The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter CLVIII, from Pope Leo to the Catholic Bishops of Egypt Residing at Constantinople

Synopsis: Leo consoles the exiled bishops for their faith, reports that he has already sent two missions to the Emperor on their behalf in anticipation of their complaints, urges them to magnanimous patience with the hope of heavenly reward, and directs them to seek the Emperor’s favor assiduously — in accordance with the letters Leo has already sent.

Leo to the Catholic bishops of Egypt residing at Constantinople.

Chapter I: Leo Grieves Over the Alexandrian Atrocities and Reports His Intercession Before the Emperor on Their Behalf

The evidence of the crimes committed at Alexandria long ago has grieved me, and so wounded my heart by the enormity of the deed itself that I know not with what tears or what lamentation it may be wept for — and rightly do I cry out with the voice of the prophet: Who will give water to my head, and a fountain of tears to my eyes? (Jer. 9:1). Yet going before the complaints of your charity, I have made supplication to the most merciful and most Christian emperor for remedies for so great evils, and through our sons and assistants Gerontius and Olympius, sent at different times, I have entreated him urgently that he command that city’s Church — in which so many Catholic doctors have flourished — to be purged of the condemned heresy, and that the parricides who could be deterred by neither the veneration of the place nor the passage of time from the blood of their own bishop be granted nothing from his clemency; above all since they desire the Chalcedonian Council to be overturned for the subversion of the faith. Therefore the same cause which drove you from your own sees ought to console the patience of your charity: for it is certain that afflicted souls suffering adversity for His name will in no way be left without the Lord’s protection.

Chapter II: Leo Exhorts the Bishops to Magnanimous Patience and Directs Them to Seek the Emperor’s Favor in Accordance with His Own Letters

Bear therefore with magnanimity, and thinking of that homeland which is truly yours, rejoice in your present pilgrimage. Let there be no pain of exile in you, nor let you have anything in this weariness of sorrow — you who know that the Apostle even glories in many dangers for the faith of the Lord. You have, together with the rewards of retribution already prepared, One who knows this conflict. Let no one flee this labor, whose wages are to reign or to live forever. Let the feet of all who fight stand firm in the courts of Jerusalem, for with the hope of that retribution they will be able to fear neither the camps of the enemy nor his battles. For over those of the adversary who have already been laid low, victory is never difficult nor the palm hard to win. Therefore seek assiduously with your prayers — as I myself also have not kept silence — the favor of the most Christian emperor, which, God being gracious, is at hand: that, according to the letters I have sent, he may unite the cause of the common faith with that devotion of mind which we have proved him to have, and that, removing all prejudices generated by the fury of the heretics, he may by his piety arrange for your return and cause each and every province and all the Churches together with their bishops to rejoice in the unshaken peace of Christ.

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

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter CLVIII is dated December 1, 457 — the third letter of that day’s dispatch, alongside Letter CLVI to the emperor and Letter CLVII to Anatolius of Constantinople. Together the three letters form the final coordinated cluster of Leo’s 457 Alexandrian correspondence. Where CLVI was theologically concentrated and CLVII was disciplinary and exasperated, CLVIII is pastoral and consolatory — addressed to the exiled Egyptian bishops who have been living as refugees at Constantinople since the murder of Proterius during Holy Week of that same year. It is a companion to Letter CLIV, written to the same recipients on October 11 — fifty-one days earlier — showing sustained pastoral engagement across the latter half of 457.

The letter’s pastoral register is genuine. Leo’s opening lament — the prophetic cry from Jeremiah about water for his head and a fountain of tears for his eyes — is not rhetorical flourish. The military imagery of Chapter II (standing firm in the courts of Jerusalem, fearing neither the enemy’s camps nor his battles) and the apostolic example of glorying in danger are the pastoral tools of a bishop consoling men who have lost their sees, their communities, and their safety. The warmth of the letter is real, and the reader should receive it as such. But the governing structure underneath the pastoral language is no less present for being expressed in gentler terms.

The most revealing detail of Chapter I is the word Leo uses to describe his own action: præveniens — going before, anticipating. Leo did not wait for the bishops to petition him before acting on their behalf with the emperor. He acted proactively, in anticipation of their complaint. The exiled bishops are present in Constantinople, within walking distance of the imperial court; Leo is in Rome. Yet it is Leo who sent agents to the emperor — Gerontius and Olympius, deployed at different times — before the bishops even appealed. The ordinary and immediate jurisdiction of the Roman pontiff is not activated by petition; it operates spontaneously, because the care of these bishops belongs to Leo’s office regardless of whether they have asked for it.

The closing of Chapter II makes the governing structure fully explicit. Leo directs the bishops to seek the emperor’s favor assiduously — but to do so “according to the letters I have sent.” Their intercession before the imperial court is to be conducted in alignment with Leo’s own prior correspondence. The bishops’ voice before the emperor at whose court they reside is ordered by reference to Leo’s letters. They are not independent actors pursuing their own restoration through their own advocacy; they are participants in a campaign whose terms Leo has already set in writing. The concentric structure of authority — Leo at the center, the bishops as reinforcing instruments of his prior written directions — is present even in a letter whose primary purpose is pastoral consolation. The warmth and the structure are not in tension; they are expressions of the same office, which encompasses the whole and leaves none of its members to act without coordination.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy