Leo, bishop, to the most beloved brother Bishop Julian.
Chapter I: Leo Grieves That Eutyches Has Made Himself Estranged from the Unity of Faith
Your beloved’s recent letters, delivered to me, show how greatly we thrive with the spiritual love of the Catholic faith and how great is the joy of heart they give me — that pious hearts are uniting in the same judgment, fulfilling through the teaching of the Holy Spirit among us what the Apostle says: I appeal to you, brothers, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you all say the same thing, and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be perfect in the same mind and the same judgment (1 Cor. 1:10).
From this unity Eutyches has made himself utterly estranged — if he persists in his perversity and does not yet understand by what bonds of the devil he is held fast, believing that some of the Lord’s priests can be found who would consent to his ignorance and madness. For a long time it was uncertain to us what in him displeased Catholics. While we received no letters from our brother Flavian, and Eutyches himself sought in his writings to make Nestorian heresy appear to be resurging, we were not fully able to discern the source or aim of so harmful a complaint. But once the documentary acts of the episcopal proceedings were brought to us, all that had been veiled by the covering of false complaints was revealed as to how detestable it was.
Chapter II: Leo’s Legates Carry the Doctrinal Standard for the Universal Church to Know
And since the most clement emperor, through his benevolence and piety of soul, wished to judge more diligently the state of one previously deemed honorable and therefore deemed it right to call an episcopal council, through our brothers Julius the bishop, Renatus the presbyter, and my son Hilarus the deacon — whom I have sent from my side in my stead1 — I have directed to our brother Flavian writings sufficient for the nature of the cause, so that both your beloved and the universal Church may know what we hold as divinely handed down and what we inviolably proclaim concerning the ancient and singular faith2 which this unlearned assailant has attacked.
Now we ought no longer to omit the part of mercy; yet we judge it fitting for priestly moderation that, if the condemned one corrects himself by full satisfaction, the sentence by which he is bound may be relaxed. But if he chooses to lie in the mire of his own folly, let the decrees stand, and let him share the lot of those whose error he has followed.
Given on the Ides of June, in the consulship of Asturius and Protogenes, most illustrious men.3
Footnotes
- ↩ The phrase quos ex latere meo vice mea misi — “whom I have sent from my side in my stead” — combines both the de latere and vice mea formulas in a single sentence. Julian of Cos is not among the legates but holds a distinct and equally important role: he is Leo’s trusted representative and correspondent in Constantinople, serving as the Roman see’s eyes and ears in the East. The legates act for Leo at the council; Julian acts for Leo in the city. Both channels extend the reach of Leo’s authority into the Eastern Church simultaneously.
- ↩ “The ancient and singular faith” (de antiqua et singulari fide) — Leo’s standard formula for the Christological orthodoxy that Eutyches has attacked. The writings directed to Flavian are the Tome (Letter XXVIII): Leo is informing Julian that the Tome has been dispatched, and that its contents are what the universal Church is to know as the authentic tradition. The claim is structural as well as doctrinal: Leo’s letters to Flavian are not private episcopal correspondence but the doctrinal standard for the whole Church.
- ↩ June 13, 449. Letter XXXIV is the brief accompanying letter of the June 13 cluster sent to Julian of Cos; Letter XXXV, also dated the Ides of June in all manuscripts, is the longer and more substantive Christological letter to the same recipient. The PL editorial note (Admonitio) before this letter discusses whether both letters could have been sent on the same day, given that Letter XXXV mentions Deacon Basilius delivering Julian’s letters — suggesting it may have been written slightly later — but concludes that the manuscript tradition unanimously gives June 13 for both and should be followed.
Historical Commentary