The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter LXXXII, from Pope Leo to Emperor Marcian

Synopsis: Leo writes to Emperor Marcian to give thanks for the Catholic faith whose preservation is repaid by the peace of the empire, rejoicing that the most illustrious prefect Tatianus and the Constantinopolitan clerics have come to Marcian’s piety with the great material of ecclesiastical peace — expressing confidence that nothing impudent will arise from any quarter given Marcian’s character and governance — and to declare that it is altogether impious for the Church to be called back through the foolishness of a few to reopen the conjectured disputes of carnal argumentation, as if it were still an open question whether Eutyches thought impiously or Dioscorus judged perversely, since the holy Fathers have interpreted the Scriptures and it is sacrilege to interpret them otherwise.

Leo, bishop, to Marcian, ever Augustus.

Chapter I: Thanksgiving for the Catholic Faith and the Peace of the Empire; Leo’s Confidence in Marcian’s Governance

How many things there are for which we must give thanks to our God — whose mercy it is that you, most glorious emperor, govern human affairs with such wise providence and excel in divine virtues — we have come to know fully from the arrival of Tatianus, the most illustrious prefect, your son, and the Constantinopolitan clerics who came to your piety. For the great material of ecclesiastical peace was made known to us from them, and we give thanks to the Lord that those who had been drawn away from the right path are being restored to the unity of the Catholic faith. For among Christian princes, the Spirit of God confirming concord, a twin trust in piety roborates both: because the invincible power of arms makes for the security of the faithful, and the sincere devotion of faith in the one confession, propitiating God through peace, shatters heretical falseness and barbarian hostilities alike. I presume, accordingly, that nothing impudent will arise from any quarter to trouble your serenity — since your spirit, rooted in the love of God, cannot be moved by anyone’s rash presumption.

Chapter II: It Is Sacrilege to Reopen Settled Questions; The Scriptures Must Be Interpreted as the Fathers Have Interpreted Them

But it is altogether too unjust that through the foolishness of a few we should be called back to the conjectures of opinions and the wars of carnal disputes — as if it were necessary to reopen the question of whether Eutyches thought impiously, or whether Dioscorus judged perversely — who in the condemnation of the most holy memory of Flavian both struck down simplicity and drove it to ruin, that many fell along with him into the same pit of condemnation. There are remedies for those who are converted, and pardon for those who repent; but those of this kind whose faith is wickedness, let them not be received unless they provide fitting satisfaction.

For it is impious that the divine Scriptures and the teachings of the holy Fathers be interpreted by anyone otherwise than the Holy Spirit, through whom they were written and delivered, has directed — for the disciples of truth ought not to follow the inventions of human error, but to seek the rule of faith in the writings of the prophets and apostles, in the expositions of the Catholic doctors, and in the definitions of the synods: none of which will be found to conflict, for all proceed from one and the same Spirit. Let whatever is contrary to these be avoided as deadly, and let the evangelical and apostolic doctrine, illuminated by the explanations of the holy Fathers, be held without any wavering.

Given on the ninth day before the Kalends of May, in the consulship of Adelfius, most illustrious man.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter LXXXII is addressed to Marcian ten days after the April 13 packet, prompted by the arrival of the prefect Tatianus and Constantinopolitan clerics who had brought news from Constantinople. The letter’s first chapter is warm and confident — the ecclesiastical peace is good, Marcian’s governance is sound, nothing impudent is anticipated. The second chapter is more pointed: Leo has apparently learned that some persons are attempting to reopen the doctrinal questions that Ephesus II had wrongly decided, and he shuts the door firmly.

The declaration that it would be impious — nefas — to reopen the questions about Eutyches and Dioscorus is Leo functioning as the doctrinal authority whose judgment closes matters rather than opens them. He is not saying that a future council might settle these questions differently. He is saying they are settled, and that re-agitating them is not legitimate theological inquiry but foolishness and impudence. The Apostolic See has determined these questions; the council about to meet will confirm that determination, not reconsider it. This is exactly the framework Marcian had acknowledged in Letter LXXVI: the council will operate according to the ecclesiastical rules as Leo has defined — sicut sanctitas tua secundum ecclesiasticas regulas definivit. Letter LXXXII is Leo defining, in advance of the council, what is not on the agenda.

The *nefas* declaration about scriptural interpretation deserves particular attention. Leo is saying that the Catholic tradition — the Scriptures as interpreted by the holy Fathers, the Catholic doctors, and the synods — is the fixed standard, and that deviation from it is sacrilege. This is not a claim about the pope’s personal infallibility; it is a claim about the tradition the Apostolic See holds and transmits. The tradition is apostolic, the Fathers have expounded it, the synods have confirmed it, and Leo’s office is to uphold and defend it. Anyone who interprets Scripture otherwise is not engaging the tradition; they are opposing it. The cumulative effect of this letter, read alongside the April 13 packet, is that by the time Leo’s legates arrive at Chalcedon, every major question has been pre-answered: the doctrine is fixed, the invalid council is identified, the repentant are welcomed on specific terms, the obstinate are excluded, and the framework within which the new council will operate has been defined from Rome.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy