Leo, bishop, to Neon, bishop of Ravenna.1
Chapter I: Children Taken Captive Before They Could Remember Whether They Were Baptized May Seek Baptism After Careful Examination
We have often strengthened the wavering hearts of our brothers amid the uncertainty of various difficult questions — guided by the Spirit of God, drawing the form of our response from the discipline of the holy Scriptures or from the rules of the Fathers. But lately a new and previously unheard-of kind of question has arisen in the synod.2
We have been informed by the report of certain brothers that some captives, freely returning to their homes — who had gone into captivity at an age when they could have had no firm knowledge of anything — are seeking the remedy of baptism. But whether they received the mystery of baptism and its sacraments, the ignorance of childhood prevents them from remembering; and so under this uncertainty of hidden memory their souls are being put at risk, since the grace is being withheld from them on the grounds that it is presumed already given. Since rightful doubt has thus arisen among some brothers about administering the sacraments of the Lord’s mystery, we received in the synodal assembly the form of this inquiry — and examining it with all diligence, we wished to treat it with careful reasoning, so that we might arrive at the truth more surely. What came to us through divine inspiration, the frequent assent of the brothers also confirmed.3
In the first place, then, we must take care that, while maintaining a certain appearance of caution, we do not incur the loss of souls needing regeneration. For who is so given over to suspicion that he would let what is true be denied simply because, when all clear evidence fails, nothing more remains than doubtful conjecture? Since neither does the person seeking regeneration remember having been baptized, nor can anyone else testify on his behalf whether he has been consecrated — there is nothing blameworthy here: for in this matter neither the one who is consecrated is guilty in his own conscience, nor is the one who consecrates.
We know well that it is an unforgivable crime whenever someone is compelled — following the practices condemned by the holy Fathers and used by heretics — to submit again to the washing that was once for all given for regeneration; for the apostolic teaching protests this, proclaiming one Lord, one faith, one baptism (Eph. 4:5). But in this case no such thing need be feared, since what is entirely unknown to have been done cannot be counted as repetition.4
Whenever such a case arises, therefore, examine it first with careful inquiry — and investigate over a sufficient period, unless the end of life is pressing near — whether there is anyone at all who can help resolve the uncertainty by his testimony. And when it has been established that the person truly needs the sacrament of baptism, nothing standing in the way except bare unverifiable suspicion, let him come without fear to receive the grace of which he knows no trace in himself. And let no one hesitate to open for him the door of salvation which he is not known ever before to have entered.
Chapter II: Those Baptized by Heretics Are Not to Be Rebaptized; They Receive the Holy Spirit Through the Episcopal Laying On of Hands
But if it has been established that someone was baptized by heretics, under no circumstances is the sacrament of regeneration to be repeated for him. Rather, only what was lacking there is to be supplied: through the episcopal laying on of hands he is to receive the power of the Holy Spirit — which heretics cannot confer, since the Holy Spirit, as the Lord said, blows where he wills, and his gifts are the property of Catholic priests, not of those who stand outside the Church.5
This ruling, dearest brother, I am making known in general to all of you,6 lest in fearing more than is just, the mercy of God be denied to those who seek salvation.
Given on the ninth day before the Kalends of November, in the consulship of Majorian Augustus.7
Footnotes
- ↩ Neon was bishop of Ravenna — the city that served as the administrative capital of the Western Empire in this period. His see was one of the most important in the Italian peninsula. The pastoral problem he presents arises from the same barbarian captivities that generated Letter CLIX to Niceta of Aquileia (March 21, 458): children seized in infancy during the Hunnic or Vandal raids who have returned without any memory of whether they received baptism.
- ↩ The synod here is a local gathering of Italian bishops that presented the question to Leo for resolution. The question then went to Rome; the ruling comes back from Rome to the whole episcopate through Neon. The sequence is the consistent pattern of the corpus: difficult pastoral questions flow up to the Apostolic See; the ruling flows back down through the regional bishop to the broader Church. Compare Letters CXLIX (Basil of Antioch directed to circulate the ruling throughout the eastern episcopate) and CL (Euxitheus of Thessalonica directed to circulate it throughout Illyricum).
- ↩ The phrase per divinam inspirationem — “through divine inspiration” — describes the source of the ruling. The sequence is precise: the synodal brothers confirmed what came through divine inspiration, not the other way around. Their assent demonstrates the ruling and ratifies it; it does not constitute or generate it. The inspiration precedes and grounds the collegial confirmation. This is a small but significant moment: Leo claims that the resolution of a disputed pastoral-canonical question flows from divine inspiration operative in his office — a claim in the same register as those visible throughout this cluster, where Chalcedon’s definitions are said to have “proceeded from heavenly decrees” and the Apostolic See is described as “founded in faith and stability.” The ruling on baptism is as much a product of the teaching office as the condemnation of Eutyches.
- ↩ This is a careful canonical distinction: the prohibition on rebaptism applies when it is known that baptism was received. Where the fact of prior baptism cannot be established, the sacrament is not being repeated — it is being administered for the first and only known time. The same reasoning would later underlie the Church’s use of conditional baptism (“If you are not yet baptized, I baptize you…”) in cases of uncertainty.
- ↩ The theological principle here is consistent with the tradition inherited from Augustine against the Donatists: heretical baptism is valid as baptism (because administered in the name of the Trinity) but lacks the sanctifying gift of the Holy Spirit, which is given only within the communion of the Church through the bishop’s imposition of hands. Leo applies the same principle set out for Niceta of Aquileia in Letter CLIX, Chapter VII. The requirement of episcopal imposition of hands — not simply priestly — is significant: confirmation is treated as specifically a bishop’s act, not a presbyteral one. This connects to the consistent ecclesiology of the corpus: the Catholic bishop, in communion with Rome, is the essential minister through whom the Spirit’s gifts are properly conveyed. The phrase “Catholic priests” at the close includes both bishops and priests in the general sense, but the specific act — the laying on of hands — is reserved to the bishop.
- ↩ The phrase omnibus vobis generaliter intimandum esse credidimus — “I am making known in general to all of you” — promulgates the ruling not to Neon alone but through him to the whole episcopate in his circle. The same pattern of general promulgation through a regional bishop appears in Letters CXLIX (Basil of Antioch to circulate throughout the eastern episcopate), CL (Euxitheus of Thessalonica to circulate throughout Illyricum), and CLIX (Niceta of Aquileia to circulate to his provincial colleagues). The Roman ruling reaches the broad episcopate through the regional bishop as its instrument of distribution: Rome rules; the bishop transmits; the Church receives and observes.
- ↩ October 24, 458. The Admonitio in Epistolam Sequentem that follows this letter in the Patrologia Latina is Migne’s editorial preface to Letter CLXVII (to Rusticus of Narbonne), discussing the historical context of the Hunnic invasions and the pastoral problems they generated. It is not part of Leo’s text.
Historical Commentary