The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter, from Leontius, Bishop of Arles, to Pope Hilarius

Synopsis: Leontius congratulates Hilarius on his elevation to the pontificate, grounds the congratulation in the status of the Roman Church as mother of all and the pope as the one raised over her to judge peoples and direct nations, invokes the continuity from Leo to Hilarius, and requests that the favors and privileges long extended to the Church of Arles by the Apostolic See be preserved and increased.

Letter of Leontius, bishop of Arles, to Pope Hilarius.

That death has taken away your most holy predecessor Leo — who kept watch against heresies and uprooted the tares that were sprouting all too thickly, alas, in the Lord’s field — we grieve; that he has repaired the loss through Your Holiness, we rejoice. For the son rejoices in the honor of his mother: and since the Roman Church is the mother of all, We had to rejoice that, in so great a consternation of affairs and infirmity of the ages, He has raised you up over her, so that you may judge the peoples in equity and direct the nations on earth. Therefore, when the messenger came to us through our church’s deacon Concordius — who at that time was present when Your Holiness was raised to that pinnacle of honor — we gave thanks to our God, and resolved to greet you as soon as possible with this letter of our humility, so that the affection that has long grown up between Your Holiness and us might be strengthened in the Lord, and hereafter increased with the due reverence with which it is fitting for sons to follow a father. Blessed therefore is he who comes in the name of the Lord (Ps 117:26 LXX). It must now be strenuously labored over and striven for by Your Holiness, that what the most holy Pope Leo began, you may carry to its final boundary — that, with the army of Gideon sounding through trumpets in the mouths of the brave and shaken with lamps in their strong hands, Your Holiness may cast down the accursed walls of Jericho, already so often anathematized and battered.

Moreover, since our Church of Arles has always been adorned by the Apostolic See with the most abundant favors and privileges, we ask Your Holiness that through it nothing may decrease from us, but rather be increased — so that we may be able to labor together with you in the vineyard of the Lord God of Sabaoth, and to break the efforts of the envious: who, if there were no authority to restrain them, would certainly go on worse from day to day, since the malice by which they hate us rises ever higher.

Given in the consulship of Severus Augustus (A.D. 462).

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Leontius’s congratulatory letter to Hilarius is the reply to Letter V — the encyclical announcing Hilarius’s accession to the Apostolic See. It is the formal act by which the metropolitan of Arles receives the news of the new pontificate and pledges his cooperation. Such letters were conventional in form, but the theological content with which Leontius fills the convention is worth attending to closely, because it tells us how the leading Gallic bishop understood the relationship between his province and Rome as of 462.

Three primacy acknowledgments anchor the letter. First, the Roman Church is named as the mother of all — Ecclesia Romana omnium mater — and this maternity is treated not as a claim Leontius is advancing but as the settled premise from which his rejoicing follows. Second, the pope is described as raised up over the Roman Church, and through that office as appointed to judge the peoples and direct the nations. The kingly-judicial language is drawn from Psalm 66 and applied to the papal office without apology: the pope’s jurisdiction is universal, reaching to all peoples and nations, not bounded by province or region. Third, the pope is named as the father whom sons follow with due reverence. The family metaphor carries through the letter: Roman Church as mother, pope as father, Gallic bishops as sons.

The continuity argument is stated with unusual directness. Leontius names Leo as Hilarius’s predecessor and identifies Hilarius’s task as carrying Leo’s work to its final boundary. What Leo began, Hilarius must finish. The two pontificates are treated as a single ongoing labor — the same logic Hilarius himself had just applied in Letter IV, where he invoked the judgment of Our predecessor of holy memory as binding precedent. The office is continuous across its occupants, and the reigning pope is accountable to carry forward what the previous pope established. The reader should note that this continuity argument is not a Roman self-understanding alone; it is how the Gallic metropolitan understands the relationship between popes from the outside.

The closing petition makes the structural dependence of Arles on Rome explicit. The favors and privileges of the Church of Arles have come from the Apostolic See; Leontius asks Hilarius that they not decrease but rather increase. The presupposition is that Rome’s grants may be continued, diminished, or increased at the reigning pope’s discretion. Leontius does not appeal to a conciliar decree, an ancient custom, or an independent right of Arles; he appeals to the Apostolic See’s past generosity and asks for its continuation. This is the same structural dependence visible in Leo’s Letter X, where Leo grants authority to Leontius, limits the grant, and holds the power to revoke it if necessary. That Leontius himself describes the relationship this way is useful evidence: the structure was understood the same way from both sides.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy