the Lord's command, who says, "Give not that which is holy to
the dogs, nor cast your pearls before swine(7)." Surely it is altogether
unworthy and unjust to admit to freedom of discussion men whom the Holy Spirit
describes in the words of the prophet, "the sons of the stranger have
lied unto rues(8)." For even though they resist not the Gospel, yet they
have shown themselves to be of those of whom it is written "they profess
that they know God but by their deeds they deny Him(9)," while the blood
of just Abel(1) still cries against wicked Cain(1), who being rebuked by the
Lord did not set quietly about his repentance but burst forth into murder.
Whose punishment we wish to be reserved for the Lord's judgment in such a way
that, unprincipled plunderer and blood-thirsty murderer as he is, he may be
thrown back upon himself and relinquish what is ours. We pray you also not to
suffer the lamentable captivity of the holy church of Alexandria to be any
further prolonged, which by the help of your faith and Justice ought to be
restored to its liberty, that through all the cities of Egypt the dignity of
the Fathers and their priestly rights may be restored. Dated 21st of March in
the consulship of Leo and Majorian Augusti (458).
LETTER CLXIII: TO Anatolius,
Bishop of Constantinople.
By Patritius the deacon.
(Glorying over the harshness
of his former letter, to which Anatolius had objected, but persisting that he
is not satisfied with the explanation Atticus had furnished of his orthodoxy.)
LETTER CLXIV(2): TO LEO
AUGUSTUS.
Leo, the bishop, to Leo
Augustus.
I. He sends envoys but de
deprecates any fresh discussion of the Faith. Rejoicing that it has been
proved to me by many clear proofs with what earnestness you consult the
interests of the universal Church, I have not delayed to obey your Majesty's
commands on the first opportunity, by despatching Domitian and Geminian my
brothers and fellow-bishops, who in furtherance of my earnest prayers, shall
entreat you for the peaceful acceptance of the gospel-teaching and obtain the
liberty of the Faith in which through the instruction of the Holy Spirit you
yourself are so conspicuously eminent, now that the enemies of Christ are
driven far away, who even if they had wished to conceal their madness, could
not lie hid, because the holy simplicity of the Lord's flock is very different
from the pretences of beasts who hide themselves in sheeps' clothing, nor can
they creep in by hypocrisy now that their exceeding madness has revealed them.
Recognize, therefore, august and venerable Emperor, how that you are called by
Divine providence to the guardianship of the whole world, and understand what
aid you owe to your Mother, the Church, who makes especial boast of you.
Disputes that are ended must not be allowed to rise with renewed vigour
against the triumphs of the Almighty's right hand, especially when this can in
no wise be allowed to heretics, whose attempts have long ago been condemned
and the labours of the faithful have a just claim to this result, that all the
fulness of the Church shall remain secure in the completeness of her unity,
and that nothing whatever of what has been well laid down shall be
reconsidered, because, after constitutions have been legitimately framed under
Divine guidance, to wish still to wrangle is the sign not of a peace-making
but of a rebellious spirit, as says the Apostle, "for to strive with
words is profitable for nothing, but for the subverting of them that
hear'."
II. In matters of Faith
human rhetoric is out of place.
For if it be always free for
human fancies to assert themselves in dispute, there never will be wanting men
who will dare to oppose the Truth, and to put their trust in the glib
utterances of this world's wisdom, whereas the Christian Faith and wisdom
knows from the teaching of our Lord Jesus Christ Himself how strictly it ought
to shun this most harmful vanity. For when Christ was about to summon all
nations to the illumination of the Faith, He chose those who were to devote
themselves to the preaching of the Gospel not from among philosophers or
orators, but took humble fishermen as the instruments by which He would reveal
Himself, lest the heavenly teaching, which was of itself full of mighty power,
should. seem to need the aid of words. And hence the Apostle protests and
says, "For Christ sent me not to baptize but to preach the Gospel, not in
wisdom of words lest the cross of Christ should be made void; for the word of
the cross is to them indeed that perish foolishness, but to those which are
being saved it is the power of God. For it is written, I will destroy the
wisdom of the wise and the prudence of the prudent will I reject. Where is the
wise? where is the scribe? where is the inquirer of this age? has not God made
foolish the wisdom of this world(3)?" For rhetorical arguments and clever
debates of man's device make their chief boast in this, that in doubtful
matters which are obscured by the variety of opinions they can induce their
hearers to accept that view which each has chosen for his own genius and
eloquence to bring forward; and thus it happens that what is maintained with
the greatest eloquence is reckoned the truest. But Christ's Gospel needs not
this art; for in it the true teaching stands revealed by its own light: nor is
there any seeking for that which shall please the ear, when to know Who is the
Teacher is sufficient for true faith.
III. Eutyches' dogma is
condemned by the testimony of Scripture and cannot further be entertained.
But nothing severs those who
are deceived by their own inventions, from the light of the Gospel so much as
their not thinking that the Lord's Incarnation appertains in a true sense to
man's, that is, our, nature: as if it were unworthy of God's glory that the
majesty of the impossible Word should have taken the reality of human flesh,
whereas men's salvation could not otherwise have been restored had not He Who
is in the form of God deigned also to take the form of a slave. And hence
since the holy Synod of Chalcedon, which was attended by all the provinces of
the Roman world and obtained universal acceptance for its decisions, and is in
complete harmony therein with the most sacred council of Nicaea, has cut off
all the wicked followers of the Eutychian dogma from the body of the catholic
communion, how shall any of the lapsed regain the peace of the church, without
purging himself by a full course of penitence? For what licence can be granted
them for discussing, when they have deserved to be condemned by a just and
holy judgment, so that they might most truly fall under that sentence of the
blessed Apostle, wherewith at the very outset of the infant Church he
overthrew the enemies of Christ's cross, saying: "every spirit which
confesses Jesus Christ to have come in the flesh is of God, and every spirit
which dissolves Jesus is not of God, but this is antichrist 4." And this
pre-existent teaching of the Holy Ghost we must faithfully and stedfastly make
use of, lest, by admitting the discussions of such men the authority of the
divinely inspired decrees be diminished, when in all parts of your kingdom and
in all borders of the earth that Faith which was confirmed at Chalcedon is
being established on the surest basis of peace, nor is any one worthy of the
name of Christian who cuts himself off from communion with us. Of whom the
Apostle says, "a man that is heretical after a first and a second
admonition, avoid, knowing that such a one is perverse and condemned by his
own judgment(4a)."
IV. If the Divine mercy is
to be exercised, the heretics must cease entirely from the error of their
ways.
What therefore the unholy
parricide has perpetrated by seizing on the holy Church and cruelly murdering
its very ruler, cannot be expiated by man's forgiveness, unless He Who alone
can rightly punish such things, and alone can of His unspeakable mercy remit
them, be propitiated. But though we are not anxious for vengeance, we cannot
in any way be allied with the devil's servants. Yet if we learn they are
quitting the ranks of heresy, repenting, them of their error and turning from
the weapons of discord to the lamentations of sorrow, we also can intercede
for them, lest they perish for ever, thus following the example of the Lord's
loving-kindness, who, when nailed to the wood of the cross prayed for His
persecutors, "Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do s."
And that Christian love may do this profitably for its enemies, wicked
heretics must cease to harass God's ever religious and ever devout Church;
they must not dare to disturb the souls of the simple by their falsehoods, to
the end that, where in all former times the purest faith has flourished, the
teaching of the Gospel and of the Apostles may now also have free course;
because we also imitating, so far as we can, the Divine mercy desire no one to
be punished by justice, but all to be released by mercy.
V. Let him restore the
refugee clergy and laity and utterly reject those who persist in heresy.
I entreat your clemency,
listen to the suggestions of my brethren already mentioned, whom, as I some
time ago have said in a former letters(5a), I have sent not to wrangle with
the condemned, but merely to intercede with you for the stability of the
catholic Faith. And in accordance with your faith in and regard for the Divine
Majesty this especially you should grant, that completely setting aside the
contentions of heretics you should deign to bestow a merciful attention on
those who have fallen upon such evil days, and, after restoring the liberty of
the church of Alexandria to its pristine state, should set up there a bishop
who, upholding the decrees of the Synod of Chalcedon and agreeing with the
ordinances of the Gospel, shall be able to restore peace among that greatly
disturbed people. Those bishops and clergy also whom the unholy parricide has
driven out of their churches, should be recalled at your Majesty's command,
all others also, whom a like maliciousness has banished from their dwellings,
being restored to their former estate, to the end that we may have due cause
fully and perfectly to rejoice in the grace of GOD and your faith without any
further noise of strife. For it any one is so forgetful of the Christian hope
and his own salvation as to venture by any dispute to assail the Evangelical
and Apostolical decrease of the holy Synod of Chalcedon, thus overthrowing the
most sacred Council of Nicaea also, him with all heretics who have held
blasphemous and abominable views on the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ
we condemn by a like anathema and equal curse, so that, without refusing the
remedy of repentance to those who make full and legitimate atonement, the
sentence of the Synod, which is based on truth, may rest upon those who still
resist. Dated 17th of August, in the consulship of Leo and Majorian Augusti
(458). LETTER CLXV: To Leo Augustus.
[This letter, which is
sometimes called the Second Tome, contains the detailed statement of the
catholic doctrine of the Incarnation, which Leo had promised the Emperor in
Letter CLVI. It consists of(9) chapters, but, as chaps. iii. to viii. and
parts of ii. and ix. are almost identical in language with Letter CXXIV.
already given in full, I have not thought it necessary to reproduce the letter
here. At the end a long series of quotations from Hilary, Ambrose and other
Fathers bearing upon the doctrine are also added, but these also are dispensed
with in accordance with our general practice, as we are now presenting Leo and
no one else to the reader.]
LETTER CLXVI: To Neo, Bishop
of Ravenna.
Leo, the bishop, to Neo,
bishop of Ravenna, greeting.
I. Those, who being taken
captives in infancy cannot remember or bring witnesses of their baptism, must
not be denied this sacrament.
We have indeed frequently,
God's Spirit instructing us, steadied the brethren's hearts, when they were
tottering on the slippery places of doubtful questions, by formulating an
answer either out of the teaching of the Holy Scriptures or from the rules of
the Fathers: but lately in Synod a new and hitherto unheard-of subject of
debate ha@ arisen. For at the instance of certain brethren we have discovered
that some of the prisoners of war, on their free return to their own homes,
such to wit as went into captivity at an age when they could have no sure
knowledge of anything, crave the healing waters of baptism, but in the
ignorance of infancy cannot remember whether they have received the mystery
and rites of baptism, and that therefore in this uncertainty of defective
recollection their souls are brought into jeopardy, so long as under a show of
caution they are denied a grace, which is withheld, because it is thought to
have been bestowed. And so, since certain brethren in a not unjustifiable fear
have hesitated to perform the rites of the Lord's mystery, at a synodal
meeting, as we have said, we have received a formal request for advice on this
matter, and in carefully discussing it, we have desired to weigh each members
opinion, and to handle it in so cautious a manner as to arrive with certainty
at the truth by making use of the knowledge of many. Consequently the same
things, which have come into our mind by the Divine inspiration, have received
the assent and confirmation of a large number of the brethren. And so we are
bound before all things to take heed test, while we hold fast to a certain
show of caution, we incur a loss of souls who are to be regenerated. For who
is so given over to suspicions as to decide that to be true which without any
evidence he suspects by mere guesswork? And so wherever the man himself who is
anxious for the new birth does not recollect his baptism, and no one can Bear
witness about him being unaware of his consecration to God, there is no
possibility for sin to creep In, seeing that, so far as their knowledge goes,
neither the bestower or receiver of the consecration is guilty. We know indeed
that an unpardonable offence is committed, whenever in accordance with the
institutions of heretics which the holy Fathers have condemned, any one is
forced twice to enter the font, which is but once available for those who are
to be reborn, in opposition to the Apostle's teaching(5b), which speaks to us
of One Godhead in Trinity, one confession in Faith, one sacrament in Baptism.
But in this nothing similar is to be apprehended, since, what is not known to
have been done at all, cannot come under the charge of repetition. And so,
whenever such a case occurs, first sift it by careful investigation, and spend
a considerable time, unless his last end is near, in inquiring whether there
be absolutely no one who by his testimony can assist the other's ignorance.
And when it is established that the man who requires the sacrament of baptism
is prevented by a mere baseless suspicion, let him come boldly to obtain the
grace, of which he is conscious of no trace in himself. Nor need we fear thus
to open the door of salvation which has not been shown to have been entered
before.
II. Baptism by heretics must
not be invalidated by second baptism.
But if it is established
that a man has been baptized by heretics, on him the mystery of regeneration
must in no wise be repeated, but only that conferred which was wanting before,
so that he may obtain the power of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of the
Bishop's hands(6). This decision, beloved brother, we wish to be brought to
the knowledge of you all generally, to the end that God's mercy may not be
refused to those who desire to be saved through undue timidity. Dated the 24th
of Oct., in the consulship of Ms Majorian Augustus (458).
LETTER CLXVII(7).
To Rusticus, Bishop of
Gallia Narbonensis, with the Replied His Questions on Various Points.
Leo, the bishop, to Rusticus,
bishop of Gallia Narbonensis.
1. He exhorts him to act
with moderation towards two bishops who have offended him. Your letter,
brother. which Hermes your archdeacon(8) brought, I have gladly received; the
number of different matters it contains makes it indeed lengthy, but not so
tedious to me on a patient perusal that any point should be passed over, amid
the cares that press upon me from all sides. And hence having grasped the gist
of your allegation and reviewed what took place at the inquiry of the bishops
and leading men(9), we gather that Sabinian and Leo, presbyters, lacked
confidence in your(1) action, and that they have no longer any just cause for
complaint, seeing that of their own accord they withdrew from the discussion
that had been begun. What form or what measure of justice you ought to mete
out to them I leave to your own discretion advising you, however, with the
exhortation of love that to the healing of the sick you ought to apply
spiritual medicine, and that remembering the Scripture which says "be not
over just(2)," you should act with mildness towards these who in zeal for
chastity seem to have exceeded the limits of vengeance, lest the devil, who
deceived the adulterers, should triumph over the avengers of the adultery.
II. He expostulates with him
for wishing to give up his office, which would imply distrust of GOD's
promises.
But I am surprised, beloved,
that you are so disturbed by opposition in consequence of offences, from
whatever cause arising, as to say you would rather be relieved of the labours
of your bishopric, and live in quietness and ease than continue in the office
committed to you. But since the LORD says, "blessed is he who shall
persevere unto the end(3)," whence shall come this blessed perseverance,
except from the strength of patience? For as the Apostle proclaims, "All
who would live godly in Christ shall suffer persecution(4)." And it is
not only to be reckoned persecution, when sword or fire or other active means
are used against the Christian religion; for the direst persecution is often
inflicted by nonconformity of practice and persistent disobedience and the
barbs of ill-natured tongues: and since all the members of the Church are
always liable to these attacks, and no portion of the faithful are free from
temptation, so that a life neither of ease nor of labour is devoid of danger,
who shall guide the ship amidst the waves of the sea. if the helmsman quit his
post? Who shall guard the sheep from the treachery of wolves, if the shepherd
himself be not on the watch? Who, in fine, shall resist the thieves and
robbers. if love of quietude draw away the watchman that is set to keep the
outlook from the strictness of his watch? One must abide, therefore, in the
office committed to him and in the task undertaken. Justice must be stedfastly
upheld and mercy lovingly extended. Not men, but their sins must be hated(5).
The proud must be rebuked, the weak must be borne with; and those sins which
require severer chastisement must be dealt with in the spirit not of
vindictiveness but of desire to heal. And if a fiercer storm of tribulation
fall upon us, let us not be terror-stricken as if we had to overcome the
disaster in our own strength, since both our Counsel and our Strength is
Christ, and through Him we can do all things, without Him nothing, Who, to
confirm the preachers of the Gospel and the ministers of the mysteries, says,
"Lo, I am with you all the days even to the consummation of the
age(6)." And again He says, "these things I have spoken unto you
that in me ye may have peace. In this world ye shall have tribulation, but be
of good cheer, because I have overcome the worlds." The promises, which
are as plain as they can be, we ought not to let any causes of offence to
weaken, lest we should seem ungrateful to GOD for making us His chosen
vessels, since His assistance is powerful as His promises are true.
III. Many of the questions
raised could be more easily settled in a personal interview than on paper.
On those points of inquiry,
beloved, which your archdeacon has brought me separately written out, it would
be easier to arrive at conclusions on each point face to face, if you could
grant us the advantage of your presence. For since some questions seem to
exceed the limits of ordinary diligence, I perceive that they are better
suited to conversation than to writing: for as there are certain things which
can in no wise be controverted, so there are many things which require to be
modified either by considerations of age or by the necessities of the case;
always provided that we remember in things which are doubtful or obscure, that
must be followed which is found to be neither contrary to the commands of the
Gospel nor opposed to the decrees of the holy Fathers.
QUESTION I. Concerning a
presbyter or deacon who falsely claims to be a bishop, and those whom they
have ordained,
REPLY. No consideration
permits men to be reckoned among bishops who have not been elected by the
clergy, demanded by the laity, and consecrated by the bishops of the province
with the assent of the metropolitan(8). And hence, since the question often
arises concerning advancement unduly obtained, who need doubt that that can in
no wise be which is not shown to have been conferred on them, And if any
clerics have been ordained by such false bishops in those churches which have
bishops of their own, and their ordination took place with the consent and
approval of the proper bishops, it may be held valid on condition that they
continue in the same churches. Otherwise it must be held void, not being
connected with any place nor resting on any authority.
QUESTION II. Concerning a
presbyter or deacon, who an his crime being known asks for public penance,
whether it is to be granted hint by laying on of hands?
REPLY. It is contrary to the
custom of the Church that they who have been dedicated to the dignity of the
presbyterate or the rank of the diaconate, should receive the remedy of
penitence by laying on of hands for any crime; which doubtless descends from
the Apostles' tradition, according to what is written," If a priest shall
have sinned, who shall pray for him(9)?" And hence such men when they
have lapsed in order to obtain GOD's mercy must seek private retirement, where
their atonement may be profitable as well as adequate.
QUESTION III. Concerning
those who minister at the altar and have wives, whether they may lawfully
cohabit with them?
REPLY. The law of continence
is the same for the ministers(1) of the altar as for bishops and priests, who
when they were laymen or readers, could lawfully marry and have offspring. But
when they reached to the said ranks, what was before lawful ceased to be so.
And hence, in order that their wedlock may become spiritual instead of carnal,
it behaves them not to put away their wives but to "have them as though
they had them not(2)," whereby both the affection of their wives may be
retained and the marriage functions cease.
QUESTION IV. Concerning a
presbyter or deacon who has given his unmarried daughter in marriage to a man
who already had a woman joined to him, by whom he had also had children.
REPLY. Not every woman that
is joined to a man is his wife, even as every son is not his father's heir.
But the marriage bond is legitimate between the freeborn and between equals:
this was laid down by the LORD long before the Roman law had its beginning.
And so a wife is different from a concubine, even as a bondwoman from a
freewoman. For which reason also the Apostle in order to show the difference
of these persons quotes from Genesis, where it is said to Abraham, "Cast
out the bondwoman and her son: for the son of the bondwoman shall not be heir
with my son Isaac(3)." And hence, since the marriage tie was from the
beginning so constituted as apart from the joining of the sexes to symbolize
the mystic union of Christ and His Church, it is undoubted that that woman has
no part in matrimony, in whose case it is shown that the mystery of marriage
has not taken place. Accordingly a clergyman of any rank who has given his
daughter in marriage to a man that has a concubine, must not be considered to
have given her to a married man, unless perchance the other woman should
appear to have become free, to have been legitimately dowered and to have been
honoured by public nuptials.
QUESTION V. Concerning young
women who have married men that have concubines. REPLY. Those who are joined
to husbands by their fathers' will are tree from blame, if the women whom
their husbands had were not in wedlock.
QUESTION VI. Concerning
those who leave the women by whom they have children and take wives.
REPLY. Seeing that the wife
is different from the concubine, to turn a bondwoman from one's couch and take
a wife whose free birth is assured, is not bigamy but an honourable
proceeding.
QUESTION VII. Concerning
those who in sickness accept terms of penitence, and when they have recovered,
refuse to keep them.
REPLY. Such men's neglect is
to be blamed but not finally to be abandoned, in order that they may be
incited by frequent exhortations to carry out faithfully what under stress of
need they asked for. For no one is to be despaired of so long as he remain in
this body, because sometimes what the diffidence of age puts off is
accomplished by maturer counsels.
QUESTION VIII. Concerning
those who their deathbed promise repentance and die before receiving
communion.
REPLY. Their cause is
reserved for the judgment of GOD, in Whose hand it was that their death was
put off until the very time of communion. But we cannot be in communion with
those, when dead, with whom when alive we were not in communion.
QUESTION IX. Concerning
those who under pressure of great pain ask for penance to be granted them, and
when the presbyter has come to give what they seek, if the pain has abated
somewhat, make excuses and refuse to accept what is offered.
REPLY. This tergiversation
cannot proceed from contempt of the remedy but from fear of falling into worse
sin. Hence the penance which is put off, when it is more earnestly sought must
not be denied in order that the wounded soul may in whatever way attain to the
healing of absolution.
QUESTION X. Concerning those
who have professed repentance, if they begin to go to law in the forum.
REPLY. To demand just debts
is indeed one thing and to think nothing of one's own property from the
perfection of love is another. But one who craves pardon for unlawful doings
ought to abstain even from many things that are lawful, as says the Apostle,
"all things are lawful for me, but all things are not expedient(4)."
Hence, if the penitent has a matter which perchance he ought not to neglect,
it is better for him to have recourse to the judgment of the Church than of
the forum.
QUESTION XI. Concerning
those who during or after penance transact business.
REPLY. The nature of their
gains either excuses or condemns the trafficker, because there is an
honourable and a base kind of profit. Notwithstanding it is more expedient for
the penitent to suffer loss than to be involved in the risks of trafficking,
because it is hard for sin not to come into transactions between buyer and
seller.
QUESTION XII. Concerning
those who return to military service after doing penance.
REPLY. It is altogether
contrary to the rules of the Church to return to military service in the world
after doing penance, as the Apostle says, "No soldier in GOD'S service
entangles himself in the affairs of the world(5)." Hence he is not free
from the snares of the devil who wishes to entangle himself in the military
service of the world.
QUESTION XIII. Concerning
those who after penance take wives or join themselves to concubines.
REPLY. If a young man under
fear of death or the dangers of captivity has done penance, and afterwards
fearing to fall into youthful
incontinence has chosen to
marry a wife lest he should be guilty of fornication, he seems to have
comitted a pardonable act, so long as he has known no woman whatever save his
wife. Yet herein we lay down no rule, but express an opinion as to what is
less objectionable. For according to a true view of the matter nothing better
suits him who has done penance than continued chastity both of mind and body.
QUESTION XIV. Concerning
monks who take to military service or to marriage.
REPLY. The monk's vow being
undertaken of his own will or wish cannot be given up without sin. For that
which a man has vowed to GOD, he ought also to pay. Hence he who abandons his
profession of a single life and betakes himself to military service or to
marriage, must make atonement and clear himself publicly, because although
such service may be innocent and the married state honourable, it is
transgression to have forsaken the higher choice.
QUESTION XV. Concerning
young women who have worn the religious habit for some time but have not been
dedicated, if they afterwards marry.
REPLY. Young women, who
without being forced by their parents' command but of their own free-will have
taken the vow and habit of virginity, if afterwards they choose wedlock, act
wrongly, even though they have not received dedication: of which they would
doubtless not have been defrauded, if they had abided by their vow.
QUESTION XVI. Concerning
those who have been left as infants by Christian parents, if no proof of thee?
baptism can be found whether they ought to be baptized?
REPLY. If no proof exist
among their kinsfolk and relations, nor among the clergy or neighbours whereby
those, about whom the question is raised, may be proved to have been baptized,
steps must be taken for their regeneration: lest they evidently perish; for in
their case reason does not allow that what is not shown to have been done
should seem to be repeated.
QUESTION XVII. Concerning
those who have been captured by the enemy and are not aware whether they have
been baptized but know, they were several times taken to church by their
parents, whether they can or ought to be baptized when they come back to Roman
territory(6)?
REPLY. Those who can
remember that they used to go to church with their parents can remember
whether they received what used to be given to their parents(7). But if this
also has escaped their memory, it seems that that must be bestowed on them
which is not known to have been bestowed because there can be no presumptuous
rashness where the most loyal carefulness has been exercised.
QUESTION XVIII. Concerning
those who have come from Africa or Mauretania and know not in what sect they
were baptized, what ought to be done in their case(6)?
REPLY. These persons are not
doubtful of their baptism, but profess ignorance as to the faith of those who
baptized them: and hence since they have received the form of baptism in some
way or other, they are not to be baptized but are to be united to the
catholics by imposition of hands, after the invocation of the Holy Spirit's
power, which they could not receive from heretics.
QUESTION XIX. Concerning
those who after being baptized in infancy were captured by the Gentiles, and
lived with them after the manner of the Gentiles, when they come back to Roman
territory as still young men, if they seek communion, what shall be done?
REPLY. If they have only
lived with Gentiles and eaten sacrificial food, they can be purged by fasting
and laying on of hands, in order that for the future abstaining from things
offered to idols, they may be partakers of Christ's mysteries. But if they
have either worshipped idols or been polluted with manslaughter or
fornication, they must not be admitted to communion, except by public penance.
LETTER CLXVIII: TO ALL THE
BISHOPS OF CAMPANIA, SAMNIUM AND PICENUM.
(Rebuking them first for
performing baptisms without due preparation or sufficient cause on ordinary
saints'-days (Easter and Whitsuntide being the only recognized times), and
secondly for requiring from penitents that a list of their offences should be
read out publicly, a practice which is in many ways objectionable.)
LETTER CLXIX: TO LEO
AUGUSTUS.
Leo, the bishop, to Leo
Augustus.
I. He heartily thanks the
Emperor far what he has done, and asks him to complete the work in any way he
can.
If we should seek to reward
your Majesty's glorious resolution in defence of the Faith with all the praise
that the greatness of the issue demands, we should be found unequal to the
task of giving thanks and celebrating the joy of the universal Church with our
feeble tongue. But His worthier recompense awaits your acts and deserts, in
whose cause you have shown so excellent a zeal, and are now triumphing
gloriously over the attainment of the wished-for end. Your clemency must know
therefore that all the churches of GOD join in praising you and rejoicing that
the unholy parricide has been cast off from the neck of the Alexandrine
church, and that GOD's people, on whom the abominable robber has been so great
a burden, restored to the ancient liberty of the Faith, can now be recalled
into the way of salvation by the preaching of faithful priests, when it sees
the whole hotbed of pestilence done away with in the person of the originator
himself. Now therefore, because you have accomplished this by firm resolution
and stedfast will, complete your tale of work for the Faith by passing such
decrees as shall be well-pleasing to GOD in favour of this city's catholic
ruler(8), who is tainted by no trace of the heresy now so often condemned:
lest, perchance, the wound apparently healed but still lurking beneath. the
scar should grow, and the Christian laity; which by your public action has
been freed from the perversity of heretics, should again fall a prey to deadly
poison.
II. Good works as well as
integrity of faith is required in a priest.
But you see, venerable
Emperor, and clearly understand, that in the person, whose excommunication is
contemplated, it is not only the integrity of his faith that must be
considered; for even, if that could be purged by any punishments and
confessions, and completely restored by any conditions, yet the wicked and
bloody deeds that have been committed can never be done away by the
protestations of plausible words: because in GOD'S pontiff, and particularly
in the priest of so great a church, the sound of the tongue and the utterance
of the lips is not enough, and nothing is of avail, if GOD makes proclamation
with His voice and the mind is convicted of blasphemy. For of such the Holy
Ghost speaks by the Apostle, "having an appearance of godliness, but
denying the power thereof," and again elsewhere, "they profess that
they know GOD, but in deeds they deny Him(9)." And hence, since in every
member of the Church both the integrity of the true Faith and abundance of
good works is looked for, how much more ought both these things to predominate
in the chief pontiff, because the one without the other cannot be in union
with the Body of Christ.
III. Timothy's request far
indulgence on the scare of orthodoxy must not be allowed.
Nor need we now state all
that makes Timothy accursed, since what has been done through him and on his
account, has abundantly and conspicuously come to the knowledge of the whole
world, and whatever has been perpetrated by an unruly mob against justice, all
rests on his head, whose wishes were served by its mad hands. And hence, even
if in his profession of faith he neglects nothing, and deceives us in nothing,
it best consorts with your glory absolutely to exclude him from this design of
his L because in the bishop of so great a city the universal Church ought to
rejoice with holy exultation, so that the true peace of the LORD may be
glorified not only by the preaching of the Faith, but also by the example of
men's conduct. Dated 17th of June, in the consulship of Magnus and Apollonius
(460). (By the hand of Philoxenus agens in rebus(1a).)
LETTER CLXX: TO GENNADIUS,
BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE(2).
(Complaining of Timothy
AElurus having been allowed to come to Constantinople, and saying that there
is no hope of his restitution.)
LETTER CLXXI: TO TIMOTHY,
BISHOP OF ALEXANDRIA.
Leo, the bishop, to Timothy,
catholic bishop of the church of Alexandria.
I. He congratulates him on
his election, and bids him win back wanderers to the fold.
It is dearly apparent from
the brightness of the sentiment quoted by the Apostle, that "all things
work together for good to them that love GOD(3)," and by the dispensation
of GOD's pity, where adversities are received, there also prosperity is given.
This the experience of the Alexandrine church shows, in which the moderation
and long suffering of the humble has laid up for themselves great store in
return for their patience: because "the LORD is nigh them that are of a
contrite heart, and shall save those that are humble in spirit(4)," our
noble Prince's faith being glorified in all things, through whom "the
right-hand of the LORD hath done great acts(4)," in preventing the
abomination of antichrist any longer occupying the throne of the blessed
Fathers; whose blasphemy has hurt no one more than himself, because although
he has induced some to be partners of his guilt, yet he has inexpiably stained
himself with blood. And hence concerning that which under the direction of
Faith your election, brother, by the clergy, and the laity, and all the
faithful, has brought about, I assure you that the whole of the LORD'S Church
rejoices with me, and it is my strong desire that the Divine pity will in its
loving-kindness confirm this joy with manifold signs of grace, your own
devotion ministering thereto in all things, so that you may sedulously win
over, through the Church's prayers, those also who have hitherto resisted the
Truth, to reconciliation with GOD, and, as a zealous ruler, bring them into
union with the mystic body of the catholic Faith, whose entirety admits of no
division, imitating that true and gentle Shepherd, who laid down His life for
His sheep, and, when one sheep wandered, drove it not back with the lash, but
carried it back to the fold on His own shoulders.
II. Let him be watchful
against heresy and send frequent reports to Rome.
Take heed, then, dearly
beloved brother, lest any trace of either Nestorius' or Eutyches' error be
found in GOD's people: because "no one can lay any foundation except that
which is laid, which is Christ Jesus(5);" who would not have reconciled
the whole world to GOD the Father, had He not by the regeneration of Faith
adopted us all in the reality of our flesh(6). Whenever, therefore,
opportunities arise which you can use for writing, brother, even as you
necessarily and in accordance with custom have done in sending a report of
your ordination to us by our sons, Daniel the presbyter and Timothy the
deacon, so continue to act at all times and send us, who will be anxious for
them, as frequent accounts as possible of the progress of peace, in order that
by regular intercourse we may feel that "the love of GOD is shed abroad
in our hearts through the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us(7)." Dated
the 18th of August, in the consulship of Magnus and Apollonius (460).
LETTER CLXXII: TO THE
PRESBYTERS AND DEACONS OF THE CHURCH OF ALEXANDRIA.
(Inviting them to aid in
confirming the peace of the Church, and in winning those who had given way to
heresy.)
LETTER CLXXIII: TO CERTAIN
EGYPTIAN BISHOPS.
(Congratulating them on the
election of Timothy, and begging them to assist in maintaining unity and
bringing back wanderers to the fold.)
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