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LEO THE GREAT
LETTERS CXXIII TO CLXXIII
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 CXXXIlI.
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.
I. 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, awl 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 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 rhetorns 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 has 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 Reply to His Questions on Various Points.
Leo, the bishop, to Rusticus, bishop of Gallia Narbonensis.
I. 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.