Simplicius, pope, to Acacius, bishop of Constantinople.
Simplicius Charges Acacius to Oppose Timothy Aelurus’s Push for a Universal Council, Arguing That Roman Doctrine Is Not to Be Disputed and That Synods Are Called Only for Genuinely New Questions
As far as has been made known by the report of presbyters and of monks serving the Lord from various monasteries, the devil is again disturbing the Churches of the Lord: so that, with the Alexandrian priest excluded, a heretic — one universally condemned — is said to have occupied that same place from which he had been driven; and further, with certain persons favoring him, to have dared to press on to Constantinople, so that the city of the Christian princes, pre-eminent in devotion to the truth of the Catholic faith, and the Christian people attentive in defense of religion, might be troubled by the depravity of heretics which had already been laid to rest. But the mercy of God — whose cause this is — has not failed: so that Timothy, who had been justly separated from the universal Church by priestly sentences and imperial constitutions, was not permitted to approach either the Church of Your Charity or the thresholds of the homes of the faithful. And We have learned that he is threatening new assemblies on his behalf, supposing that what the universal authority has decreed concerning him can be undone.1
Hence, since the doctrine of Our predecessors of holy memory stands — against which it is impious to dispute2 — whoever seems to think rightly does not need to be taught by new assertions; all things are already plain and complete, by which one deceived by heretics can be instructed, or one to be planted in the Lord’s vineyard be taught. Having implored the faith of the most clement prince, cause the call for holding a synod to be rejected; and let no suggestion lag at the ears of the Christian emperor, because Christ is the strength of his salvation and of his kingdom itself.
Therefore, together with the aforementioned presbyters and monks, supplicate his piety in Our name as well at the proper moment, and present this legation on Our behalf to his clemency, that nothing be slyly introduced. Let him be instructed by the prayers of all alike, lest the enemy, through public occupations, contrive any snares against the peace of the Church. Let him see to it that the Church of Alexandria be restored to its integrity, and let him drive from the see of the blessed evangelist Mark the enemy and parricide; and let him with dignity inquire — in the innermost chambers of his court — how the integrity of the Catholic faith is to be preserved. And lest perhaps these matters be corrupted by some fraud of the enemies of the faith — although they can be found in the archives of your church — We have nevertheless sent copies, which you will prepare to present to his piety.
For well known and celebrated among all powers are those letters which My predecessor of holy memory, Leo, wrote to the consultation of Leo of august memory,3 and with what veneration they were received, let them recognize — that it may thus appear (as We trust) that he is the imitator of the faith of the one whose more worthy successor in empire he is, by God’s favor; and let him consider as written to himself whatever has been handed down in pious reading to the princes before him. For that is perpetuity, and the posterity to be propagated through the succession of the kingdom: if in the successor is found what descends from the predecessor.
I exhort you therefore, dearest brother, that by every means the attempts of the perverse to hold a synod be resisted. A synod has never been called except when something new has arisen in depraved opinions, or something ambiguous in the assertion of doctrines — so that, for those deliberating together, the authority of priestly deliberation might illuminate any obscurity:4 as the impiety first of Arius, then of Nestorius, and finally of Dioscorus and Eutyches, compelled [synods] to be held. And (may the mercy of Christ our God and Savior avert it!) it must be made known that it is an abomination — against the sentences of the priests of the Lord of the whole world and the rulers of both realms — to restore the condemned guilty, to recall exiles, or to absolve those relegated in the cause of a nefarious conspiracy. Therefore (as must often be repeated) humbly present all these things to the most clement ears. God will without doubt come to your aid — the God in whose hand the king’s heart is held established (Prov. 21:1) — that the king may know no other source for his power.
Given on the fifth day before the Ides of January [January 9], the alternative reading being the sixth day before the Kalends of February [January 27], A.D. 477.5
Footnotes
- ↩ Timothy Aelurus had been recalled from exile by Basiliscus in 475 and restored to Alexandria (the situation Letter IV protests). After Zeno’s restoration in August 476, Timothy’s position became precarious, but he remained in Alexandria and pressed for a universal council that would vindicate his status and reverse the Chalcedonian condemnation. Timothy would die in July 477, which dates this letter’s concern to the window between Zeno’s return and Timothy’s death — approximately January 477 by the dateline. This is the first of Simplicius’s many letters to Acacius of Constantinople, who had been elected in 471 and had, during Basiliscus’s usurpation, refused communion with the Encyclical (winning Rome’s trust). The correspondence that begins here would, within a decade after Simplicius’s death, become the Acacian Schism.
- ↩ The Latin is contra quam nefas est disputare — “against which it is impious to dispute.” Nefas is among the strongest words in Latin religious-legal vocabulary: it designates not merely something forbidden but something that violates divine order, a sacrilege. To call dispute against Roman doctrine nefas is to put such dispute in the category of religious violation, not merely disobedience. Simplicius is therefore asserting the strongest possible claim about the bindingness of the doctrine handed down from his predecessors in the Roman see: it is not simply authoritative but untouchable. The same nefas language appears in Leo’s correspondence when defining the limits of what may be revisited (Letter X, Letter XXVIII), and Simplicius deploys it in the same register: against Roman definitions, legitimate argument cannot be made.
- ↩ The reference is to the correspondence between Pope Leo I and the Emperor Leo I following the murder of Proterius at Alexandria in 457 and the Eastern disturbances that followed Timothy Aelurus’s illicit ordination. Pope Leo wrote at length to the Emperor Leo defending the Chalcedonian settlement and urging action against Timothy (see Letters CXLII–CLXII in the Leo corpus, especially the “Second Tome” and the extended correspondence around the Alexandrian crisis of 457–460). Simplicius’s claim here is that this correspondence is not a dated exchange between one pope and one emperor but a continuing authority that the present emperor — Zeno — must consider as addressed to himself. The argument treats papal correspondence with predecessor emperors as binding on successor emperors, much as Simplicius will treat the doctrine of predecessor popes as binding on himself and Acacius.
- ↩ Simplicius here articulates a principle that governs the Roman understanding of when councils are legitimately called. A synod — even a universal one — has a specific function: to resolve new questions or to clarify genuine ambiguity. It is not called to reopen what has already been decided. Simplicius’s list of the precedents (Arius, Nestorius, Dioscorus, Eutyches) shows the pattern: each time, a new heresy had arisen requiring conciliar determination. The claim here is therefore structural: since nothing new has arisen (Timothy Aelurus’s position is not a new heresy but the continuation of a condemned one), no new synod is justified. The principle preserves the finality of prior Roman and conciliar definitions: what Rome has taught and the Church has received cannot be subjected to a fresh council’s re-examination. Compare Leo’s nulla penitus disputatione cujusquam retractationis admissa in the pre-Chalcedonian correspondence (the principle Simplicius invoked in Letter IV against Basiliscus’s Encyclical). The two principles work together: Rome’s definitions cannot be reconsidered, and councils cannot be summoned to reconsider them.
- ↩ January 9 or January 27, 477 — the letter belongs to early 477, during the months between Zeno’s return to power (August 476) and Timothy Aelurus’s death (July 477). The two date readings (quinto idus Januarii vs. vi cal. Februarias) are both preserved in the manuscript tradition; the January 9 reading is supported by the main PL text, the January 27 reading by variant manuscripts. The dating year is established by the historical content: Timothy is still alive, Zeno is restored, Acacius is in communion with Rome and cooperating against the heretics.
Historical Commentary