The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter CIX, from Pope Leo to Bishop Julian of Cos

Synopsis: Leo laments the violent disturbances caused by Eutychian monks in Palestine, directs Julian to press the emperor to separate the ringleaders and exile the obstinate, transmits the letter of Athanasius to Epictetus as a patristic weapon against the heresy, and addresses the case of Juvenal of Jerusalem — who had joined the Eutychians but later corrected himself, only to be ousted by the very disciples he had led astray.

Leo, pope, to Julian, Bishop of Cos.

Chapter I: Leo Laments the Violent Eutychian Disturbances Among Palestinian Monks

Grave and deeply lamentable are the things which your brotherhood reports of the tumults of false monks — as Eutyches’s impious fury wages war against evangelical and apostolic preaching, recoiling to the ruin of himself and his allies. God’s forbearance delays this, revealing how greatly the enemies of the cross of Christ serve the devil. Heretical depravity, exceeding the feigned veil of its simulation, can no longer contain itself within the limits of hypocrisy — pouring out all the venom it had long stored up, raging not only with words against the disciples of truth but also with violence, forcibly extorting agreement from the simplicity of the unlearned or the timidity of the fearful. Yet the sons of light ought not so to fear the sons of darkness as to yield to those who rage, nor to deem such men worthy of reverence. If they prefer to perish rather than to repent, we must ensure their impunity does not spread harm — rising to the ruin of many through prolonged tolerance.

Chapter II: Leo Directs Julian to Press the Emperor to Exile the Obstinate Ringleaders

I am not unaware of the charity and grace owed to our holy and true monk sons who do not abandon the modesty of their profession and fulfill in their conduct what they vowed. But the proud and restless — who glory in contempt and injuries to bishops — are to be held not as servants of Christ but as soldiers of Antichrist, and must especially be humbled by those who lead them when they are stirring an ignorant multitude to the defense of their perversity. Since the most clement prince, with the full religious ardor of his heart, cherishes the Catholic faith and is greatly offended — as is widely known — by the audacity of these rebellious heretics: you must act before his clemency to separate the instigators of this sedition from their mad gatherings. Not only Eutyches and Dioscorus, but also any who zealously aid their furious depravity, should be placed in a location where they can have no blasphemous commerce with their allies: so that the simplicity of some may be healed by this remedy and they may be more easily recalled to sound minds when freed from the instigations of pestilent teachers.

Chapter III: Leo Transmits the Letter of Athanasius to Epictetus as a Weapon Against the Heresy

Lest instruction for strengthening pious hearts or for refuting heretics be lacking or hidden, I transmit the letter of Bishop Athanasius of blessed memory to Bishop Epictetus — which Cyril of holy memory used at the Ephesine synod against Nestorius, defending the Incarnation of the Word so lucidly and diligently that it already defeated, in that era’s heretics, both Nestorius and Eutyches. Let the followers of Eutyches and Dioscorus dare accuse this man, of such authority, of ignorance or depravity — who claim that our preaching deviates from the doctrine and understanding of the Fathers. This should serve to confirm the minds of all the Lord’s bishops: since the heretics, long foreseen and condemned in their authors, now openly assert the doctrine of their impiety — lest it seem doubtful, hidden in silence, whether the threefold error of Apollinaris and the mad opinion of the Manichees are sprouting in them. Since they no longer hide but boldly rise against the churches of Christ, we must ensure that all the force of their efforts be removed — with measured severity separating the unconvertible from the peaceable: for evil communications corrupt good manners (1 Cor. 15:33), and when the pestilent is chastised, the wise will be wiser (Prov. 21:11).

Chapter IV: Leo Addresses the Case of Juvenal of Jerusalem

We ought not to be so moved by their insults and vain talk as to neglect care for their correction. But the injuries of Bishop Juvenal are lamentable: for he rashly joined himself to the blasphemies of the heretics, embracing both Eutyches and Dioscorus, leading many of the ignorant by his example to their ruin — though he afterward corrected himself with wiser counsel. Those who had greedily drunk the venom of impiety became his adversaries — once his disciples — causing him to suffer what he had nurtured. It is to be hoped that they imitate the correction he chose, if they repent through the testimony of the holy places around which they dwell. The character of the one who crept into the place of the living bishop is clear from the nature of the act itself — and it cannot be doubted that the one whom the adversaries of the faith have favored is himself perverse. Meanwhile, let your brotherhood continue its pious solicitude — informing me frequently of how matters progress through your writings.

Dated the seventh day before the Kalends of December, in the consulship of Herculanus, most illustrious man.

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Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter CIX belongs to the post-Chalcedon enforcement correspondence — the cluster of letters in which Leo addresses the practical problem that defining the faith at a great council does not automatically end the organized resistance of those condemned by it. The Eutychian party in Palestine was particularly resilient, rooted in the monastic communities of the holy places and capable of both theological propaganda and physical violence. Leo’s letter to Julian of Cos is the Western end of the coordination required to address it: Julian is to bring the situation to the emperor’s attention and press for imperial action to exile the ringleaders.

The transmission of Athanasius’s letter to Epictetus of Corinth in Chapter III is a significant patristic move. By sending a document that Cyril had used at Ephesus I — a letter that implicitly condemned both Nestorianism and Eutychianism decades before either controversy formally began — Leo is equipping the Eastern bishops with an argument from antiquity. The Eutychian claim was that the Chalcedonian settlement deviated from the Fathers; Leo’s response is to produce a Father who condemned the Eutychian position before Eutyches was born. The argument is pre-emptive rather than reactive: the heresy is not new, its condemnation is not new, and those who now assert it openly are asserting what patristic authority already condemned in its precursors — Apollinaris and the Manichees.

The Juvenal case in Chapter IV is one of the corpus’s sharper ironies. Juvenal of Jerusalem had been among the signatories of the Latrocinium’s condemnation of Flavian; he corrected himself at Chalcedon and subscribed to the definition. His own former disciples, whom he had led toward Eutychianism, then drove him from his see for that correction. Leo’s observation — “those who avidly drank the venom of impiety became his adversaries, once his disciples” — captures the self-defeating logic of the Eutychian position: a movement that could not retain even the bishop it had previously recruited, and that installed in his place a rival whose Eutychian credentials were themselves the mark of his perversity. Leo notes this without vindictiveness, but the irony is allowed to stand.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy