The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter Fragment, from Pope Simplicius to Emperor Zeno

Synopsis: In this incomplete letter, preserved in a Freising manuscript, the pope responds directly to Zeno’s proposal that Peter Mongus be appointed bishop of Alexandria, rehearsing the case against Peter and insisting that even if he now seeks amendment, he is worthy of indulgence after repentance but not of honor.

Beginning of the letter of Pope Simplicius of holy memory to the Emperor Zeno.

Among other matters, and to the point:

Simplicius Weighs the Merit of Peter Mongus and Reminds the Emperor of the Documentary Record

But let us now come to those of whom your tranquil writings declare that one must be excluded from the priesthood of the Alexandrian Church and another appointed to govern it. And first, if it please you, let us weigh the merit of Peter’s character. Surely this is the accomplice of the parricide of Timothy, and by your own command as well most worthy of perpetual exile. He has always been an associate and teacher of those warring against the truth. There is no doubt that I have often written requesting his expulsion from the city of Alexandria. If he held the true faith, he would surely have remained in Catholic communion. And if he now recently approaches it seeking amendment, this very fact refutes his long-held error.

One Worthy of Indulgence After Repentance Is Not Worthy of Honor

Yet even if he now seeks amendment with a sincere mind, he should accordingly offer satisfaction — he does not aspire to dignity, [for] one who is worthy of indulgence after repentance is worthy of that, not of honor. Far be it from me to begrudge his salvation, if he repents — I embrace, I encourage, and I rejoice, most glorious Emperor. But for one long wounded by the injury of depravity, the mercy of healing is fitting, not the power of authority. For he can only be called religious if, condemning his perversity, he chooses to return to the sound faith. Otherwise it is clear that he does not desire the healing of his own affliction but aspires to a position from which he may more confidently and freely pour the venom of his perfidy into wretched souls, and from a higher place reduce the freedom of Catholics to servitude with far greater violence.

The Testimony of Those Separated From Catholic Communion Is Not Admissible

I ask, then: who supports his promotion? I hear they are archimandrites and monks, or others who have separated themselves from Catholic communion. Is their testimony, then, to be approved — those whose persons are not admissible, who lack the cause of sound faith and conscience, and who are held in the same error as he?

End.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

The Fragment is an incomplete letter to the Emperor Zeno, preserved in a single Freising manuscript and unknown to scholars until its discovery by Frobenius Forster. The copyist extracted only the section dealing with the Alexandrian question, omitting the salutation and whatever preceded the transitional phrase Inter caetera et ad locum (“Among other matters, and to the point”). What survives is Simplicius’s direct response to the emperor’s proposal that Peter Mongus be made bishop of Alexandria.

The Fragment adds nothing doctrinally new to what Letter XVII had already said to Acacius about the same crisis. The canonical argument is the same: Peter is the accomplice of a parricide and a heretic; even if he now seeks amendment, he must pass through satisfactio before any question of promotion can arise; a man worthy of indulgence after repentance is worthy of indulgence, not of honor. The dismissal of Peter’s supporters as themselves separated from Catholic communion and therefore inadmissible as witnesses is the same principle of complicity that Gelasius would later develop at length in the Duo Sunt letter. What the Fragment adds is the addressee: this is not Simplicius writing to the patriarch who was supposed to be his intermediary, but Simplicius writing directly to the emperor who made the proposal. The refusal is delivered to the man who holds the coercive power, not merely to the man who was supposed to channel Roman directives.

The reader should attend to two features of the Fragment that the brevity of the text makes easy to overlook. First, the documentary reminder: “there is no doubt that I have often written requesting his expulsion from the city of Alexandria.” Simplicius is invoking the paper trail — Letters X, XI, XII, XIII, and XIV — as evidence that Rome’s position on Peter Mongus is not new, not improvised, and not subject to revision because the emperor has changed his mind. The archives hold the record, and the record is consistent. Second, the rhetorical question at the end: “who supports his promotion? I hear they are archimandrites and monks who have separated themselves from Catholic communion. Is their testimony to be approved?” The question answers itself: the supporters of Peter’s promotion are themselves heretics, and heretics cannot serve as witnesses to the fitness of a heretical candidate. The principle is juridical: testimony is admissible only from those who possess the standing to give it, and standing in ecclesiastical matters requires communion with the Catholic Church.

The Fragment breaks off with Finis — “End.” Whether this is the copyist’s notation that the manuscript ended here, or a scribal mark indicating the end of the extracted section, is unclear. What is clear is that the letter is incomplete: whatever directives Simplicius gave about John (the candidate the Egyptian synod had elected), whatever closing formula he used, and whatever dateline the letter bore are all lost. The letter belongs to the same period as Letters XVI and XVII (July 482).

The Henoticon would be issued later in 482, and Peter Mongus would be installed as patriarch of Alexandria under its terms — with Acacius’s support. Everything Simplicius had worked to prevent across five years of correspondence came to pass within months of this letter. The Fragment preserves Simplicius’s direct refusal to the emperor: he rejected Peter’s promotion, invoked the documentary record of his prior requests, and dismissed the testimony of those who supported it. The cooperative framework of 477–478 was over, and the conditions for the Acacian Schism — which would last thirty-five years and which Felix III would open by excommunicating Acacius in 484 — were now in place.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy