Various fragments of letters of Pope Gelasius, preserved fragmentarily in later manuscript collections — the first five drawn from the Miscellanea of Étienne Baluze (1630-1718), and the last from a ninth-century Lucca codex.1 The Patrologia Latina also prints, immediately after these fragments, an Appendix Secunda containing canons attributed to Gelasius drawn from medieval canonical compilations (Burchard, Ivo of Chartres, Gratian); but the editor Mansi himself notes in the prefatory Monitum that he does not consider all of them to be genuine works of Gelasius, and that the same principle followed by other compilers — that is, including matter “less than authentic, but which has been held authentic by others” — has been applied. Because of this acknowledged uncertainty of authorship, those canons are not included here.2
Fragment I: From a Letter of Gelasius — On the Determination of Parochial Boundaries by the Place of Baptismal Regeneration3
What can the new building prejudice the ancient division of the churches, since in it [namely, the new building] those things which were future were not [yet], but those which were present were being terminated? But now, with regard to this basilica which is to be dedicated, this with the highest intention should be inquired into — that is, of which city, in the same matter, before the basilica which has been built was founded, [the prior basilica] had baptized the inhabitants, or under whose designation they had assembled with annual devotion. For agreement is not defined by termini or by any places, but by what we said above: the parish is to be determined by from whom the cohabitants in the same place have been purged by the laver of regeneration.4 And therefore, dearest brothers, with all ambiguity removed and every circuitous argument set aside, this it behooves you to investigate by all means: that he, especially, may be called to the consecration to whom by this manner — which we have prescribed [as] proper — that he be permitted, you may know.
In the rest of the churches also which were subsequently constituted, when, after the constitution which was effected by the synod of Leo of holy memory recently re-read,5 [the case of] those distinct in those places by the surreptition6 of an uncertain bishop has stood [as their consecrator], — these things must be examined, are to be required, and are to be ordered in all modes; in such a way, however, that the document of which we have spoken above may be preserved in every constitution; because whatever has been clarified in the supplied petitions is to be deduced into ineffectuality by the contemplation of so great a Pontiff.
Fragment II: To Bishops Maximus and Eusebius — On the Inviolability of Ancient Parochial Dispositions7
Although it is contained in the ancient rules that parishes assigned to each church by ancient disposition can in no manner be torn away — lest, with the worst example of evil-temerity growing through usage, universal confusion arise everywhere — already in our decrees not long ago issued, we have ordered all to be restored which had been thus invaded.8 But because the temerity of those overstepping thinks that a law can be generated for itself, if it should adjoin to its [own] crime the obstinacy of [its] retention,9 those things which between our brother and fellow bishop Constantinus, priest of the church of Camiscana, and the bishop of Anconitanum we have decreed, and which we have directed [to be carried out],10 we desire to be fulfilled by you. Then we have written down for the rest of considerations the form which must be followed.
By no presumption, therefore, can the state of the parishes — which has lasted through the firmness of perpetual age, with neither the negligence of the bishop nor a temporal addition (which perhaps through carelessness might be generated), nor an ignoble [or supine] concession, nor a creeping supplication able to tear the precept by which a once-constituted parish has been settled, from which the devoted people consists for regeneration and consignation always — be torn away.11
Fragment III: From the Decretals — To Dulcius the Defensor — On the Ordination of Anastasius as Bishop of Lucera12
Your experience, having received our present admonition, will not omit to declare to our sons the magnificent men Aemilianus the Master of Soldiers, and Constantinus the judge, and Ampelius, by way of our exhortation. Behold, just as the desire of your magnitude has requested, without any delay and without any cost — in such a way that we should not allow them to grant the customs themselves to ecclesiastical offices — we have ordained Anastasius the deacon as priest for the city of Lucera.13 Therefore now let your magnificence freely expend on the public utilities of this same bishop or of the church of Lucera, in everything which is necessary, and let him bestow upon them the consolation of his Christian devotion in the competent vigilance of his [office].
Fragment IV: Gelasius to Bishop Stephanus — On the Case of Antistia, Who Broke Her Purpose of Widowed Chastity14
It would have been fitting that Antistia, who had directed a petition concerning the modesty desired by herself,15 should remain [in it], because she ought not easily to have despised that which she had earlier easily believed must be sought. For with the consideration thoroughly examined and matured, she ought either to have measured her own youth or those things which she ought to have valued [in] the petition, and not, against the election of the indicated widowhood,16 subsequently to seek pretexts and occasions for breaking [her] chastity. But because the changeable error of her mind by the desire of fault rashly tempted [her], and she sought a husband — preferring more the incontinence which is forbidden by no laws — you ought to know that she should be returned to the customary procession spoken of above, and that the access to the church and the sacred communion of [its] ministries be granted to her.17
Editor’s footnote on the canonical principle: Widows did not emit any solemn profession of chastity. If, however, they violated a chastity assumed under the religion of a vow privately offered to God, by taking up marriage, they did not [merely break the public election of widowhood, but also broke a vow under graver discipline].18
Fragment V: To Justinus the Archdeacon and Faustus — On the Division of the Church’s Goods Into Four Parts19
We have judged your counsel and that of your repute,20 that in the place of your bishop someone be substituted in [his] stead by the same — who, in his name, would alike dispose of all things — so that you may recall all the income to your study, lest you suppose that anything of the church should be assigned to any cleric in proportion to himself alone, lest through carelessness and negligence it be diminished, but that the whole sum of the income, collected from all the rural and urban estates, be brought to the bishop. From which collection, however, account is to be had — what is needed for cases or expenses of incoming necessities, as is foreseen — that it be sequestered from the middle [i.e., from the common fund]; and the four portions, or the offerings of the faithful, are to be made from this in all manners of income, in such a way that the bishop takes one for himself; he distributes another to the clergy according to his judgment and election; the third he causes to be paid out to the poor under the conscience of all; and concerning the fabric, what is competent for the ordinations [of materials and labor], we decree to be pending upon the supervision of the bishop’s distribution.21 If perhaps there shall remain anything from the annual expense, let it be deposited in the strongboxes [thecis] under a chosen guardian on both sides, so that if a greater fabric should emerge, those things may be set aside which the diligence of various times has been able to preserve; or certainly, let possession be bought which may regard the common utilities.22
Fragment VI: From the Sayings of Pope Gelasius — On the Discipline of the Catechumens and the Public Penitents23
Catechumens are called in Latin “the instructed” or “the hearing” (instructi vel audientes); these are they who have been instructed in the faith of Christ, hear the precepts of Christ, rightly believe, and have also been signed by the priest, and have been purged by the exorcism, and yet have not been washed by sacred baptism.24 The penitents are called those in the canon which deals with crimes — those who do public penance for greater faults. And it is to be known that, according to the precept of the canon, it is not lawful for the faithful — that is, those who have already been baptized — to dismiss the [catechetical] meetings in the church together with the hearers (that is, the catechumens) [by] standing during the time of prayer and the canonical praise, and to pray and sing psalms together with them. Nor is it lawful for clerics or for the rest of the laity to pray or sing psalms together with the penitents being mixed [with them].
… Anciently a place proper [to them] was set down, either outside the church, or at the beginning of the entrance of the church, where the catechumens — that is, the instructed or hearing — stood for praying and hearing the divine office, [though] below [or beneath] the church.25 Above these [in canonical order] there was likewise a place properly designated where the penitents stood, so that all those entering the church might know them to be doing penance concerning criminal faults, and might pray for them, and they through these things, being more humbled, might more readily receive pardon for their sins. And above [or beyond] these, in another space of the church, the rest of the lay faithful stood — separated, however, from the clerics.
And when, however, in some chapters of the canon it is said that the penitent is to be cast out for any criminal cause whatsoever — that is, for graver fault — by the church, this is not to be understood that he is utterly forbidden from every assembly and hearing of the divine praise and of the Lord’s precepts; for this would be too absurd, and against the precept of divine clemency,26 that the sick should be excluded from the divine medicine of God, who was incarnate and suffered for the salvation of sinners, and that he should be cast out from every assembly and consolation of the faithful, and handed over to the devil. But the aforementioned [provision] is to be reasonably understood: that he is to be cast out from communion — that is, from the consortium of the other faithful, who stand within the church during the time of prayer and praise of God; and let him stand for the appointed years for praying and hearing the praises of God outside the church, among the hearers (that is, among the catechumens); and with all these things completed, according to the judgment, the offense being committed, let him enter into the church among the penitents — that is, into the consortium of prayer with the penitents — among whom, when the years according to the judgment of his fault are completed, let him return more fully to communion — that is, to the consortium of the rest of the faithful and of the perception of the sacred body and blood of Christ.27
Footnotes
- ↩ The Patrologia Latina arranges these fragments under the heading Appendix Prima — Varia Fragmenta, immediately following the principal Gelasian corpus. They are not full letters but excerpts preserved by canonical compilers and antiquarians, often quoted for the doctrinal or disciplinary point they made and surviving only because that point made them worth citing in later compendia. The full letters from which they were drawn are otherwise lost. Étienne Baluze (1630-1718), librarian to Colbert, was one of the great manuscript-hunters of the seventeenth century, and his Miscellanea (seven volumes, 1678-1715) preserved many otherwise-lost patristic and medieval texts. The reader will note that, while these are fragments rather than complete letters, they nonetheless give a precious window onto the pastoral, disciplinary, and jurisdictional work of Gelasius’s pontificate — and several of them touch directly on themes elaborated in the principal Gelasian works.
- ↩ The reader who wishes to consult the Appendix Secunda directly may find it in Patrologia Latina vol. 59, cols. 141ff. The editorial caution about authenticity, drawn from Mansi’s own preface, justifies leaving those canons aside in a corpus oriented toward authentic primary-source evidence. The legitimate Gelasian corpus is more than substantial enough to make its case without recourse to materials that even the editor flags as of doubtful authenticity.
- ↩ The fragment is from a letter whose addressee and full occasion are no longer known. Its substance is a careful determination of how to identify the parish — that is, the diocesan territory under a particular bishop — to which a newly built basilica properly belongs. The principle Gelasius lays down is decisive for the development of medieval parochial structure: parish boundaries are not determined by physical termini (rivers, roads, walls) or by abstract geographical lines, but by the spiritual fact of where the inhabitants have been regenerated through the laver of baptism. The basilica belongs to the parish whose font has baptized those who live near it.
- ↩ Per quod fuerint lavacri regeneratione purgati. The criterion Gelasius sets down is sacramental, not territorial. The parish is constituted not by physical boundary lines but by the relation of the people who live there to the font from which they received baptism. This is the living spiritual link — between the bishop in whose church they were regenerated, and the people now scattered through the surrounding region — that defines the unit of pastoral care. The principle would be foundational for the development of medieval parish structure: the church to which one’s baptism connects one is the church to whose pastoral authority one belongs. The reader will note the structural coherence with the broader necessity-of-baptism doctrine articulated in the Adversus Pelagianam Haeresim: baptism is not only the gateway to eternal life but also the foundation of one’s standing within the visible jurisdictional structure of the Church.
- ↩ Post constitutum quod gestis sanctae memoriae Leonis papae in synodo nuper relectis. A precious incidental witness. Gelasius is referring to the acts of Leo I, “of holy memory,” being re-read at a recent Roman synod (perhaps the synod of 495 or earlier in his pontificate). This indicates the practical mode by which Roman magisterial continuity was maintained: the acts of preceding popes were preserved in the Roman archives, were recited at synods of his successors, and provided the jurisprudential basis for current decisions. The reference to Leo by the formula sanctae memoriae (“of holy memory”) is the standard honorific for a deceased pope being cited as authoritative; it would shortly afterward be applied to Gelasius himself by his successors. The reader will see the structural coherence with the project’s continuity-with-predecessors theme: the Roman bishop’s exercise of authority is, in practice, the continuation of what his predecessors instituted, attested by their acts read aloud in his synods.
- ↩ Per subreptionem. A technical Roman juridical term: the act of obtaining a favorable decision by misrepresentation or by concealing material facts. The bishop in question is being said to have stood as bishop of churches not properly his own through such misrepresentation. The text appears corrupt at this point — the editor’s footnote (Locus corruptus) acknowledges the difficulty — and the precise reference of virunnis (almost certainly a corruption) is uncertain.
- ↩ Addressed to two bishops named Maximus and Eusebius, whose sees are not specified in the surviving fragment. The substance closely parallels Fragment I and may be from the same case or a related one — the determination of the rightful priestly authority over the church of Camiscana (an unidentified locality), against an attempted intrusion by parties from another jurisdiction.
- ↩ Jam in decretis nostris ante non multum temporis destinatis, omnia jussimus, quae taliter fuerant invasa, restitui. Gelasius is referencing his own earlier decrees — issued not long before this letter — in which he had ordered the restoration of parishes that had been “invaded” (i.e., usurped) by external parties. The procedural pattern is significant: a Roman pope issuing decrees in a particular case, then having to reissue and reinforce them when the offending party persists. The ante non multum temporis (“not long ago”) suggests this is a continuation of an earlier intervention, and indicates the practical ongoing work of the Apostolic See in maintaining the structural integrity of the Italian and broader western parish system. The reader will note the structural coherence with the four-fold revenue division of the Constituta: just as the bishop’s revenue must be applied in proper proportions, so the bishop’s territorial jurisdiction must be respected in its proper boundaries.
- ↩ Si sceleri suo pertinaciam retentionis adjungat. Gelasius is naming the legal-philosophical mistake of those who think that simple persistence in unlawful possession produces a right. The principle is precisely the opposite of the prescriptive principle invoked in the Decretum to the bishops of Dardania (repeti non possunt quae triginta annis quiete possidentur): there, lawful possession over thirty years produces an indefeasible right; here, unlawful possession however long sustained does not produce any right at all. The contrast is exact and Roman-juridical. Lawful possession matures into right; unlawful possession, however persistent, only compounds the wrong. The doctrine has direct application to ecclesiastical jurisdiction: those who have unlawfully seized a parish or a church do not gain any standing by holding what they have seized, no matter how long they hold it.
- ↩ The case involves a dispute between Constantinus, priest (i.e., bishop) of the church of Camiscana, and the bishop of Anconitanum (the see of Ancona on the Adriatic coast of Italy). Camiscana has not been securely identified; some have suggested a corruption of Camerinum (Camerino, in the Marche) or another minor see in the same region. The substance is jurisdictional: a contested boundary between two adjacent Italian sees, the case adjudicated by Gelasius, and the parties evidently failing to comply, requiring this further intervention.
- ↩ Ex qua semper ad regenerationem atque consignationem plebs devota consistit. The closing principle ties parochial stability directly to the sacramental life of the people. The parish is the unit of pastoral care because it is the unit through which the faithful are regenerated (baptized) and signed (confirmed; consignatio is the standard patristic term for confirmation as the sealing of baptism). The integrity of the parish is therefore not a mere administrative convenience but a sacramental reality: to disrupt the parish is to disrupt the channels through which the faithful receive the sacraments. The reader will see the doctrinal coherence with the necessity-of-baptism thread of the broader corpus: the parish exists for the sacraments, and the sacraments are the application of redemption to individual souls. The structural sacramental ecclesiology of Gelasius is consistent across the corpus.
- ↩ Addressed to Dulcius, a defensor ecclesiae — one of the Roman Church’s lay or clerical agents charged with administrative and legal business on behalf of the Apostolic See. The defensor office was a distinctive Roman institution of the period, the holders effectively functioning as legal representatives and inspectors operating in the regions on the pope’s behalf. The fragment is addressed to Dulcius personally and concerns the ordination of Anastasius as bishop of Lucera (in southern Italy, in Apulia). The mention of three magnifici viri — Aemilianus the Master of Soldiers, Constantinus the judge, and Ampelius — names the local Roman officials whose representations and assistance were instrumental in the case. The fragment is brief but indicates the Roman pope’s working relationship with both ecclesiastical agents (the defensor) and civil officials (the master of soldiers, the judge) in the practical administration of episcopal appointments.
- ↩ Anastasium diaconum Lucerinae civitati ordinavimus sacerdotem. The verb ordinavimus (“we have ordained”) is in the first person plural, the standard papal “we.” The ordination of the bishop of Lucera was conducted directly by Gelasius — consistent with the Constituta‘s pattern of the Roman pope personally ordaining bishops in the Italian sees within his direct jurisdiction (the suburbicarian dioceses and the broader Italian region). The phrase civitati ordinavimus sacerdotem — “we have ordained as priest [bishop] for the city” — names the ordination as an act for that specific local church, with the new bishop now being its proper pastor. Sacerdos in this register, when applied to the head of a city’s church, means “bishop”; the patristic usage preserves the priestly character of the episcopate and was standard through this period.
- ↩ Addressed to a bishop named Stephanus, whose see is not preserved in the fragment. The substance is the case of Antistia, a woman who had directed a petition expressing her desire to remain in widowed chastity, but who afterward — through an immature and changeable mind — broke that purpose and remarried. Bishop Stephanus had apparently shown excessive leniency in receiving her excuses; Gelasius corrects this. The case turns on the canonical question of whether widows who have committed themselves to chastity but without a solemn formal vow may remarry, and what disciplinary consequences attach.
- ↩ Quae direxit petitorium in desiderata sibi pudicitia permanere. Antistia had sent a formal petition (petitorium) declaring her purpose to remain in chastity (pudicitia) — the ecclesiastical term for vowed widowed continence. The PL editor’s footnote at this point clarifies a technical question: widows who had not made a solemn profession of chastity (solemnem castitatis professionem) but who nevertheless violated their assumed chastity by marrying, did not commit the worse offense of breaking a vow privately consecrated to God; nevertheless, having publicly directed such a petition, they incurred the lesser ecclesiastical disability now to be addressed.
- ↩ Contra electionem viduitatis indictae. Antistia had publicly entered the state of widowed chastity through her petition; this constituted an “election of indicated widowhood” — a public choice of the widowed state, marked by the visible expression. Even without a solemn vow, this public profession created an obligation that her subsequent remarriage breached. The PL editor’s note clarifies the canonical point: those who had not made a solemn profession could not, on the strength of remarriage alone, be charged with breaking a vow to God; but they had nevertheless violated a publicly indicated state of life and were subject to ecclesiastical correction.
- ↩ Et ut accessus ecclesiae et ministeriorum sacra communione potiatur. The disciplinary outcome is moderate. Antistia, having broken her purpose of widowed chastity but not having broken a solemn vow to God, is to be restored to the ordinary processions and to communion with the sacred ministries. The discipline is severe enough to mark the disorder — she had to be formally restored — but not so severe as to bar her from the sacraments altogether, which would be the consequence of breaking a solemn vow. The Catholic distinction between a vow privately made to God (which binds under graver discipline) and a publicly indicated purpose without solemn vow (which binds under milder discipline) is here presupposed.
- ↩ The editor’s footnote in the PL is incomplete in the printed text, breaking off at non- with the next page missing in the apparatus. The completion of the canonical principle, supplied here from context, is the standard distinction: a private vow to God under the religion of the vow itself binds gravely and its violation is a graver canonical offense than the violation of a publicly indicated purpose without such vow. Antistia’s case falls in the lesser category, and the discipline applied is correspondingly lighter.
- ↩ Addressed to Justinus, the archdeacon (of Rome, presumably), and Faustus — likely another senior Roman cleric or administrative official. The substance is a detailed elaboration of the four-fold division of Church revenues that the Constituta commands every bishop to maintain. The reader who has worked through the Constituta will recognize the same principle here — bishop / clergy / poor / fabric — but applied with greater specificity to the practical case of a church without a bishop, where the metropolitan or another supervising authority must temporarily administer the revenues until a successor is appointed. The fragment is one of the most precise statements of Roman financial-administrative discipline of the period.
- ↩ Vobis et famae vestrae consultum duximus. The phrase is a courtesy formula recognizing the addressees’ standing and inviting their cooperation in the implementation of the directive that follows.
- ↩ Antistes… clericis… pauperibus… fabricis. The four-fold division of the Constituta here receives its detailed administrative elaboration. The bishop receives one part for himself; he distributes the second to the clergy “according to his judgment and election” (pro suo judicio et electione — that is, in proportion to their offices and faithful service, not as automatic shares); the third goes to the poor “under the conscience of all” (sub omnium conscientia — that is, with public accountability, not as private discretionary almsgiving by the bishop); and the fourth is reserved for the fabric (the maintenance of the church buildings and ornament). The reader will see the structural coherence with the Constituta‘s formulation. What this fragment adds is the procedural detail: how the funds are gathered (all collected to the bishop, not distributed at source); how necessary current expenses are deducted (sequestered from the middle before the four-fold division); and how the four-fold division is to be administered (with specific accountability for each part). Notable in particular is the phrase sub omnium conscientia for the poor’s portion — establishing the principle that the poor have a juridical right to their share, accountable to the whole community, not merely a discretionary charity.
- ↩ In thecis, ut si major emerserit fabrica, sint subsidio. The image of the strongbox (theca) is precise: any annual surplus is to be placed in a secured box, with a custodian appointed by each interested party (likely the bishop and the lay community), against the day when a greater building project (“a greater fabric”) emerges. Alternatively, surplus may be invested in additional ecclesiastical property (possessio) for the long-term benefit of the church. The doctrine is mature: the Church’s revenue is held in trust for the Church’s mission, with provision both for present needs and for the structural development of the Church’s physical and economic life.
- ↩ Drawn from a ninth-century Lucca manuscript, this fragment treats the canonical disciplines of the catechumens (those being instructed for baptism) and the public penitents (those undergoing formal penance for grave public sins). The fragment carefully distinguishes the location of each class within or around the church during the celebration of Mass and the canonical hours. The closing reference — to Gelasius’s letter to the bishops of Lucania, chapter 21 (Mansi’s identification) — indicates that this material derives from or parallels that fuller letter, of which only fragments survive.
- ↩ Per exorcisma purgati, sed necdum sacro baptismate sunt abluti. The catechumens are described in their canonical state: they have been received as inquirers (signati a sacerdote, “signed by the priest” — the formal reception into the catechumenate, with the sign of the cross), have been progressively purged through the exorcisms which formed part of the catechumenate, but have not yet received baptism. The reader will see the doctrinal coherence with the Easter-and-Pentecost rule of the Constituta: the catechumens are precisely those who would be baptized at the great paschal festivities, not before. The fragment’s careful articulation of the catechumens’ canonical state presupposes the developed Roman catechumenal discipline of the late fifth century.
- ↩ The arrangement is precise. The catechumens stood at the entrance of the church or just outside, in a designated place, where they could hear the readings and join in the prayers but could not yet enter into the full liturgical assembly of the faithful. After the catechetical portion of the service, they were dismissed before the eucharistic mysteries — the celebrated Missa catechumenorum dismissal that gave its name to the Mass itself.
- ↩ Quod nimis absurdum est, et contra praeceptum divinae clementiae. A precise theological-pastoral judgment. To exclude the penitent from all hearing of God’s word and praise would be both absurd in itself (the penitent, of all people, needs the word of God) and against the divine clemency (which calls sinners to repentance through the very means of the proclaimed word). The hermeneutical principle Gelasius applies here is that the discipline of the canons must be read in the light of the underlying doctrinal substance — the call of mercy that operates through the disciplinary structure, not against it.
- ↩ The graduated penitential discipline is precisely articulated. The grave public sinner passes through stages: (a) outside the church entirely, with the catechumens; (b) inside the church, among the penitents, but not yet in full communion; (c) full restoration to communion of prayer and to the eucharist with the rest of the faithful. Each stage occupies a fixed term of years according to the gravity of the offense and the judgment of the bishop. The doctrinal substance is the medicinal nature of penance: the sacrament-discipline graduates the sinner back into full communion through stages of increasing participation, mirroring the inverse path by which catechumens approach baptism. The reader will see the patristic-Roman penitential discipline in its mature form here, before the medieval shift toward private auricular confession would gradually displace these public structures.
Historical Commentary