The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter CLXI, from Pope Leo to the Presbyters, Deacons, and Clergy of the Church of Constantinople

Synopsis: Leo praises the Constantinople clergy’s steadfastness and urges them to remain united and free from all heretical company; he reports that he has petitioned the Emperor against any new council; and he commands that Atticus and Andreas be stripped of their orders unless they publicly recant by voice and by written subscription before the Christian people.

Leo to the presbyters, deacons, and clergy of the Church of Constantinople.

Chapter I: Leo Praises the Clergy’s Steadfastness and Urges Them to Remain United and Free from All Heretical Company

I am greatly delighted by the steadfastness of your faith, made known to me, in which I glory in the Lord; and I understand that you are in everything most devoted disciples of evangelical teaching and of the apostolic preaching that flowed from the same source — thinking nothing that is at odds with the Catholic faith, which, being true and one, suffers no diversity to violate it. And so I do not cease to exhort and urge you to persevere, guided by the Holy Spirit, all saying the same thing — that there be no schisms among you, but that you be perfect in the same mind and in the same judgment (1 Cor. 1:10). Drive far from your company the errors of those long since condemned, as you have already begun to do, remaining firm in the faith; allow no one tainted with Nestorian or Eutychian perversity to associate with you, as though what certain fools have led others into — and stirred up into acts of diabolical fury — were a light and tolerable matter.

Chapter II: Leo Reports His Petition to the Emperor, and Commands That Atticus and Andreas Be Stripped of Their Orders Unless They Publicly Profess the Chalcedonian Faith

God’s favor has given us the great and divinely prepared assistance of the most Christian emperor, whom I have besought by my letters, to the extent the cause demands, not to grant any concession of his clemency to the wicked petitions of the parricides — nor in any way to allow the definitions of the holy Council of Chalcedon, which have truly proceeded from heavenly decrees, to be subjected to what they call a necessary reconsideration. For the aim of the impious is evidently to discredit, by a fresh judgment, what is fully consistent with the standards of evangelical preaching and the traditions of the Fathers — and once debate is opened, all settled authority is eroded. I trust that divine protection will be present with its inspirations and will grant the holy emperor the capacity never to permit what he knows to be contrary to the welfare of souls. As for Atticus and Andreas — whose names I indicated to my brother and fellow bishop Anatolius in letters sent earlier, having learned that they dissent from your praiseworthy faith and connive most openly with Eutychian treachery — unless they condemn the hostile doctrines with their own voice and written subscription, and publicly profess before the Christian people their intention to follow the faith confirmed by the Council of Chalcedon, they are to be stripped of the honor of their orders — so that the cunning of wolves may no longer be mixed with the simplicity of the Lord’s flock.

Given on the twelfth day before the Kalends of April, in the consulship of Leo and Majorian, most august Emperors.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter CLXI, dated March 21, 458, is the second of the three-letter cluster of that day — alongside Letter CLX to the exiled Egyptian clergy and Letter CLXII to the emperor — and it completes the running disciplinary case of Atticus the presbyter that Leo first opened in Letter CLI seven months earlier. But it does more than close a case; it demonstrates, in the clearest possible way, what the ordinary and immediate jurisdiction of the Roman pontiff means when a subordinate bishop has failed to act.

The letter is addressed not to Anatolius of Constantinople but directly to the clergy of his church. This is the sharpest jurisdictional move in the entire Atticus episode, and its structural significance should not be underestimated. Leo had issued the same directive — investigate, correct or expel — through Anatolius in three successive letters over seven months (CLI, CLV, CLVII). Anatolius did not comply. Leo’s response is not to write a fourth letter to Anatolius; it is to bypass him entirely and address the clergy directly. The immediate jurisdiction of the Roman pontiff is not mediated through the local bishop; it reaches the clergy of another bishop’s church without the bishop as an intermediary. By writing directly to the Constantinople clergy, Leo is not going around Anatolius as a matter of procedural creativity; he is exercising the jurisdiction that his office holds over every church, which does not require the local bishop’s mediation to operate.

The specific requirements Leo imposes on Atticus and Andreas in Chapter II are as precisely juridical as any ruling in this cluster. Two distinct acts are required: an oral public profession of faith before the Christian people assembled in the church, and a written subscription documenting that profession. Neither alone is sufficient. The venue is specified — the church itself, with the congregation present. The content is specified — condemnation of the hostile doctrines and profession of Chalcedonian faith. Leo is prescribing the precise form of the required juridical act, including its public and liturgical character. The form is not arbitrary: Atticus’s offense was public disputation against the faith in the church; the remedy must be a public act of profession in that same setting. The public character of the correction mirrors the public character of the scandal.

Chapter II also contains one of the most precise statements in the corpus of what the irreformability of defined doctrine means in practice. Leo writes that once debate on a settled matter is admitted, authority is eroded — dum disceptatio admittitur, auctoritas auferatur. This is not merely a tactical argument about the Eutychians’ motives. It is a theological principle: the moment you agree to debate what has been defined, you have conceded that the definition is open to revision — and that concession is the settlement’s undoing. Reopening the question is not a preliminary step toward settling it again; it is itself the destruction of the settlement. This principle underlies every refusal in this cluster to entertain the demand for a new council. Leo does not argue against a new council on the merits; he refuses to engage the question at all, because engaging it would already be a concession that the question is open.

The letter also illuminates, in passing, the mechanics of Leo’s cross-referencing across his own correspondence. He tells the Constantinople clergy that he has identified Atticus and Andreas to Anatolius “in letters sent earlier” — a reference to CLI, CLV, and CLVII. Leo is not treating each letter as an isolated communication; he is building a documented record across multiple letters, each of which references and builds on the previous ones. The Atticus case is not resolved in a single intervention; it is prosecuted systematically over months, with each letter adding to the record. The final ruling to the clergy directly is the outcome of that documented process — a process Leo has been conducting in writing, step by step, since September 1, 457.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy