The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter V, Libellus from the Alexandrian Apocrisiarii to the Roman Legation

Synopsis: Libellus presented in 497 by the Alexandrian apocrisiarii at Constantinople to Pope Anastasius II’s legates, petitioning that the Alexandrian profession of faith and the diptychs of Dioscorus, Timothy Aelurus, and Peter Mongus be referred to the pope for judgment — the legates having declined to decide the question without explicit papal mandate.

To the most glorious and most excellent patrician Festus, and to the venerable bishops Cresconius and Germanus, sent from the city of Rome together with his power in legation to the most clement and Christ-loving Emperor Anastasius — Dioscorus presbyter of the venerable church of Alexandria, and Chaeremon lector, serving as the apocrisiarii of the same church.

Chapter I: The Petrine Concord of Rome and Alexandria; The Roman Bishop’s Designation of the Alexandrian Archbishop in Ambiguous Matters

1. The venerable churches of Rome and Alexandria have not only preserved the right and immaculate faith ever since the saving word was preached among them, but also in the divine ministry have always preserved concord. For since by one and the same was thrown the foundation of faith in both — we mean the most blessed Apostle Peter, of whom in all things the holy Evangelist Mark stood forth as the imitator — so it was, that whenever it might happen that certain councils of bishops were celebrated in ambiguous matters, the most holy one who presided over the Roman church would designate the most reverend archbishop of the city of Alexandria, that he might take up the care of his own place.

Chapter II: The Schism Attributed to Nestorian Translators of Leo’s Letters; The Earlier Alexandrian Legation to Rome

2. But the enemy of the human race, to whom good things are hateful, who always rages with impious fury for our destruction, was not loth to sow tares between the two through his own satellites, that he might bring about discord in so great a unity. For when Eutyches the most impious was sensing and attempting to teach against the faith which had been preached in the most blessed apostles, it happened around that same time that Leo, then prelate of the Apostolic See, sent letters to the Council of Chalcedon. The translators of these letters were those who had at that time been followers of the Nestorian heresy together with Theodoret, bishop of the city of Cyrus: and the aforementioned letters are demonstrated to stand against that faith which was set forth by the venerable three hundred and eighteen fathers, and they furnished no small occasions to those who defend the blasphemies of the same most nefarious Nestorius, so that they might construct more freely [the claim] that the same Nestorius held nothing perverse. By these causes therefore our God-loving people was offended, and judged that the Latin discourse also contained a sense similar to the Greek translation, and divided itself from the unity of the Roman church. And not less did the Roman pontiff also, judging that we had conspired against the faith handed down from the most blessed apostles, suspend himself from our communion.

3. Nevertheless, wishing to satisfy his sanctity that we hold that faith which the prince of the apostles, Peter, and his disciple the most blessed Mark believed, and which afterwards the three hundred and eighteen venerable pontiffs set forth, our church took care to send legates to the city of Rome. But there a certain man of our city was found who dissented from the right faith and was alien from it on diverse grounds — who appears to have done this, that no opportunity might be given for the receiving of the legates: who, not even being admitted to the face of the salutation, returned without any effect.

Chapter III: Photinus’s Account from Thessalonica; The Petition to the Roman Legates

4. But because not long ago Photinus the religious deacon of the holy church of Thessalonica joined with us in words about the peace of the churches, and said that he had a short time before been sent by the most holy Archbishop Andrew of the church of Thessalonica to the Roman pontiff Anastasius, and was affirming concerning these things which gravely offend us, that satisfaction had been made him concerning the translation of the letter by the aforesaid prelate of the Roman church — that, namely, errors were corroborated in the translation of the letter, but that the Latin letter itself stood forth as set forth in accordance with the faith of the three hundred and eighteen holy fathers; and besides this he reported that certain things had been said in the person of the same prelate, which pertained to the censure of those things which had been put into the translation, and to those who had attempted to break those errors, and to the satisfaction of those who do not neglect to keep the right and immaculate faith.

5. Being abundantly healed by these things, and desiring that the former concord be restored, we wished also to be taught from you, if those things are true which Photinus the religious deacon had reported to us, and we desired to meet your sanctity and have a conversation about all these things. And your sanctity has deigned to teach us not once but frequently that the errors interspersed in the interpretation of the letter were not conceived in the Latin text. Wherefore we have besought you that you would receive the confession of our faith, on whose behalf we discharge the legation of our venerable church — which faith also the most holy archbishop proclaimed everywhere, and received the rescripts of all approving — that, if you should also see your holy church to agree with this faith, you would order satisfaction to be made to us, so that, the scandals being removed from the midst, both the venerable Roman and Alexandrian churches may return to the former unity.

Chapter IV: The Profession of Faith — Nicaea, Constantinople, Ephesus, and the Twelve Chapters of Cyril

6. This confession of faith we have offered to you, containing thus from the evangelical and apostolic proclamations, by divine inspiration, the only true and right faith — which the three hundred and eighteen venerable fathers gathered at the Synod of Nicaea set forth; which also the one hundred and fifty equally venerable pontiffs who came together at the royal city followed. This also was followed by the fathers gathered at Ephesus, with the consent also of the most holy pope of the Apostolic See, Celestine, who condemned the sacrilegious Nestorius, prefixing a penalty against those who should attempt to set forth another faith — which Nestorius we also, together with Eutyches as sensing things contrary to those said above, condemn with the punishment of anathema, receiving those twelve chapters which Cyril of venerable memory, formerly archbishop of the church of Alexandria, wrote.

And we confess the only-begotten Son of God and God, who according to truth was made man, our Lord Jesus Christ — consubstantial with the Father according to the divinity, and the same one consubstantial with us according to the humanity: who descended and was incarnate of the Holy Spirit from Mary the Virgin, the Theotokos, that is, the Mother of God — one Son existing, not two. For we say that of one only-begotten Son of God are both the miracles and the sufferings, which He sustained in the flesh willingly for us. But those who divide or confound, or introduce some phantasy, we by no means receive: because that incarnation, which the Mother of God brought forth from herself according to truth, did not produce an addition to the Son. For the Trinity remained, even with the Word of God, who is one of the Trinity, made incarnate. These things therefore we have written, not innovating in the faith, but desiring to make satisfaction to you for the sake of concord. And every one who senses or shall sense otherwise, whether now or at any time, in any place or in any council, we strike with the punishment of anathema — but especially Nestorius and Eutyches and all who assent to them.

Chapter V: The Diptychs Question — The Legates Decline to Decide Without Papal Mandate

7. Your reverence therefore, receiving our faith, asserted that he would refer it to the prelate of the Roman church, Anastasius — and was reporting that he stood ready to make satisfaction to those whom we should send to him for this cause. He also asserted that against this faith Dioscorus, Timothy, and Peter, formerly archbishops of our city, had sensed, and that their names ought not to be reckoned in the diptychs. We on the contrary demanded that either persons be brought against them who would maintain and demonstrate such things; or, if none could be found who could convict them, that he would acquiesce when we had made satisfaction on their behalf — demonstrating and approving that our aforesaid fathers and archbishops Timothy, Dioscorus, and Peter had held this faith, taught it, and handed it on to all whom they had instructed. But your sanctity refused, saying that you had not been instructed by the pontiff of the Apostolic See to make this question.

Chapter VI: The Petition to Pope Anastasius II and Witness Before the Last Judgment

8. For the sake of this matter we adjure you before our great God and Savior Jesus Christ, who was incarnate and born of the holy Mother of God Mary the Virgin, who freely approves and receives the concordant glorification and service of the faithful, and by His holy angels, and by this same immaculate faith which is concerning Him: that, coming to the city of Rome with the Lord’s favor, you may offer this little charter to the pontiff of the Apostolic See Anastasius — which has been offered to you in the person of the holy church of Alexandria — that his sanctity, reading it again, may deign to make manifest what shall please him, either by letters given to our most holy archbishop, or through some go-between. For when by his sanctity the confession of right faith, which has been established by the blessed fathers, has been preserved, we profess ourselves ready to send legates to the city of Rome who shall act on behalf of the unity of the holy churches of God.

9. We trust in our Lord Jesus Christ, that, His blessedness consenting to this faith, according to those things which are placed in the response, he may regard our peoples also as his own and bear solicitude for their governance, desiring according to God to be approved as useful to all. We have retained a copy of this little charter with us, holding it necessary, if any delay should occur which would prevent the unity of the holy churches from being effected, at that glorious coming of our Lord Jesus Christ from the heavens, when He shall come to judge the living and the dead, before His tribunal, where there is no acceptance of persons, to assist with this for the refutation of those who have neglected the unity of the holy churches.

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Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter V is not a letter of Anastasius II but a libellus offered to his legates at Constantinople in 497 by the Alexandrian apocrisiarii. It is included in Thiel’s edition of the Anastasian corpus because it documents what the Roman legation received during the same mission that bore Letter I to the Emperor Anastasius. The reader should approach the document with two facts firmly in mind. First, the apocrisiarii are not Catholics in communion with Rome; they are the resident representatives at Constantinople of Patriarch Athanasius II of Alexandria, the successor of Peter Mongus, working from within the Henoticon-aligned Alexandrian church. Second, what they are asking the Roman legates to do — and through them, what they are asking Pope Anastasius II to do — is to rehabilitate the Alexandrian patriarchs Dioscorus II, Timothy Aelurus, and Peter Mongus as orthodox, restore their names to the diptychs, and accept a doctrinal formula that pointedly omits both the Council of Chalcedon and Leo’s Tome. The libellus reads, on its surface, as a remarkably warm Eastern recognition of Roman authority. On careful reading, it is something more complicated: a sophisticated Henoticon-aligned petition that uses the rhetoric of Petrine concord and Roman authority to reach a substantive doctrinal end Rome did not accept and would not accept until the schism was finally closed in 519 on entirely different terms.

That having been said, the document contains primacy material of genuine value, and it is worth identifying carefully what holds up under close reading and what does not. The opening of Chapter I asserts that the foundation of faith was thrown in both Rome and Alexandria by Peter (Mark in Alexandria being his disciple and imitator) and that, as a consequence, the Roman bishop in ambiguous matters would designate the Alexandrian archbishop to take care of his own place. The historical accuracy of the second claim is open to debate — there is no clear independent evidence of formal Roman designation of Alexandrian archbishops as a regular practice — but the rhetorical move is what matters here. The apocrisiarii, addressing a papal legation, are framing the historic Rome-Alexandria relation in the strongest available form of Roman precedence: the Alexandrian patriarch acted as the Roman bishop’s designate. Even from a Henoticon-aligned party, the available rhetorical register is one in which Roman precedence is not contested but invoked.

The same holds in Chapter II, where Leo I is named as sedis apostolicae praesul, the prelate of the Apostolic See, and his letters to Chalcedon are presented as the touchstone — even if the apocrisiarii are recasting the Greek translation of those letters as the source of difficulty rather than the doctrine itself. The reader should note that this rhetorical move actually conserves Leo’s authority. The complaint is not that Leo erred but that Leo’s words were corrupted in transmission. The apocrisiarii are not willing to attack the prelate of the Apostolic See directly; they prefer to blame the translators. Whether the historical claim is accurate is one question; that the rhetorical strategy is to preserve Roman authority is another.

Chapter VI’s inclusion of annuente quoque sedis apostolicae papa sanctissimo Coelestino at Ephesus is editorially significant. Per Thiel’s apparatus, this clause was not in the original Henoticon and has been added by the apocrisiarii to capture the favor of the Apostolic See. It is rhetoric, but it is rhetoric in the Roman direction: the Alexandrian formula being offered is being garnished with explicit recognition of papal authority at the third ecumenical council. The Roman legates are being assured that, even on this formula, the Apostolic See’s role at Ephesus is being acknowledged. This is not the operative recognition of Chalcedon and Leo’s Tome — those are passed over in silence — but it is real, additional rhetorical work being done in the Roman direction by an Alexandrian party that did not have to do it.

The document’s most striking moment for the project’s purposes is in Chapter V. Confronted with the Alexandrian petition concerning the diptychs of Dioscorus, Timothy Aelurus, and Peter Mongus, the papal legates refuse to render judgment because — in the words the apocrisiarii themselves record — non sibi fuisse praeceptum ab apostolicae sedis antistite de his facere quaestionem: they had not been instructed by the pontiff of the Apostolic See to make this question. The legates were bishops, accredited representatives of the See, present at Constantinople for the very purpose of conducting this negotiation, and faced with a coherent Eastern petition that demanded a response. They could conceivably have responded. They refused. They refused on the principle that legates exercise the authority delegated to them and no broader; that the diptychs question, regarding the orthodoxy of three deceased Eastern patriarchs, was not within their delegation; and that decision-rights on it remained with the pope. The reader should observe that this principle is being invoked here not by Rome unilaterally but by Rome’s legates in the field, in real time, in response to a substantive Eastern request — and that the Eastern petitioners record the refusal without surprise. They neither contest the principle nor accuse the legates of evasion. They accept that the matter must go to the pope for decision, and the rest of the libellus (Chapters VI through IX) is structured around that acceptance: the legates are asked to be messengers, the pope is asked to decide, and the Alexandrians promise to send their own legation to Rome upon his decision. The canonical structure of papal jurisdiction is operative throughout, recognized by both sides, and recorded as such in the document the Henoticon-aligned Alexandrians themselves drafted.

The substantive content of the doctrinal proposal — the omission of Chalcedon and Leo’s Tome, the reception of the Twelve Chapters of Cyril, the defense of the three Alexandrian patriarchs as orthodox — explains why the negotiation collapsed. The apocrisiarii are offering Rome a formula that the Henoticon-aligned Eastern party could subscribe to and that the Roman discipline could not accept. The Catholic-Chalcedonian core of the schism — that the Council of Chalcedon and Leo’s Tome are doctrinally normative, that the Monophysite-aligned Alexandrian patriarchs were not in the orthodox communion, and that their names cannot remain in the diptychs as if they had been — is precisely what the libellus passes over and asks Rome to set aside. The Roman legates’ refusal in Chapter V reflects, in operative form, the same caution that Felix III had exercised in 484 against Acacius and that Hormisdas would exercise definitively in 519. The negotiation Letter I attempted with the emperor and that this libellus attempted with the papal legation collapsed in 498 with Anastasius II’s death; the schism continued; and when it was closed, it was closed by the Formula of Hormisdas requiring formal subscription to a confession that anathematized Acacius and his successors and required removal from the diptychs of exactly the names the apocrisiarii here defend.

The reader should leave the document with three observations. First, the operative recognition of Roman authority is real even from a Henoticon-aligned Eastern party — the Petrine concord is acknowledged, the Roman bishop’s historical role is acknowledged, the Apostolic See’s role at Ephesus is acknowledged, the legates’ delegation-bound authority is acknowledged, and the pope’s decision-rights are acknowledged. Second, the substantive doctrinal proposal Rome was being asked to accept on the basis of that recognition was incompatible with Roman discipline; the recognition of authority did not dissolve the substantive disagreement, and Rome’s representatives were entirely correct to refuse the petition without papal mandate. Third, the document is most useful for the project not as evidence that Eastern parties always recognized Roman authority on Roman terms — they did not — but as evidence that even Eastern parties working from within a separated communion could not formulate their petition without invoking the Roman primacy as the operative framework within which any reconciliation had to be sought. Whatever else divided Rome and the Henoticon-aligned East at the end of the fifth century, the framework of papal authority within which negotiation occurred was a framework both sides recognized as the operative structure of the question.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy