The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter CLVII, from Pope Leo to Anatolius, Bishop of Constantinople

Synopsis: Leo urges Anatolius to press the Emperor without ceasing for the liberation of the Alexandrian Church; he notes that of the entire Egyptian episcopate only four previously condemned bishops joined the usurper Timothy Aelurus; he declares that the Apostolic See will never receive any novel council against Chalcedon and that connivance at such demands constitutes self-separation from Catholic communion; and he commands, for the third time, that the presbyter Atticus and Andrew either be corrected publicly or expelled.

Leo to Anatolius, bishop of Constantinople.

Chapter I: Leo Urges Anatolius to Press the Emperor Without Ceasing for the Liberation of the Alexandrian Church

Having again received the letters of your charity, I have learned with great sorrow all the things that have been done most insanely at Alexandria — though indeed no pages of letters could suffice to set forth such atrocious crimes. But it is not now our business to linger over lamenting adversities: it is more useful to provide for what will help and what will at last drive the fury of the heretics away from the peace of the Church. For since divine Providence has given us so great a prince, that his faith almost surpasses the solicitude of priests, the insistence of your charity is most particularly awaited — that you not cease to make supplication to the most venerable emperor for the universal Church, and to press him with constant suggestions that the Alexandrian Church be freed as soon as possible from those who have seized it. For my own part, I have petitioned the most devout prince with as much as lay in my power, that he command the decrees of the holy Council of Chalcedon to remain inviolate, and that the assertions of the heretics be recognized as proceeding from the deepest blindness — and that what the sacrilegious parricides have perpetrated in the seizure of the priesthood may in no way be tolerated by dissimulation; nor can the whole cause be settled in any other way than that the constitutions of the aforesaid synod receive the strength of permanence, and the most insane usurpers be expelled from another’s see, so that the Alexandrian people may at last enjoy their proper peace and quiet, lest they be hurled to the ruin of the Church and the offense of God by the caprice of a few heretics.

Chapter II: Only Four Previously Condemned Egyptian Bishops Joined Timothy Aelurus; The Parricides Have No Place in the Church

I have received much consolation in this: that out of the entire number of bishops who preside over the Egyptian dioceses, only four — previously condemned — could be found who had joined Timotheus in the impiety of heresy and the brigandage of crime — who could in no way be admitted to a synod, even if they were being arraigned on the charge of heresy alone. But since both in seizing the episcopate and in murdering the bishop they have perpetrated an unheard-of crime, what place in the Church is there for them, even if they were to embrace the Catholic faith? To all the priests of the Lord throughout Egypt, therefore, whether more recent ones or those residing there from ancient establishment, one aid and one remedy must be provided: that they be freed from such unworthy persecutions, and that the evil which has thrust itself into the very heart of so great a city be driven out by wholesome authority, so that the Christian people — previously devout in faith and works — may be able to serve in peace according to the traditions of their fathers.

Chapter III: The Apostolic See Will Never Receive Any Novel Council Against Chalcedon; Connivance Constitutes Self-Separation from Catholic Communion

I have not ceased to commend to the emperor by my letters our brothers who have come to Constantinople from the parts of Egypt; and I also admonish you to apply as much effort as you can to the consolation of their exile, since their presence can be of great assistance to your charity before the most merciful prince — lest assent be given to the petition of the heretics for a new synod, which is the enemy of the universal Church. For however firmly the Apostolic See is founded in faith and stability, so that it will in no way receive the assent of this novelty — and if anyone should believe it necessary to connive at the machinations of the adversaries, he would by that very fact separate himself from the communion of the Catholic Church — since, according to the inspiration of God, and in the faith of the Incarnation of Christ, and in the keeping of the Chalcedonian synod, the universal Church has but one mind; and above all in our own ranks the evangelical doctrine must be held so firmly that it would be counted a great sacrilege to deviate from the apostolic tradition even in the slightest degree.

Chapter IV: Leo Rebukes Anatolius for His Failure to Correct the Presbyter Atticus and Demands Immediate Action

I recall having written some time ago to your charity that you should suffer no one in the clergy of your Church to consent to the Eutychian heresy — since the head’s life is at stake if anything diseased is found in the members. But since this has been purged by no correction whatsoever, and I now learn that your presbyter Atticus has progressed to such insolence that he dares to dispute openly in the Church against the Catholic Faith and the Chalcedonian synod, I am compelled to find greater fault with your dissimulation. For what you ought to have done without being admonished, I am astonished to find neglected even after our plain written instructions. And so I warn you more sharply, and protest that you must no longer dissemble, if you intend to keep so pestilent a man any further in your communion. We ourselves, if it can be done, would prefer him corrected rather than lost — so that if he desires to appear corrected and to remain in ecclesiastical fellowship, he should now openly, from that very place where he has argued so much against the Catholic Faith, appear as a preacher of the faith itself, and suppress nothing of the Eutychian doctrine which he does not condemn by the public profession of his own faith before the Christian people: lest, as I have said, this dissimulation greatly stain you — if either this man, who is so dangerous, or Andreas, the ally of impiety, be kept on, neither corrected nor expelled.

Given on the Kalends of December, in the consulship of Constantinus and Rufus.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter CLVII is dated December 1, 457 — the same day as Letter CLVI to the emperor — and is the fourth letter Leo has addressed to Anatolius of Constantinople in the course of the Alexandrian crisis. The trajectory across the four letters is itself one of the most significant patterns in this cluster: CLI issued the initial directive on Atticus (private examination, then correction or expel); CLV rebuked Anatolius’s excessive leniency and warned of personal stain; CLVII escalates to open exasperation and sharpened command after continued noncompliance. At no point does Leo defer to Anatolius’s judgment about his own clergy, entertain the possibility that Anatolius’s assessment might be different from his own, or soften the directive. The presumption throughout is that Leo’s command is binding regardless of Anatolius’s disposition toward it.

Chapter I contains a detail worth pausing over. Leo describes the emperor’s faith as almost surpassing “the solicitude of priests” — sollicitudinem sacerdotum. The word sollicitudo is Leo’s defining term for the universal pastoral responsibility of the Roman bishop, the debt he owes to all the Churches of God. To apply it to the emperor is to describe his devotion in the highest functional terms available — and simultaneously to define the emperor’s role as one who exercises something approaching priestly solicitude for the faith. The emperor is not a theologian or a pastor; but his zeal for the Church’s peace approaches the watchfulness proper to priests. It is on this basis that Leo directs Anatolius to leverage the emperor’s proximity with constant pressing. The whole structure is Leo’s: the solicitude is his term, the emperor is its approximate possessor, Anatolius is the instrument of Leo’s engagement with the emperor, and the campaign’s direction flows from Rome.

Chapter II’s argumentative force turns on a precise detail. Leo notes that of the entire Egyptian episcopate, only four bishops joined Timothy Aelurus — and these four were dudum damnati, previously condemned. The usurper’s support within the legitimate episcopal body came exclusively from men already under ecclesiastical condemnation. Leo deploys this as evidence of Eutychian isolation: the movement has no legitimate episcopal base in Egypt. This demolishes the Eutychian argument for a new council — a council convened to hear their case would require some plausible claim to episcopal representation, and that claim cannot be made when the only bishops who have joined them were condemned before the crisis began.

Chapter III contains one of the clearest statements of the Apostolic See’s self-understanding in the entire corpus. Two claims are made in rapid succession. First: the Apostolic See is “founded in faith and stability” such that it cannot receive the demand for a novel council. This is a claim of indefectibility — the See’s constitution in faith is such that it will not fail, and therefore the demand is already answered before it is made. Second: anyone who connives at the adversaries’ machinations separates himself from Catholic communion by that very fact. This is not a threat of excommunication but a statement of structural reality — ipse se separabit, he separates himself. The Apostolic See’s judgment defines the boundary of Catholic communion, and departure from that judgment is ipso facto departure from the Church. Leo does not need to act; the act of connivance itself constitutes the separation. The two claims together present the Apostolic See as both constitutionally indefectible and definitionally determinative of Catholic communion — the most compressed statement of both principles in this cluster.

Chapter IV’s prescribed remedy for Atticus is as revealing as the directive itself. Leo does not merely say that Atticus must be corrected or expelled; he specifies what correction requires: Atticus must stand in the very place where he publicly argued against the faith and publicly preach the faith from that same place, condemning by name every element of the Eutychian doctrine before the Christian people assembled to hear him. Leo is governing the pastoral procedure in precise detail — its public character, its specific location, its doctrinal content. This is the same procedural specificity visible in Letter CLI’s private-examination-first directive. Across four letters, Leo has prescribed the sequence, the procedure, the preferred outcome, and now the precise form that correction must take. Anatolius is left no discretion on the manner; he is left only the factual determination of which outcome — correction or expulsion — the situation produces. The governance of Constantinople’s internal disciplinary affairs is being conducted from Rome, step by step, over the course of three months.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy