The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter CLXXI, from Pope Leo to Timothy, Catholic Bishop of Alexandria

Synopsis: Leo congratulates Timothy on his election as the new Catholic Bishop of Alexandria, rejoicing that the whole Church of the Lord rejoices with him; he urges Timothy to reconcile those who have resisted the truth through gentleness rather than force, imitating the good shepherd; and he directs him to remain vigilant against Nestorian and Eutychian error, and to write frequently to Leo so that mutual communication may confirm their shared charity.

Leo, bishop, to Timothy, Catholic bishop of the Church of Alexandria.

Chapter I: Leo Congratulates Timothy on His Election and Urges Him to Reconcile the Strayed With Gentleness

It is clearly apparent under the splendor of the apostolic sentence that for those who love God, all things cooperate toward the good (Rom. 8:28); and by the dispensation of divine piety, where adversity is received, there prosperity is also given. This the experiences of the Alexandrian Church demonstrate, in which the modesty and endurance of the humble has gathered many treasures of patience — for the Lord is near to those who are troubled in heart and humble in spirit, and he will save them (Ps. 33:19); the faith of the illustrious prince being glorified in all things, through whom the right hand of the Lord has done great deeds (Ps. 118:16), so that the reproach of Antichrist might no longer sit upon the throne of the blessed Fathers: whose impiety harmed none more than himself — for even if he drove some into the society of his crime, he himself has been stained with inexpiable bloodguilt. Therefore concerning what the election of the clergy and people and all the faithful has accomplished in your brotherhood through the instinct of faith, I write back that the whole Church of the Lord rejoices with me; and I desire that the goodness of divine piety may confirm this with multiplied grace — so that through your devotion serving in all things, you may also earnestly acquire for reconciliation to God through the Church’s prayers those who have in some degree resisted the truth, and as a diligent ruler join them to the mystery of the Catholic faith, whose solidity admits of no division: imitating that true and pious shepherd who laid down his life for his sheep (John 10:11), and did not drive back the one straying sheep with blows, but carried it back to his own sheepfold on his own shoulders (Luke 15:5).

Chapter II: Timothy Must Guard Against Heresy and Write Frequently to Leo

Let your charity therefore act, dearest brother, so that no trace of Nestorian doctrine or Eutychian error may be found among God’s people — for no one can lay a foundation other than what has been laid, which is Christ Jesus (1 Cor. 3:11): who could not reconcile the whole world to God the Father unless he had taken all people up in the truth of our flesh through the regeneration of faith. Whenever opportunities for writing arise which your brotherhood uses — as you have necessarily and customarily done, in directing writings to us through our sons Daniel the presbyter and Timothy the deacon of your ordination — so at every time persevere in this duty, and let signs of the progress of peace be sent as often as possible to our solicitude: so that through mutual exchanges we may perceive that the charity of God has been poured out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us (Rom. 5:5).

Given on the fifteenth day before the Kalends of September, in the consulship of Magnus and Apollonius.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter CLXXI, dated August 18, 460, is the final letter in the Alexandrian correspondence series — the last of more than two dozen letters written by Leo in response to the crisis that began with the murder of Proterius during Holy Week 457. It is addressed to Timothy Salofaciolus, the newly elected orthodox Catholic Bishop of Alexandria, whose installation represents the achievement of everything Leo’s three-year campaign had sought. The letter is warm, brief, and structurally precise — a new relationship being established on exactly the terms Leo has consistently defined.

Chapter I’s congratulation is carefully grounded in canonical fact. Leo notes that Timothy’s election was accomplished by “the clergy and people and all the faithful” acting through “the instinct of faith” — the standard canonical process Leo has insisted on throughout the corpus, from Letter X’s ruling on the province of Vienne through the Inquiry I response in Letter CLXVII. The election is legitimate because it met the canonical conditions Rome has defined; Leo’s recognition is the confirmation of that legitimacy. The distinction is precise: the Egyptian bishops and people performed the canonical act; Leo confirms that the canonical conditions were met. This is the ordinary and immediate jurisdiction of the Roman pontiff expressed in its most positive form — not correction or direction but ratification of what has been rightly done.

The pastoral instruction of Chapter I is notable in its register. Leo’s consistent firmness in doctrine — visible across dozens of letters that refuse any negotiation on Chalcedon — here gives way to an equally firm pastoralism in implementation. Timothy is to reconcile those who resisted the truth not with blows but with the good shepherd’s method: carrying the strayed sheep back on his own shoulders. The imitatio Christi of the good shepherd is not a softening of Leo’s doctrinal positions but their pastoral expression: the solidity of the Catholic faith that admits no division is the very solidity from which the gentleness of reconciliation flows. The shepherd seeks the lost sheep precisely because the sheepfold is firm.

Chapter II’s direction to write frequently to Leo’s solicitude establishes at once the same reporting relationship Leo had built with every major eastern correspondent across this correspondence. The new bishop of the second see in Christendom is from his first communication being placed within the governed structure of the universal Church: the flow of information from Alexandria to Rome is not a courtesy but an ordinary duty of the episcopal office as Leo understands it. The named carriers — Daniel the presbyter and Timothy the deacon — confirm that the relationship is already operational; Timothy has already written to Leo through these men, and Leo is directing that this continue. The Alexandrian correspondence does not end with the resolution of the crisis; it becomes the regular communication of a bishop in communion with the Apostolic See reporting as he is directed to do.

The arc from Letter CXLV to Letter CLXXI — from Leo’s first tentative approach to an untested emperor about a newly murdered bishop to this warm recognition of the man duly elected to replace the usurper — is the fullest demonstration in the Leonine corpus of what the ordinary and immediate jurisdiction of the Roman pontiff looks like when exercised over a sustained crisis. It was not exercised through a council. It was not exercised through conciliar consensus or patriarchal agreement. It was exercised through sustained, coordinated, patient governance — through letters to emperors and patriarchs and vicars and legates and bishops and exiles — until the result the Apostolic See had defined as the only acceptable one was achieved. And then a warm letter to the man installed to occupy the see, directing him to write frequently. The solicitude never stops; it simply turns to the next obligation the office imposes.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy