The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter II, from Pope Symmachus to Aeonius, Bishop of Arles

Synopsis: Symmachus instructs Aeonius of Arles to direct the bishop of Vienne to send representatives to Rome, so that the dispute between the two metropolitans over their respective rights — in which the Vienne bishop had obtained a ruling from Pope Anastasius II by stealth procurement — may be heard with both parties present and adjudicated by the Apostolic See on the basis of the statutes of his predecessors.

To Our most beloved brother Aeonius, Symmachus.

Chapter I: The Vienne Bishop Obtained a Ruling From Anastasius II by Stealth Procurement; The Case Is to Be Reheard at Rome

1. The report of Your beloved has indeed moved Us, in that it has declared: namely that, contrary to the rules of ecclesiastical order and against the venerable treatment of the canons, the bishop of the Church of Vienne, by stealth procurement, obtained certain things culpably from the Apostolic See — Our predecessor formerly presiding — if the complaint be true, what was frivolously obtained cannot hold effect; nor can anything new be ordained by Us, unless those things shall have shone forth which were established by Our fathers and predecessors in this case. Yet, lest We seem to have decreed something prejudicially in the absence of the other party, We have judged it more fitting to ordain that Your brotherhood, at an appropriate time, not delay sending here someone instructed concerning every aspect of the case, who may competently allege the truth of the cause before Us — so that, when all has been thoroughly examined, what is to be established may be sanctioned with the strength of deliberation.

Chapter II: The Bishop of Vienne Likewise to Send His Own Representative

2. We charge that Your beloved must also do this: that Our brother and fellow bishop, the prelate of the city of Vienne, also be admonished by messenger and writing — that, on the appointed days, he too direct his own man, who may competently set forth the allegations of his party — so that, with the suggestions readily presented from both sides, those things may be ordered which are to be observed in perpetuity. For he ever judges suspectly who appears to decide on the basis of what one party seems to want.

The Lord keep you safe, dearest brother! Given on the twelfth day before the Kalends of November, after the consulate of the most distinguished man Paulinus.

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter II opens what would become the Vienne dispute that occupies Letters II, III, IV, and ultimately VIII of Symmachus’s correspondence — the affair in which the bishop of Vienne (Avitus) had obtained from Pope Anastasius II a ruling that modified, in his favor, the older Leonine framework governing the Arles-Vienne relation. Aeonius of Arles, the metropolitan whose rights were abridged by Anastasius II’s ruling, brought the matter to Symmachus through the presbyter Crescentius. The present letter is Symmachus’s first response: he indicates that per subreptionem rulings cannot stand if the underlying claim is true, but that he will not rule without hearing both parties.

The reader should observe what this letter does and does not yet say. It does not yet annul the Anastasius II ruling — that comes in Letter III, when Symmachus has heard Avitus’s case and has determined that the Anastasian ruling was inconsistent with the older Apostolic discipline. What the present letter does is establish the procedural framework for review: both parties to send representatives, the case to be heard at Rome, the See’s decision to be made on the basis of what the predecessors had established. The letter is canonical rather than jurisdictional in the strict sense — it is regulating the form by which the substantive dispute will be adjudicated.

The substantive principle invoked, however, is itself jurisdictional. The pope cannot rule on the Vienne case by his own discretion; he must rule in continuity with the established discipline of the See as set forth by his predecessors. The reader should notice what this presupposes about how the Roman pontificate works. The See’s authority is not the personal authority of the man who occupies it at a given moment; it is the corporate authority of the office, exercised in continuity through successive occupants. A ruling that contradicts the settled discipline of predecessors — even a ruling by the immediate predecessor — is open to review by the successor on precisely that ground. This is what Letter III will make explicit: quemadmodum priorum statuta a sequentibus convenit violari? — “how is it fitting that the statutes of earlier popes should be violated by those who follow?” The continuity of the See’s discipline binds even the See itself.

The mechanism by which the Anastasius II ruling becomes reviewable is also worth attention. Symmachus identifies the ruling as having been obtained per subreptionem — by stealth procurement, the canonical-legal term for fraudulent representation. This is not merely a rhetorical accusation; it is the formal canonical ground on which papal grants are voidable. The principle that grants obtained by subreptio or obreptio do not bind the See is foundational to the operation of papal jurisdiction: the See’s grants depend on the truthful representation of the case, and a grant procured on a false basis is invalid from the start. By identifying the Anastasius II grant as subrepta, Symmachus is not so much overruling his predecessor as voiding a grant that was never validly obtained. This is the editorial framework within which the eventual annulment in Letter III will be issued — not a successor pope reversing his predecessor’s settled judgment, but a successor pope finding that no settled judgment had ever been validly procured.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy