The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter IV, from Pope Hilarius to Leontius, Veranus, and Victurus, Bishops

Synopsis: Hilarius delegates the dispute between Ingenuus of Ebredunum and Auxanius to three Gallic bishops, nullifying a subsequent ruling obtained from himself by deception, and decreeing that Cemelenum and Nicaea return to the governance of a single bishop as his predecessor Leo had defined.

Hilarus, pope, to his most beloved brothers Leontius, Veranus, and Victurus, bishops.

We are moved by the rationale of justice — which, though it ought to be guarded by all who hold right views, is especially not to be negligently ignored by the priests of the Lord, by whose institutions the rest are to be formed. Our brother and fellow bishop Ingenuus of Ebredunum, always supported by the honor of metropolitan of the province of the Maritime Alps, as the attached documents declare, reports that certain things were decreed by Us to his prejudice — at the request of Our brother and fellow bishop Auxanius — which ran counter to all defenses raised in this same cause. For once the reports which Our brother and fellow bishop Veranus had sent, together with the other priests of the province, to Our predecessor of holy memory were reviewed in Our judgment, and the response of the Apostolic See which had then been issued was made manifest, it was clear that nothing afterward should have been attempted — nor was it fitting that anything be established, to the injury of the synodal rules, by the deception which was recently perpetrated. For although even what was elicited from Us may be considered invalid — since it was reported that even the one who obtained it failed to execute it — nevertheless, lest We be moved by hatred or by favor (which ought not to have any place in the adjudication of causes), We delegate to your charity the investigation of the attached complaint — so that nothing may prevail against the venerable canons, nothing against the judgment of Our predecessor of holy memory, if it be established that anything has been obtained from Us by deception.

For We do not wish, dearest brothers, that the privileges of the churches — which must always be preserved — be confounded; nor do We permit a bishop of one province to hold rights in another’s. For by this the sanctions of holy traditions are no less violated than the Lord Himself is offended, the expectation of whose fruit from Our ministry is placed not in the breadth of regions but in the acquisition of souls. Therefore let Our brother and fellow bishop Ingenuus hold the pontifical authority of his province, concerning which he was long ago blamed by the Apostolic See for an illicit cession. And with all things preserved that the authority of Our predecessor of holy memory defined concerning the churches of the city of Cemelenum and the fortress of Nicaea, as We have said, let nothing harm the right of the churches — the fact that in one of the aforementioned places a bishop has recently been consecrated by the aforementioned brother (to exclude, as he alleged, another’s ambition). Rather let the form of the prescribed correction stand: that the aforementioned places, which ought not to have been divided between two bishops, return to the governance of a single bishop.

May God keep you safe, dearest brothers.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter IV is a delegation letter with unusually detailed background: Hilarius is asking three Gallic bishops to investigate a case whose earlier chapters he has already resolved in his own mind. The occasion is a jurisdictional dispute in the province of the Maritime Alps. Ingenuus was the metropolitan at Ebredunum; Auxanius had obtained papal rulings that appeared to transfer jurisdiction over Cemelenum and Nicaea to himself. The complication is that Auxanius obtained not one but two favorable rulings from Rome — the first from Leo, the second from Hilarius — and that the second was secured by misrepresenting the facts of the first. When Ingenuus finally appealed with the full documentary history, Hilarius recognized what had happened and is now reversing his own prior act.

The continuity argument governs the whole letter. Hilarius repeatedly invokes his predecessor’s judgment as the standard against which everything must be measured: the response of the Apostolic See which had then been issued (Leo’s ruling), the judgment of Our predecessor of holy memory, the authority of Our predecessor of holy memory defined. The reader should note what this pattern means in practice. Leo’s ruling is not a historical precedent that Hilarius may consult or revise at discretion; it is a binding act of the Apostolic See whose force continues into Hilarius’s pontificate. When Hilarius’s own subsequent ruling conflicts with Leo’s, it is Hilarius’s ruling that must yield — because Leo’s was issued properly and Hilarius’s was obtained by deception. The chain of papal authority is treated as cumulative: what one pope defines by legitimate process, his successor must preserve.

The delegation structure is worth attending to in its own right. Hilarius does not personally pronounce the final judgment in this letter. He delegates the investigation to Leontius, Veranus, and Victurus — but the delegation is constrained. The three bishops are told the outcome they must reach: nothing may prevail against the venerable canons; nothing against Leo’s judgment; Ingenuus’s metropolitan authority must hold; the division of the disputed places between two bishops must be reversed. This is the same delegation model Leo employed throughout the Gallic and Illyrian correspondence: Rome defines the outcome; Roman agents implement it; the delegated judges have investigative authority but not discretionary authority over the principle. The pattern is of jurisdiction exercised through subordinates, not of authority shared with them. Leontius here is the same Leontius of Arles whom Leo had designated in Letter X as the senior bishop of the province of Vienne — the Gallic ecclesiastical framework Leo established is still functioning as Hilarius’s instrument of governance.

The famous sentence on breadth of regions versus acquisition of souls deserves separate attention. It is placed precisely where Hilarius rejects Auxanius’s expansionist ambition, and it functions as the theological premise for the jurisdictional ruling that follows. The Lord’s ministry is measured in souls, not in territory; therefore ambitions to expand jurisdiction at the expense of another bishop’s province are not mere breaches of ecclesiastical custom but offenses against the very purpose for which the pastoral office exists. The principle applies with particular force within the framework of this letter: Auxanius’s attempt to enlarge his reach by annexing Cemelenum and Nicaea is condemned not only as a canonical irregularity but as a misunderstanding of what the episcopate is for.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy