The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter CXVI, from Pope Leo to Empress Pulcheria

Synopsis: Leo thanks Pulcheria for her sanctions against the rebellious monks, reports that — at the emperor’s request — he has sent his formal agreement with Chalcedon’s faith definition to all the assembled bishops, names Anatolius’s deliberate concealment of his previous letter, and asks Pulcheria to give Julian the confidence to suggest to her piety whatever serves the universal Church.

Leo, bishop, to Pulcheria Augusta.

Chapter I: Leo Thanks Pulcheria for Her Sanctions Against the Rebellious Monks

Although I have received no letters from your piety at this time, the writing of the most glorious prince brought me no less joy than if the words of your serenity had been addressed to me. Upholding my due custom, I make known to your clemency my joy at your well-being — ceaselessly praying to God to preserve you, the Roman republic, and the Catholic Church in all prosperity. I cannot fully express the thanks I render to God for the vigor of your faith — ceaselessly offering a sacrifice of praise to the Lord — as we recognize in the princes of our time not only royal power but priestly doctrine. My brother Bishop Julian’s report brought copies of your most salutary sanctions — by which you deigned to temper the madness of the ignorant monks with sparing correction and instructive punishment — so that, if divine mercy turns them to repentance, they may be cleansed by many tears from their nefarious slaughters and the blasphemies of heretics.

Chapter II: Leo Reports Sending Letters to All Chalcedonian Bishops, Names Anatolius’s Concealment, and Delegates Julian

As the most pious emperor wished me to send letters to all the bishops who attended the Chalcedon synod — affirming the rule of the faith defined there — I gladly complied, lest any deceitful pretense cause my judgment to appear uncertain. Through the bishop of Constantinople — to whom I had amply expressed my joy — my writings could have reached all, had he not preferred to conceal my gladness rather than publicize the rebuke of his ambition.

I ask that you deign to grant my brother Bishop Julian — to whom I delegated my solicitude in the cause of the faith — the confidence to suggest to your piety what is profitable to the universal Church.

Dated the twelfth day before the Kalends of April, in the consulship of Opilio, most illustrious man.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter CXVI is the third letter of the March 21, 453 triple dispatch — CXIV to the assembled bishops of Chalcedon, CXV to Marcian, CXVI to Pulcheria. Its brevity relative to CXV reflects the difference in the recipients: Marcian needed the full administrative account; Pulcheria, whose role was more pastoral and personal, receives a shorter report with the same key elements. The three letters together form a coordinated act: the formal confirmation is issued publicly (CXIV), explained to the emperor (CXV), and reported to the empress (CXVI) — all on the same day, deliberately bypassing Anatolius who had blocked the previous communication.

The most analytically interesting element in CXVI is the audience for the Anatolius concealment revelation. In CXV, Leo names Anatolius’s suppression to the emperor. Here he names it to Pulcheria — the woman whose personal testimony had been one of the grounds for Leo’s acceptance of Anatolius’s episcopate. The implicit message is clear without being stated: the bishop you vouched for has been suppressing my correspondence. Pulcheria’s influence over Anatolius and over the court was precisely the resource Leo had drawn on throughout the Eutychian controversy; by informing her of Anatolius’s conduct, Leo is activating that resource toward correction.

The Julian delegation appears in CXVI in its most compressed form — one sentence asking Pulcheria to give Julian “the confidence to suggest to your piety what is profitable to the universal Church.” But the phrase behind it is precise: Leo has delegated his “solicitude” to Julian for this purpose — the sollicitudo that defines the Roman bishop’s universal pastoral responsibility. Julian does not merely advise the empress; he presents Leo’s solicitude for the universal Church to her piety. The request that Pulcheria receive Julian with confidence is a request that she receive Leo’s pastoral care in its delegated form.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy