Gelasius to his most beloved brother Æonius.
The Principal Governance of the Blessed Apostle Peter, Delegated by Christ, Owes the Care of the Whole Sheepfold to the Universal Flock
Among the various difficulties, We rejoice to have found the opportunity by which — disclosing that through divine grace We have come to the governance of the Apostolic See — We might mingle with your brotherhood the discourse long postponed, and, having sent Our greeting, in the solicitude of mutual charity, inquire also after the prosperity of your dilection.
For inasmuch as the principal governance of the Blessed Apostle Peter1 — undertaken with Christ the Lord delegating it — owes to the universal flock throughout the world the care of the whole sheepfold, with so great an affection of piety does she embrace all the Churches and their rulers; and as soon as opportunity presents itself, she both anxiously inquires and rejoices to learn whether, amid the various turmoils of the world, they persevere steadfastly in the paternal faith and tradition.
Greeting to Be Conveyed to the Gallic Bishops Through Our Returning Envoys
Wherefore, most dear brother, with Our religious sons Euphronius the priest and Restitutus the religious man — who had come to the parts of Italy to provide sustenance for a holy congregation2 and now returning to their own homes — We could not be silent; but with all fervor We have thought that your dilection ought to be admonished, that the brothers and Our fellow-bishops established throughout Gaul — through your charity making it known — might learn that the heart of mutual grace thrives among Us, and that through whomsoever your charity should wish, she might in turn convey the well-being of all to those desiring to learn of it, and that it might be established that [this bond] is in no way torn apart however much the age may detract from it, but that the Catholic profession remains always and everywhere joined.
May the Lord keep you safe, most dear brother. Given on the tenth day before the Kalends of September, Asterius and Praesidius, most illustrious men, being consuls.3
Footnotes
- ↩ The Latin is B. Petri apostoli gubernatio principalis — “the principal governance of the Blessed Apostle Peter.” The adjective principalis is the same load-bearing term Leo I had used (in the adverbial form principaliter) in Letter X to express Peter’s governing, originating position among the apostles — the one in whom the mystery of the universal office was principally placed, from whom as from a head His gifts flow to the whole body. Gelasius’s formulation is distinctive in grounding the governance explicitly in Christ the Lord’s delegation (Christo Domino delegante): Peter holds this governance because Christ gave it to him, and it therefore owes care to the universal flock as a commission received from Christ himself.
- ↩ Euphronius and Restitutus appear to have been Gallic envoys who had traveled to Italy on a charitable mission to supply the needs of a religious community, and were now returning home to Gaul. Gelasius uses their return journey as an opportunity to send a letter to Arles, following the common Roman practice of entrusting correspondence to trusted travelers already making the journey.
- ↩ August 23, 494 — only eighteen days after Letter XI to the bishops of Dardania and Illyricum (August 5, 494). The two letters together illustrate Gelasius’s simultaneous primatial attention in the summer of 494: to the Acacian Schism in the East and to the maintenance of communion with the Gallic churches in the West.
Historical Commentary