The Early Church and Peter's Primacy

Letter X, from Pope Gelasius to the Bishops of Sicily

Synopsis: Gelasius writes to the bishops of Sicily — confirming that bishops have the governance of church resources subject to the distribution of stipends to widows, orphans, the poor, and the clergy, and that the thirty-year prescription barred in civil law bars also ecclesiastical claims against bishops who have possessed church property and dioceses for thirty years or more.

Gelasius, bishop of the Roman Church, to his most beloved brother bishops united in the charity of Christ, who are established in Sicily.

Bishops Have the Governance of Church Resources, Subject to the Distribution of Stipends to Widows, Orphans, the Poor, and the Clergy

The authority of Our predecessors has gone forth, that bishops have the power to govern the resources of the church; yet in such a way that they ought to distribute the stipends of widows, orphans, and the poor, as also of the clergy. We also appoint that this be given to them, which has hitherto been decreed. Let the bishops claim the rest for themselves, that (as We have said before) they may be able to be bestowers upon pilgrims and captives.

The Thirty-Year Prescription Bars Claims Against Bishops Who Have Possessed Church Property and Dioceses for That Period

It has also pleased [Us] to add this: that if (God forbid) anyone should claim by right the resources of the church, as also the dioceses which are possessed by some bishops, the thirty-year law has concluded [the matter] — since the authority of our sons the emperors has also gone forth in such a way that to no one is it permitted to appeal beyond thirty years for that which the time of the laws has excluded.

Given on the Ides of May, in the consulship of Asterius and Praesidius, illustrious men.

Source/Reference

Notes / Historical Commentary

Letter X is the shortest letter in the Gelasian corpus at this point and the most narrowly administrative. Its subject is the governance of church property in the churches of Sicily, and its two directives are brief: bishops hold the governance of church resources subject to the fixed distributions to widows, orphans, the poor, and the clergy; and the thirty-year prescription bars any claim against a bishop’s possession of church resources or diocesan territory held for that period.

For the primacy question, the letter contains no explicit primacy claims of the kind that Letters VII–IX develop. Its significance is indirect but real. Gelasius grounds his directive not in his personal authority, nor in the authority of any council, but in praesulta auctoritas nostrorum — the authority of his predecessors. This is the continuity premise that runs through the Gelasian corpus: Rome’s authority is not invented in each pontificate but received from the See’s earlier holders, whose decrees remain in force and whose judgments continue to bind. The reader who has followed the corpus from Leo through Simplicius to Gelasius will recognize the same premise operating here: the Apostolic See is a continuous institution whose authority does not lapse with its occupants. Gelasius’s directive is binding not because Gelasius decided it but because the See has decided it, and the See continues.

The substantive content of the letter is also significant for what it reveals about the fifth-century Roman approach to ecclesiastical administration. The quadripartite division of church revenue (set out in Letter IX, Chapter XXVII, and reaffirmed here) would become the structural principle of Latin ecclesiastical economy for the next millennium. The thirty-year prescription applied to ecclesiastical property disputes represents a practical solution to the problem of unsettled claims on church lands — a problem acute in the Italian churches of the late fifth century, where the Gothic wars and related dislocations had created considerable uncertainty about who held what by right. Gelasius’s solution — to bar claims older than thirty years — was both practical and theologically grounded: the Church holds its goods for the service of the faithful, and unsettled property disputes are an obstacle to that service. A clean administrative rule, backed by both ecclesiastical and imperial authority, closed the disputes and allowed the bishops to direct their energies to the care of their flocks.

The reader should note that Gelasius here invokes imperial authority (filiorum nostrorum principum… auctoritas) as a parallel grounding for the thirty-year rule, but without thereby conceding that imperial authority governs ecclesiastical matters in principle. The pattern is characteristic of his practice: where civil law provides a useful rule whose content aligns with ecclesiastical purposes, Gelasius is happy to cite it; where civil or imperial authority intrudes upon matters of faith or ecclesiastical governance, he resists it absolutely (as Letter VIII to Anastasius makes plain). The distinction between matters where Rome and Constantinople may lawfully share operational principles and matters reserved to the Church alone is a consistent Gelasian principle, and Letter X is an example of the former domain.

The Early Church and Peter's Primacy