The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter CXL, from Pope Leo to Julian, Bishop of Cos

Synopsis: Leo acknowledges Julian’s report of Dioscorus’s death, sees it as providential — the removal of falsehood’s champion making the correction of the erring easier — directs Julian to make wise use of Marcian’s royal favor by offering timely suggestions for the Church’s good, and asks Julian to keep Leo informed about the progress of the Alexandrian people so that Leo may rejoice in their advancement as he does in the peace of the Eastern peoples.

Leo, bishop, to Julian, Bishop of Cos.

Dioscorus’s Death Makes the Correction of Error Easier; Leo Directs Julian to Use Marcian’s Favor and Keep Leo Informed About Alexandria

I write back to acknowledge receipt of your dilection’s letters, brought to me by our son Gerentius — and to say how greatly it pleased me that you have not let slip the opportunity of familiar correspondence, which ought fittingly to be frequent between us on every occasion: so that concerning those things which pertain to Our care for the state of the Church, we may have nothing unknown, nothing uncertain. In this solicitude, the divine protections never fail — permitting the simulations of hypocrites nothing, and confounding their hidden wickedness through its manifest destruction.

For although all the machinations of the heretics were long since shattered and the right hand of truth stripped them of all their forces, now — with Dioscorus dying away, as you report — they have fallen into deeper ruin: and with the instigator of treachery removed, certain unstable and foolish souls have what to fear but not what to follow. Hence the correction of the erring is more easily to be hoped for, and the preaching of the Gospel will be more effective — now that the defender of falsehood has been extinguished: with the piety of the most Christian prince cooperating in this remedy, whose devotion always maintains a holy watch for the advancement of all the Catholic faith.

I therefore exhort and admonish your brotherhood to make wise and gracious use of the royal favor and charity — and not to delay in offering timely suggestions about whatever you judge will be profitable: since we have proved by many experiments that the faith of the most glorious Augustus is such that he judges himself to be governing his kingdom best precisely when he has labored most earnestly for the integrity of the Church. If you learn anything about the progress of the Alexandrian people, let us know — so that as we rejoice in the peace of the Eastern peoples, we may likewise rejoice in the advancement of this people as well.

Dated the eighth day before the Ides of December, in the consulship of the most illustrious Aetius and Studius.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter CXL is a short operational letter to Julian of Cos, written on the news of Dioscorus’s death in exile. Its theological content is minimal — the main point is pastoral-strategic: with Dioscorus gone, the correction of the Eutychian remnant should be easier, and Julian should press this moment by making wise use of Marcian’s imperial favor. Leo sees Dioscorus’s death as providential: the defender of falsehood is extinguished, the unstable have what to fear but not what to follow, the imperial partner remains devoted to the faith’s advancement.

The opening formula — “concerning those things that pertain to Our care for the state of the Church, we may have nothing unknown, nothing uncertain” — is the universal solicitude applied as a practical claim. Leo’s care extends to Alexandria’s state; Julian’s reporting is what makes that care operative. The mechanism is by now familiar throughout the post-Chalcedon correspondence: Leo identifies the concern, Julian provides the intelligence, Leo directs the response. What CXL adds is the explicit statement that nothing is to be unknown or uncertain to Leo about the Church’s state anywhere — the breadth of the claim matched to the particular occasion of Dioscorus’s death and the consequent uncertainty about Alexandria’s future.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy