The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter LXXXVIII, from Pope Leo to Bishop Paschasinus of Lilybaeum

Synopsis: Leo writes to Paschasinus, bishop of Lilybaeum, to send him the Tome as comprehensive instruction for his role as legate at the coming synod — explaining the Eutychian error’s impiety in denying two perfect natures united in one person — and to send the testimonies of the holy Fathers on the Incarnation that his legates had already alleged at Constantinople; reporting that the entire Constantinopolitan church and the bishop of Antioch through his provincial circulars have subscribed to Leo’s letter condemning Nestorius and Eutyches; and entrusting to Paschasinus’s solicitude the diligent investigation of the Paschal date dispute for 455.

Leo, bishop, to Paschasinus, bishop of Lilybaeum.

Chapter I: The Tome Sent to Instruct Paschasinus as Legate; The Eutychian Error Refuted

Though I do not doubt that your brotherhood fully knows the origins of all the scandals stirred in the Eastern churches concerning the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ, lest anything escape your solicitude, I sent for your diligent review and knowledge our most comprehensive letter to Flavian of holy memory — which the universal Church embraces — so that, understanding how with God’s aid the entire impiety of this error was destroyed, you too may adopt this spirit for your love of God: knowing that those who, following Eutyches’s impiety and madness, dared to say there are not two natures — perfect Divinity and perfect humanity — in our Lord, the only-begotten Son of God, are utterly detestable.

They think they can deceive our diligence, claiming to believe in one nature of the Word incarnate — though the Word of God, in the Divinity of the Father, Himself, and the Holy Spirit, has one nature, while the truth of our flesh, assumed by that unchangeable substance, is also united in nature. For it could not be called Incarnation unless flesh were assumed by the Word: a union so great that no division of Divinity is credible in the Virgin’s conception or birth, as Divinity and humanity met in the unity of the person.

Chapter II: The Error’s Abominability; Both Natures Remain in One Person

The impiety of Eutyches — long condemned and destroyed by the Fathers in prior heretics — is abominable, and should have given pause to this most foolish man. Unable to grasp it by sense, he might have avoided their example, lest by denying the truth of human flesh in our Lord Christ he render void the singular mystery of our salvation. For if there is no true and perfect human nature in Him, our assumption is null, and all we believe and teach — according to his impiety — is vanity and falsehood. But since truth does not lie nor Divinity suffer, both substances remain in one person in the Word of God, and the Church confesses her Savior as impassible in Divinity and passible in flesh, as the Apostle says: Though crucified through our weakness, He lives by God’s power (2 Cor. 13:4).

Chapter III: Patristic Testimonies Sent; Eastern Bishops’ Subscription to the Tome

That your charity be more fully instructed, I sent writings of our holy Fathers — on what they believed and preached about the mystery of the Lord’s Incarnation — for clear recognition: these our legates at Constantinople alleged together with my letter.

You should know the entire Constantinopolitan church, with all its monasteries and many bishops, expressed their accord and with their subscriptions anathematized Nestorius and Eutyches with their doctrines. You should also know I recently received the Constantinopolitan bishop’s letter, reporting that the bishop of Antioch, through circulars sent to his provinces, brought all bishops into accord with my letter — condemning Nestorius and Eutyches with like subscription.

Chapter IV: The Paschal Date for 455 to Be Investigated

We deem it necessary to entrust to your care that, as you are not unaware of the Paschal feast’s calculation, you diligently investigate and discuss with those skilled in this rule what we found in Theophilus’s annotation — which concerns us: how the day of the Lord’s Resurrection in the fourth year should be observed. For while the coming Pascha, God willing, is to be held on the tenth day before the Kalends of April, the next on the day before the Ides of April, the third on the day before the Nones of April — Theophilus of holy memory set the fourth on the Kalends of May, which we find wholly alien to ecclesiastical rule. In our Paschal cycles, which you rightly know, the Pascha of that year is written as the fifteenth day before the Kalends of May. Therefore, to remove all ambiguity for us, let your solicitude carefully discuss this with skilled experts, so we may avoid such error in the future.

Given on the eighth day before the Kalends of July, in the consulship of Adelfius, most illustrious man.

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Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter LXXXVIII is the commission of Paschasinus of Lilybaeum as Leo’s lead legate for Chalcedon. Paschasinus, bishop of the small Sicilian see of Lilybaeum (modern Marsala), was Leo’s chosen personal representative for the most important council of the century — the man who would preside at Chalcedon in the Roman bishop’s name, refuse to begin the council’s proceedings until Dioscorus was removed from the assembly, oversee the reading of the Tome that produced the bishops’ declaration “Peter has spoken through Leo,” and preside over the council’s definition of the faith. The appointment is made here, in the final weeks before the council opens.

The letter’s first chapter is the commission itself: Leo sends Paschasinus the Tome, identified as the letter “which the universal Church embraces,” with instructions to understand its content and hold it as his governing doctrinal brief. The phrase is significant. By June 451 the Tome’s reception across the Church is documented: Constantinople’s subscription, Antioch’s provincial circular, the Gallic bishops’ welcome (Letters LXVIII and LXXV). The Tome is not Leo’s personal position; it is the articulation of the received faith that the Church has recognized as its own. The reader should note carefully that this recognition confirms the Tome’s authority — it does not constitute it. The Apostolic See declared the standard; the churches are aligning themselves with what has been declared. Their accord is the evidence that Rome has articulated the faith correctly; it is not the source of the Tome’s binding force. Paschasinus carries it to the council as the universal Church’s standard — the doctrinal determination that Chalcedon will confirm, not a Roman position that the assembled bishops are free to accept or reject.

The Eastern subscription report of Chapter III completes the pre-Chalcedon picture. Constantinople and Antioch have signed. Alexandria under Dioscorus is the holdout; Jerusalem’s Juvenal had sided with Dioscorus at Ephesus II but would reverse at Chalcedon. The cumulative reception of the Tome, documented across Letters LXVII through LXXXVIII, is the institutional preparation for Chalcedon’s unanimous reception of it as the doctrinal standard. When the council’s bishops declared “the faith of the Fathers, the faith of the Apostles, Peter has spoken through Leo,” they were confirming what the Church had already been saying for months. Chalcedon ratified; it did not originate.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy