The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter Fragment, from Pope Felix III to Andreas, Bishop of Thessalonica

Synopsis: The opening fragment of a letter from Felix to Andreas of Thessalonica — preserved only in the Verdun codex — in which Felix gladly embraces Andreas’s desire to come to the communion of the See of blessed Peter, but wishes this reintegration with the Catholic faith to be firm on every side, as the caution of orthodox truth demands.

Felix to Andreas, bishop of Thessalonica.

Felix Embraces the Desire for Communion but Requires Firmness on Every Side

Since We desire that full reintegration with the Catholic faith be confirmed, We gladly embrace the solicitude of your love, by which you desire to come to the communion of the See of blessed Peter; but We would wish it — as the caution of orthodox truth demands — to be firm on every side.

[The remainder of the letter is not preserved.]

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

The Andreas fragment, though brief, is a significant witness to the operation of the Illyrian vicariate during the Acacian Schism. The see of Thessalonica had been the Roman vicariate’s seat since Damasus and Siricius in the fourth century; Leo renewed the arrangement with Anastasius (Letters VI, XIII, XIV), and Hilarius and Simplicius continued it. Through the Schism, the Illyrian bishops were caught between the Apostolic See, to which they belonged canonically through the vicariate, and Constantinople, which lay within their geographical and political orbit. Imperial pressure under Zeno pushed some Illyrian bishops toward Acacian communion; others resisted; the situation on the ground was fluid and is now only partially recoverable.

What the Andreas fragment preserves is one moment in this history. Andreas, bishop of Thessalonica, is approaching Felix seeking restoration to communion with the Apostolic See. Felix’s response is warm but conditional: the solicitude that drives Andreas back to Rome is welcomed, but the restoration must be complete and firm on every side. What precisely Felix required — the specific conditions for Andreas’s return — the fragment does not preserve. But the opening tells the reader what the whole letter would have been: a guarded welcome that insists restoration be full restoration, with no equivocation and no partial measures.

The pattern the fragment exhibits is consistent with the whole shape of the Acacian correspondence. Felix’s dealings with Flavitas in Letter XIII, with Thalasius in Letter XIV, and with Vetranio in Letter XV all operate on the same principle: Rome is always ready to receive those who return, but the return must be on the terms Catholic truth requires, not on partial or diplomatic terms that leave the substance unresolved. The Andreas fragment is a small window into the same pattern operating in the Illyrian context, where the Roman-vicariate relationship added a further layer to the already complex question of Eastern reconciliation.

The preservation of the fragment in the Verdun codex alone is itself of interest. The Carolingian canonical collections drew heavily on earlier Italian materials and preserved many texts that had not reached the main Roman canonical transmission. That this Andreas fragment survives only there suggests that the fuller letter may have been lost early — possibly during the Schism itself, possibly in the centuries following — and that what we have is what a single scribe in a single place happened to copy from an earlier source. The reader encountering the fragment today is reading a document that almost did not survive at all.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy