The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter CIII, from Pope Leo to the Bishops of Gaul

Synopsis: Leo announces to the Gallic bishops that his legates have returned from Chalcedon, that the Catholic faith has been confirmed and the triumph of apostolic preaching glorified, and transmits the exemplar of the sentence by which his legates — acting in his stead, endowed with the dignity of the Apostle Peter — stripped Dioscorus of episcopal dignity with the consenting holy synod.

Leo, to his most beloved brothers Rusticus, Ravennium, Venerius, Constantianus, Maximus, Armentarius, and the other bishops throughout Gaul.

Leo Announces the Return of His Legates and Transmits the Exemplar of the Sentence Against Dioscorus

With our common vows fulfilled through God’s mercy, it is fitting that your brotherhood share in the joys of these holy triumphs. I report that my brothers, who presided at the Eastern synod in My stead, have returned — confirming the Catholic faith and glorifying the triumph of apostolic preaching — even those who had been led astray or compelled to deviate now rejoice at receiving the light of truth. For all the Lord’s priests, taught by the Holy Spirit, have agreed in one judgment; and concerning the mystery of the Lord’s Incarnation, in which the understanding of many had grown dark, the darkness of error has been so dispelled that in our one Lord, true Son of God and Son of man, there is no longer any doubt either about the human nature or about the divine essence. What sentence has been pronounced against the impious authors of detestable error — who judged themselves unworthy of God’s grace and refused to use the remedies of correction — the exemplars which We have sent will make known, so that your charity may recognize, most beloved brothers, that divine judgment was not absent from this holy scrutiny: rendering punishment to the obdurate and peace to those corrected. May the Lord keep you safe, most beloved brothers.

Exemplar of the Sentence

Paschasinus, bishop of Lilybaeum, Lucentius, bishop of Asculum, and Bonifacius, presbyter of the Church of the great city of Rome — vicars of the most holy and most blessed Pope Leo, bishop of the Apostolic See — declared: It is evident what Dioscorus, bishop of Alexandria, has committed against canonical discipline and ecclesiastical rules through illicit presumption, as both past proceedings and present testimony have made clear. Passing over much else, he is known to have received into the grace of communion Eutyches — partner in his own perfidy, justly condemned by his own bishop of holy memory Flavian — before sitting with the bishops assembled in the city of Ephesus. To those others, however, the Apostolic See granted pardon — since their actions, though contrary to their intent, stand approved — provided they now adhere to the most blessed Pope and to the holy and universal council, for which reason they have received the medicine of holy communion. But Dioscorus, who takes pride in persisting in evil — though he ought to bow with humble groans to the ground, as is fitting — refused to allow the letter of the most blessed Pope to Flavian, bishop of Christ of venerable memory, to be read; and, though asked by its bearers to permit it to be read, he scorned to fulfill the satisfaction he had promised, compounding the impiety of his perverse doctrine and becoming the cause of injury and scandal to all the Churches.

We wished nonetheless to show indulgence for these crimes and graciously to extend to him the pardon granted to the other bishops — since they are not found to have had a similar boldness in judgment. But the petition of the accusers was added, filled with various charges; and, summoned three times by our most reverend brothers and fellow bishops with canonical admonition, he refused to appear, detained by the secret witness of his own conscience. By receiving under an unjust usurpation the bishops condemned by their provincial synod — to which they were subject — he provoked against himself the sentence of condemnation, and repeatedly trampled the statutes of the ancient Fathers.

Therefore, the holy and most blessed Pope Leo, head of the universal Church — endowed with the dignity of the Apostle Peter, who is called the foundation and rock of faith of the Church and keeper of the gate of the heavenly kingdom — through us his vicars, with the holy synod consenting, has stripped him of episcopal dignity and made him a stranger to every priestly function. It remains for the venerable synod assembled to pronounce a canonical sentence against the said Dioscorus, as justice demands.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter CIII is the briefest letter in the Chalcedonian cluster, but it transmits the most important single document in the post-council correspondence: the formal exemplar of the sentence pronounced against Dioscorus at Chalcedon by Leo’s legates. The brief letter-body exists to introduce and authenticate this document; all the theological weight is in the sentence itself.

The sentence deserves to be read carefully, because it is not Leo’s self-description but the formal pronouncement of his legates at an ecumenical council — a document that would have been read aloud in the presence of five hundred bishops and preserved in the conciliar acts. The titles the legates assign to Leo are therefore titles the council heard and did not contest: “Pope, head of the universal Church”; “endowed with the dignity of the Apostle Peter, who is called the foundation and rock of faith of the Church and keeper of the gate of the heavenly kingdom.” The Petrine typology of Matthew 16:18-19 is applied not to Peter as a historical figure but to the office Leo holds as Peter’s successor. The dignity is Peter’s; Leo is the one endowed with it in the present moment. The action of stripping Dioscorus of episcopal rank is Leo’s action, performed through his vicars, with the synod’s consent. The synod consents; it does not co-act.

This asymmetry — Leo acts, synod consents — is the structural claim in its most compressed and publicly enacted form. At the most authoritative council the Eastern church would ever recognize as ecumenical, the sentence of condemnation against the bishop of Alexandria was pronounced in Leo’s name, under Leo’s authority, with the five hundred assembled bishops in the role of consenting witnesses. The reader who has followed the Chalcedonian sequence from Letters XCII through CI will recognize this as the enacted conclusion of everything Leo’s pre-council letters had claimed: he presided through his legates, his letter was the doctrinal standard, his authority was the ground of the council’s acts. The sentence against Dioscorus is the moment when all those claims are exercised in a specific, irreversible jurisdictional act.

The letter also notes that the same dispatch carried multiple exemplars — not only the sentence against Dioscorus but also the judgments concerning others who had been led astray and subsequently received back into communion. Leo is transmitting to Gaul a complete picture of the council’s penitential and disciplinary work, so that the Gallic bishops can understand both dimensions of what Chalcedon accomplished: the condemnation of those who refused correction, and the reconciliation of those who accepted it.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy