LEO THE GREAT, LETTERS XVI TO XXXVI
LETTER XVI.
TO THE BISHOPS OF SICILY.
Leo the bishop to all the bishops throughout Sicily greeting in the LORD.
I. Introductory.
BY GOD's precepts and the Apostle's admonitions we are incited to keep a
careful watch over the state of all the churches: and, if anywhere ought is
found that needs rebuke, to recall men with speedy care either from the stupidity
of ignorance or from forwardness and presumption. For inasmuch as we are warned
by the LORD'S own command whereby the blessed Apostle Peter had the thrice
repeated mystical injunction pressed upon him, that he who loves Christ should feed
Christ's sheep, we are compelled by reverence for that see which, by the
abundance of the Divine Grace, we hold, to shun the danger of sloth as much as
possible: lest the confession of the chief Apostle whereby he testified that he
loved GOD be not found in us: because if he (through us) carelessly feed the flock
so often commended to him he is proved not to love the chief Shepherd.
II. Baptism is to be administered at Easter-tide and not on the Epiphany.
Accordingly when it reached my ears on reliable testimony (and I already
felt a brother's affectionate anxiety about your acts, beloved) that in what is
one of the chief sacraments of the Church you depart from the practice of the
Apostles' constitution(9) by administering the sacrament of baptism to greater
numbers on the feast of the Epiphany than at Easter-tide, I was surprised that
you or your predecessors could have introduced so unreasonable an innovation as
to confound the mysteries of the two festivals and believe there was no
difference between the day on which Christ was worshipped by the wise men and that on
which He rose again from the dead. You could never have fallen into this
fault, if you had taken the whole of your observances from the source whence you
derive your consecration to the episcopate; and if the see of the blessed Apostle
Peter, which is the mother of your priestly dignity, were the recognized
teacher of church-method. We could indeed have endured your departure from its rules
with less equanimity, if you had received any previous rebuke by way of warning
from us. But now as we do not despair of correcting you, we must show
gentleness. And although an excuse which affects ignorance is scarce tolerable in
priests, yet we prefer to moderate our needful rebuke and to instruct you plainly in
the true method of the Church.
III. One must distinguish one festival from another in respect of dignity and
occasion.
The restoration of mankind has indeed ever remained immutably
fore-ordained in GOD'S eternal counsel: but the series of events which had to be
accomplished in time through Jesus Christ our LORD was begun at the Incarnation of the
Word. Hence there is one time when at the angel's announcement the blessed Virgin
Mary believed she was to be with child through the Holy Ghost and conceived:
another, when without loss of her virgin purity the Boy was born and shown to
the shepherds by the exulting joy of the heavenly attendants: another, when the
Babe was circumcised: another, when the victim required by the Law is offered
for him: another, when the three wise men attracted by the brightness of the new
star(1) arrive at Bethlehem from the East and worship the Infant with the
mystic offering of Gifts.
And again the days are not the same on which by the divinely appointed
pasage into Egypt He was withdrawn from wicked Herod, and on which He was recalled
from Egypt into Galilee on His pursuer's death. Among these varieties of
circumstance must be included His growth of body: the LORD increases, as the
evangelist bears witness, with the progress of age and grace: at the time of the
Passover He comes to the temple at Jerusalem with His parents, and when He was
absent from the returning company, He is found sitting with the ciders and disputing
among the wondering masters and rendering an account of His remaining behind:
"why is it," He says, "that ye sought Me? did ye not know that I must be in
that which is My Father's(2)," signifying that He was the Son of Him whose temple
He was in. Once more when in later years He was to be declared more openly and
sought out the baptism of His forerunner John, was there any doubt of His being
GOD remaining when after the baptism of the LORD Jesus the Holy Spirit in form
of a dove descended and rested upon Him, and the Father's voice was heard from
the skies, "Thou art My beloved Son: in Thee I am well pleased(3)?" All these
things we have alluded to with as much brevity as possible for this reason,
that you may know, beloved, that though all the days of Christ's life were
hallowed by many mighty works of His(4), and though in all His actions mysterious
sacraments s shone forth, yet at one time intimations of events were given by
signs, and at one time fulfilment realized: and that all the Saviour's works that
are recorded are not suitable to the time of baptism. For if we were to
commemorate with indiscriminate honour these things also which we know to have been
done by the LORD after His baptism by the blessed John, His whole lifetime would
have to be observed in a continuous succession of festivals, because all His
acts were full of miracles. But because the Spirit of wisdom and knowledge so
instructed the Apostles and teachers of the whole Church as to allow nothing
disordered or confused to exist in our Christian observances, we must discern the
relative importance of the various solemnities and observe a reasonable
distinction in all the institutions of our fathers and rulers: for we cannot otherwise
"be one flock and one shepherd(6)," except as the Apostle teaches us, "that we
all speak the same thing: and that we be perfected in the same mind and in the
same judgment(7)."
IV.The reason explained why Easier and Whitsuntide are the proper seasons for
Baptism.
Although, therefore, both these things which are connected with Christ's
humiliation and those which are connected with His exaltation meet in one and
the same Person, and all that is in Him of Divine power and human weakness
conduces to the accomplishment of our restoration: yet it is appropriate that the
power of baptism should change the old into the new creature on the death-day of
the Crucified and the Resurrection-day of the Dead: that Christ's death and His
resurrection may operate in the re-born(8), as the blessed Apostle says: "Are
ye ignorant that all we who were baptized in Christ Jesus, were baptized in His
death? We were buried with Him through baptism into death; that as Christ rose
from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we also should walk m newness
of life. For if we have become united with the likeness of His death, we shall
be also (with the likeness) of His resurrections(9)," and the rest which the
Teacher of the Gentiles discusses further in recommending the sacrament of
baptism: that it might be seen from the spirit of this doctrine that that is the
day, and that the time chosen for regenerating the sons of men and adopting them
among the sons of GOD, on which by a mystical symbolism and form(1), what is
done in the limbs coincides with what was done in the Head Himself, for in the
baptismal office death ensues through the slaying of sin, and threefold immersion
imitates the lying in the tomb three days, and the raising out of the water is
like Him that rose again from the tomb(2). The very nature, therefore of the
act teaches us that that is the recognized day for the general reception of the
grace(3), on which the power of the gift and the character of the action
originated. And this is strongly corroborated by the consideration that the LORD
Jesus Christ Himself, after He rose from the dead, handed on both the form and
power of baptizing to His disciples, in whose person all the chiefs of the churches
received their instructions with these words, "Go ye and teach all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Ghosts(4)." On which of course He might have instructed them even before His passion,
had He not especially wished it to be understood that the grace of regeneration
began with His resurrection. It must be added, indeed, that the solemn season of
Pentecost, hallowed by the coming of the Holy Ghost is also allowed, being as
it were, the sequel and completion of the Paschal feast. And while other
festivals are held on other days of the week, this festival (of Pentecost) always
occurs on that day, which is marked by the LORD'S resurrection: holding out, so to
say, the hand of assisting grace and inviting those, who have been cut off
from the Easter feast by disabling sickness or length of journey or difficulties
of sailing, to gain the purpose that they long for through the gift of the Holy
Spirit. For the Only-begotten of GOD Himself wished no difference to be felt
between Himself and the Holy Spirit in the Faith of believers and in the efficacy
of His works: because there is no diversity in their nature, as He says, "I
will ask the Father and He shall give you another Comforter that He may be with
you for ever, even the Spirit of Truth(5);" and again: "But the Comforter which
is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in My name, He shall teach you all
things and bring to your remembrance all that I said unto you(6);" and again:
"When He, the Spirit of Truth, is come, He shall guide you into all the
Truth(7)." And thus, since Christ is the Truth, and the Holy Spirit the Spirit of
Truth, and the name of "Comforter" appropriate to both, the two festivals are not
dissimilar, where the sacrament is the same(8).
V. S. Peter's example as an authority for Whitsuntide baptisms.
And that we do not contend for this on ours own conviction but retain it
on Apostolic authority, we prove by a sufficiently apt example, following the
blessed Apostle Peter, who, on the very day on which the promised coming of the
Holy Ghost filled up the number of those that believed, dedicated to God in the
baptismal font three thousand of the people who had been converted by his
preaching. The Holy Scripture, which contains the Acts of Apostles(9), teaches this
in its faithful narrative, saying, "Now when they heard this they were pricked
in the heart, and said unto Peter and to the rest of the Apostles, what shall
we do, brethren? But Peter said unto them, Repent ye and be baptized every one
of you in the name of Jesus Christ, unto the remission of your sins, and ye
shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For to you is the promise, and to your
children and to all that are afar off, even as many as the LORD our GOD shall
call unto Him. With many other words also he testified and exhorted them saying,
Save yourselves from this crooked generation. They then that received his word
were baptized, and there were added in that day about three thousand
VI. In cases of urgency other times art allowable for baptism.
Wherefore, as it is quite clear that these two seasons of which we have
been speaking are the rightful ones for baptizing the chosen in Church, we
admonish you, beloved, not to add other days to this observance. Because, although
there are other festivals also to which much reverence is due in GOD'S honour,
yet we must rationally guard this principal and greatest sacrament as a deep
mystery and not part of the ordinary routine(2): not, however, prohibiting the
licence to succour those who are in danger by administering baptism to them at any
time. For whilst we put off the vows of those who are not pressed by ill health
and live in peaceful security to those two closely connected and cognate
festivals, we do not at any time refuse this which is the only safeguard of true
salvation to any one in peril of death, in the crisis of a siege, in the distress
of persecution, in the terror of shipwreck.
VII. Our LORD'S baptism by John very different to the baptism of believers.
But if any one thinks the feast of the Epiphany, which in proper degree is
certainly to be held in due honour, claims the privilege baptism because,
according to some the LORD came to St. John's baptism on the same day, let him know
that the grace of that baptism and the reason of it were quite different, and
is not on an equal footing with the power by which they are re-born of the Holy
Ghost, of whom it is said, "which were born not of blood, nor of the will of
the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of GOD(3)." For the LORD who needed no
remission of sin and sought not the remedy of being born again, desired to be
baptized just as He desired to be circumcised, and to have a victim offered for
His purification: that He, who had been "made of a woman(3a)," as the Apostle
says, might become also "under the law" which He had come, "not to destroy but to
fulfil(3b)," and by fulfilling to end, as the blessed Apostle proclaims,
saying: "but Christ is the end of the law unto righteousness to every one that
believeth(4)." But the sacrament of baptism He founded in His own person(5), because
"in all things having the pre-eminence(6)," He taught that He Himself was the
Beginning. And He ratified the power of re-birth on that occasion, when from His
side flowed out the blood of ransom and the water of baptism(7). As,
therefore, the Old Testament was the witness to the new, and "the law was given by
Moses: but grace and truth came through Jesus Christs(8);" as the divers sacrifices
prefigured the one Victim, and the slaughter of many lambs was ended by the
offering up of Him, of whom it is said, "Behold the Lamb of God; behold Him that
taketh away the sin of the world(9);" so too John, not Christ, but Christ's
forerunner, not the bridegroom, but the friend of the bridegroom, was so faithful
in seeking, "not His own, but the things which are Jesus Christ's as to profess
himself unworthy to undo the shoes of His feet: seeing that He Himself indeed
baptized "in water unto repentance," but He who with twofold power should both
restore life and destroy sins, was about to "baptize in the Holy Ghost and
fire(9b)." then, beloved brethren, all these distinct proofs come before you,
whereby to the removal of all doubt you recognize that in baptizing the elect who,
according to the Apostolic rule have to be purged by exorcisms, sanctified by
fastings and instructed by frequent sermons, two seasons only are to be observed,
viz. Easter and Whitsuntide: we charge you, brother, to make no further
departure from the Apostolic institutions. Because hereafter no one who thinks the
Apostolic rules can be set at defiance will go unpunished.
VIII. The Sicilian bishops are to send three their number to each of the
half-yearly meetings of bishops at Rome.
Wherefore we require this first and foremost for the keeping of perfect
harmony, that, according to the wholesome rule of the holy Fathers that there
should be two meetings of bishops every year(1), three of you should appear
without fail each time, on the 29th of September, to join in the council of the
brethren: for thus, by the aid of Gov's grace, we shall the easier guard against the
rise of offences and errors in Christ's Church: and this council must always
meet and deliberate in the presence of the blessed Apostle Peter, that all his
constitutions and canonical decrees may remain inviolate with all the LORD'S
priests.
These matters, upon which we thought it necessary to instruct you by the
inspiration of the LORD, we wish brought to your knowledge by our brothers and
fellow-bishops, Bacillus and Paschasinus. May we learn by their report that the
institutions of the Apostolic See are reverently observed by you. Dated 21
Oct., in the consulship of the illustrious Alipius and Ardaburis (447).
LETTER XVII(2).
To all the bishops of Sicily (forbidding the sale of church property except
for the advantage of the church).
Leo, the pope(2a), to all the bishops of Sicily.
The occasion of specific complaints claims our attention as having "the
care of all the churches," that we should make a perpetual decree precluding all
bishops from adopting as a practice what in two churches of your province has
been unscrupulously suggested and wrongfully carried out. Upon the clergy of the
church in Tauromenium deploring the destitution they were in from the bishop
having squandered all its estates by selling giving away, and otherwise
disposing of them, the clergy of Panormus, who have lately had a new bishop, raised a
similar complaint about the misgovernment of the former bishop in the holy
synod, at which we were presiding. Although, therefore, we have already given
instructions as to what is for the advantage of both Churches, yet test this vicious
example of abominable plundering should hereafter be taken as a precedent, we
wish to make this our formal command binding on you, beloved, for ever. We
decree, therefore, that no bishop without exception shall dare to give away, or to
exchange, or to sell any of the property of his church: unless he foresees an
advantage likely to accrue from so doing, and after consultation with the whole
of the clergy, and with their consent he decides upon what will undoubtedly
profit that church. For presbyters, or deacons, or clerics of any rank who have
connived at the churches losses, must know that they will be deprived of both
rank and communion: because it is absolutely fair, beloved brethren, that not only
the bishop, but also the whole of the clergy should advance the interests of
their church and keep the gifts unimpaired of those who have contributed their
own substance to tile churches for the salvation of their souls. Dated 20 Oct.,
in the consulship of the illustrious Calepius (447).
LETTER XVIII.
TO JANUARIUS, BISHOP OF AQUILEIA(3)
Leo, bishop of the city of Rome, to Januarius, bishop of Aquileia.
Those who renounce heresy and schism and return to the Church must make their
recantation very clear: those who are clerics may retain their rank but not be
promoted.
On reading your letter, brother, we recognized the vigour of your faith,
which we already were aware of, and congratulate you on the watchful care you
bestow as pastor. on the keeping of Christ's flock: lest the wolves, that enter
in under guise of sheep, should tear the simple ones to pieces in their bestial
fierceness, and not only themselves run riot without restraint, but also spoil
those which are sound. And lest the vipery deceit should effect this, we have
thought it meet to warn you, beloved, reminding you that it is at the peril of
his soul, for any one of them who has fallen away from us into a sect of
heretics and schismatics(4), and stained himself to whatever extent with the pollution
of heretical communion, to be received into catholic communion on coming to
his senses without making legitimate and express satisfaction. For it is most
wholesome and full of all the benefits of spiritual healing that presbyters or
deacons, or sub-deacons or clerics of any rank, who wish to appear reformed, and
entreat to return once more to the catholic Faith which they had long ago lost,
should first confess without ambiguity that their errors and the authors of the
errors themselves are condemned by them, that their base opinions may be
utterly destroyed, and no hope survive of their recurrence, and that no member may
be harmed by contact with them, every point having been met with its proper
recantation. With regard to them we also order the observance of this regulation of
the canons(5), that they consider it a great indulgence, if they be allowed to
remain undisturbed in their present rank without any hope of further
advancement: but only on consideration of their not being defiled with second
baptism(6). No slight penalty does he incur from the LORD, who judges any such person fit
to be advanced to Holy Orders. If advancement is granted to those who are
without blame, only after full examination, how much more ought it to be refused to
those who are under suspicion. Accordingly, beloved brother, in whose devotion
we rejoice, bestow your care on our directions, and take order for the
circumspect and speedy carrying out of these laudable suggestions and wholesome
injunctions, which affect the welfare of the whole Church. But do not doubt, beloved,
that, if what we decree for the observance of the canons, and the integrity of
the Faith be neglected (which we do not anticipate), we shall be strongly
moved: because the faults of the lower orders are to be referred to none more than
to slothful and careless governors, who often foster much disease by refusing
to apply the needful remedy. Dated 30 Dec., in the consulship of the illustrious
Calepius and Ardaburis (447).
LETTER XIX.
TO DORUS, BISHOP OF BENEVENTUM.
Leo, bishop, to Dorus his well-beloved brother.
I. He rebukes Dorus far allowing a junior presbyter to be promoted over the
heads of the seniors, and the first and second in seniority for acquiescing.
We grieve that the judgment, which we hoped to entertain of you, has been
frustrated by our ascertaining that you have done things which by their
blame-worthy novelty infringe the whole system of Church discipline: although you know
full well with what care we wish the provisions of the canons to be kept
through all the churches of the LORD, and the priests of all the peoples to consider
it their especial duty to prevent the violation of the rules of the holy
constitutions by any extravagances. We are surprised, therefore, that you who ought
to have been a strict observer of the injunctions of the Apostolic See have
acted so carelessly, or rather so contumaciously, as to show yourself not a
guardian, but a breaker of the laws handed on to you. For from the report of your
presbyter, Paul, which is subjoined, we have learnt that the order of the
presbyterate has been thrown into confusion with you by strange intrigues and vile
collusion; in such a way that one man has been hastily and prematurely promoted,
and others passed over whose advancement was recommended by their age, and who
were charged with no fault. But if the eagerness of an intriguer or the ignorant
zeal of his supporters demanded that which custom never allowed, viz., that a
beginner should be preferred to veterans, and a mere boy to men of years, it was
your duty by diligence and teaching to check the improper desires of the
petitioners with all reasonable authority: lest he whom you advanced hastily to the
priestly rank should enter on his office to the detriment of those with whom he
associated and become demoralized by the growth within him, not of the virtue
of humility, but of the vice of conceit(7). For you were not unaware that the
LORD had said that "he that humbleth himself shall be exalted: but he that
exalteth himself shall be humbled(8)," and also had said, "but ye seek from little
to increase, and from the greater to be less(9)." For both actions are out of
order and out of place(1): and all the fruit of men's labours is lost, all the
measure of their deserts is rendered void, if the gaining of dignity is
proportioned to the amount of flattery used: so that the eagerness to be eminent
belittles not only the aspirer himself, but also him that connives at him. But if, as
is asserted, the first and second presbyter were so agreeable to Epicarpius
being put over their heads as to demand his being honoured to their own disgrace,
that which they wished ought not to have been granted them when they were
voluntarily degrading themselves: because it would have been worthier of you to
oppose than to yield to such a pitiable wish. But their base and cowardly
submission could not be to the prejudice of others whose consciences were good, and who
had not done despite to GOD's grace; so that, whatever the transaction was
whereby they gave up their precedence to another, they could not lower the dignity
of those that came next to them, nor because they had placed the last above
themselves, could he take precedence of the rest.
II. The presbyters, who gave way, to be degraded with the usurper to the
bottom: the rest to keep their places.
The aforesaid presbyters, therefore, who have declared themselves unworthy
of their proper rank, though they even deserved to be deprived of their
priesthood; yet, that we may show the gentleness of the Apostolic See in sparing
them, are to be put last of all the presbyters of the Church: and that they may
bear their own sentence, they shall be below him also whom they preferred to
themselves by their own judgment: all the other presbyters remaining in the order
which the time of his ordination assigns to each. And let none except the two
aforesaid suffer any loss of dignity, but let this disgrace attach to those only
who chose to put themselves below a junior who had only lately been ordained:
that they may feel that that sentence of the gospels applies to themselves when
it is said: "with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what
measure ye mete, the same shall be measured unto you(2)." But let Paul the
presbyter retain his place from which with praiseworthy firmness he did not budge: and
let no further encroachments be made to any one's harm: so that you, beloved,
who not undeservedly get the discredit of the whole matter, may with all speed
take measures to cure it at least by putting these our injunctions into effect;
lest, if a second time a just complaint be lodged with us, we be forced into
stronger displeasure: for we would rather restore discipline by correcting what
is done wrong, than increase the punishment. Know that we have entrusted the
carrying out of our commands to our brother and fellow-bishop Julius, that all
things may straightway be established, as we have ordained. Dated 8th March, in
the consulship of the illustrious Postumianus (448).
LETTER XX.
TO EUTYCHES, AN ABBOT OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
Leo, the bishop, to his dearly-beloved son, Eutyches, presbyter.
He thanks him far his information about the revival of Nestorianism and
commends his zeal.
You have brought to our knowledge, beloved, by your letter that through
the activity of some(3) the heresy of Nestorius has been again reviving. We reply
that your solicitude in this matter has pleased us, since the remarks we have
received are an indication of your mind. Wherefore do not doubt that the LORD,
the Founder of the catholic Faith, will befriend you in all things. And when we
have been able to ascertain more fully by whose wickedness this happens, we
must make provision with the help of GOD for the complete uprooting of this
poisonous growth which has long ago been condemned. GOD keep thee safe, my beloved
son. Dated 1st June, in the consulship of the illustrious Postumianus and Zeno
(448).
LETTER XXI.
FROM EUTYCHES TO LEO(4).
I. He states his account of the proceedings at the Synod.
GOD the Word is before all else my witness, being confident of my hope and
faith in Christ the LORD and GoD of all, and discerning the proof of my
holding the truth in these matters: but I call on your holiness, too, to bear witness
to my heart and to the reasonableness of my opinions and words. But the wicked
devil has exercised his evil influence upon my zeal and determination, whereby
his power ought to have been destroyed. Whereupon he has exerted all his
proper power and aroused Eusebius, bishop of the town of Dorylaeum, against me, who
presented an allegation s to the holy bishop of the church in Constantinople,
Flavian, and to certain others whom he found in the same city assembled on
various matters of their own: in this he called me heretic, not raising any true
accusation but contriving destruction for me and disturbance for the churches of
GOD.
Their holinesses summoned me to reply to his accusation: but though I was
delayed by a serious illness besides my advanced age, I came to clear myself,
knowing well that a faction had been formed against my safety. And, indeed,
together with a writ of appeal(6) to which my signature was appended, I offered
them a statement showing my confession upon the holy Faith. But when the holy
Flavian did not receive the document, nor order it to be read, yet heard me in
reply utter word for word that Faith which was put forth at Nicaea by the holy
Synod, and confirmed at Ephesus, I was required to acknowledge two natures, and to
anathematize those who denied this. But I, fearing the decision of the synod,
and not wishing either to take away or to add one word contrary to the Faith put
forth by the holy Synod of Nicaea, knowing, too, that our holy and blessed
fathers and bishops Julius, Felix, Athanasius, and Gregorius(7) rejected the
phrase "two natures," and not daring to discuss the nature of GOD the Word, who came
into flesh in the last days entering the womb of the holy virgin Mary
unchangeably as he willed and knew, becoming man in reality, not in fancy, nor yet
venturing to anathematize our aforesaid Fathers, I asked them to let your holiness
know these things, that you might judge what seemed right to you, undertaking
by all means co follow your ruling.
II. His explanations were allowed no hearing.
But without listening to any thing which I said, they broke up the Synod
and published the sentence of my degradation, which they were getting ready
against me before the inquiry. So much slander were they factiously making up
against me that even my safety would have been endangered had not the help of GoD at
the intercession of your holiness quickly snatched me from the assault of
military force. Then they began to force the heads of other monasteries s to
subscribe to my degradation (a thing which was never done either towards those who
have professed themselves heretics, nor even against Nestorius himself), insomuch
that when to reassure the people I tried to set forth(9) statements of my
faith, not only did they, who were plotting the aforesaid faction against me,
prevent them being heard, but also seized them that straightway I might be held a
heretic before all.
III. He appeals to Leo for protection.
I take refuge, therefore, with you the defender of religion and abhorrer
of such factions, bringing in even still nothing strange against the faith as it
was originally handed down to us, but anathematizing Apollinaris, Valentinus,
Manes, and Nestorius, and those who say that the flesh of our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Saviour, descended from heaven and not from the Holy Ghost and from the
holy Virgin, along with all heresies down to Simon Magus. Yet nevertheless I
stand in jeopardy of my life as a heretic. I beseech you not to be prejudiced
against me by their insidious designs about me, but to pronounce the sentence which
shall seem to you right upon the Faith, and in future not to allow any slander
to be uttered against me by this faction, nor let one be expelled and banished
from the number of the orthodox who has spent his seventy years of lite in
continence and all chastity, so that at the very end of life he should suffer
shipwreck. I have subjoined to this my letter both documents, that which was
presented by my accuser at the Synod, and that which was brought by me but not
received, as well as the statement of my faith and those things which have been de
creed upon the two natures by our holy Fathers(1).
EUTYCHES' CONFESSION OF FAITH.
I call upon you before GOD, who gives life to all things, and Christ
Jesus, who witnessed that good confession under Pontius Pilate, that you do nothing
by favour. For I have held the same as my forefathers and from my boyhood have
been illuminated by the same Faith as that which was laid down by the holy
Synod of 318 most blessed bishops who were gathered at Nicaea from the whole world,
and which was confirmed and ratified afresh for sole acceptance by the holy
Synod assembled at Ephesus: and I have never thought otherwise than as the right
and only true orthodox Faith has enjoined. And I agree to everything that was
laid down about the same Faith by the same holy Synod: of which Synod the leader
and chief was Cyril of blessed memory bishop of the Alexandrians, the partner
and sharer in the preaching and in the Faith of those saints and elect of GOD,
Gregory the greater, and the other Gregory(2), Basil, Athanasius, Atticus and
Proclus. Him and all of them I have held orthodox and faithful, and have
honoured as saints, and have esteemed my masters. But I utter an anathema on
Nestorius, Apollinaris, and all heretics down to Simon, and those who say that the flesh
of our LORD Jesus Christ came down from heaven. For He who is the Word of GOD
came down from heaven without flesh and was made flesh in the holy Virgin's
womb unchangeably and unalterably as He Himself knew and willed. And He who was
always perfect GOD before the ages, was also made perfect man in the end of the
days for us and for our salvation. This my full profession may your holiness
consider.
I, Eutyches, presbyter and archimandrite, have subscribed to this
statement with my own hand.
LETTER XXII(3).
THE FIRST FROM FLAVIAN, BP. OF CONSTANTINOPLE TO POPE LEO.
To the most holy and God-loving father and fellow-bishop, Leo, Flavian
greeting in the LORD.
I. The designs of the devil have led Eutyches astray.
There is nothing which can stay the devil's wickedness, that "restless
evil, full of deadly poison(4)." Above and below it "goes about," seeking "whom it
may" strike, dismay, and "devour(5)." Whence to watch, to be sober unto
prayer, to draw near to GOD, to eschew foolish questionings, to follow the fathers
and not to go beyond the eternal bounds, this we have learnt from Holy Writ. And
so I give up the excess of grief and abundant tears over the capture of one of
the clergy who are under me, and whom I could not save nor snatch from the
wolf, although I was ready to lay down my life for him. How was he caught, how did
he leap away, hating the voice of the caller and turning aside also from the
memory of the Fathers and thoroughly detesting their paths. And thus I proceed
with my account.
II. The seductions of heretics capture the unwary.
There are some "in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening
wolves(6):" whom we know by their fruit. These men seem indeed at first to be of us,
but they are not of us: "for if they had been of us, they would no doubt have
continued with us(7)." But when they have spewed out their impiety, throwing out
the guile that is in them, and seizing the weaker ones, and those who have
their senses unpractised in the divine utterances, they carry them along with
themselves to destruction, wresting and doing despite to the Fathers' doctrines,
just as they do the Holy Scriptures also to their own destruction: whom we must
be forewarned of and take heed lest some should be misled by their wickedness
and shaken in their firmness. "For they have sharpened their tongues like
serpents: adder's poison is under their lips(8)," as the prophet has cried out about
them.
III. Eutyches' heresy stated.
Such a one, therefore, has now shown himself amongst us, Eutyches, for
many years a presbyter and archimandrite(9), pretending to hold the same belief as
ours, and to have the right Faith in him: indeed he resists the blasphemy of
Nestorius, and feigns a controversy with him, but the exposition of the Faith
composed by the 318 holy fathers, and the letter that Cyril of holy memory wrote
to Nestorius, and one by the same author on the same subject to the Easterns,
these writings, to which all have given their assent, he has tried to upset, and
revive the old evil dogmas of the blasphemous Valentinus and Apollinaris. He
has not feared the warning of the True King: "Whoso shall cause one of the least
of these little ones to stumble, it was better that a millstone should be
hanged about his neck, and that he should be sunk in the depth of the seaL" But
casting away all shame, and shaking off the cloak which covered his error(2), he
openly in our holy synod persisted in saying that our LORD Jesus Christ ought
not to be understood by us as having two natures after His incarnation in one
substance and in one person: nor yet that the LORD'S flesh was of the same
substance with us, as if assumed from us and united to GOD the Word hypostatically:
but he said that the Virgin who bare him was indeed of the same substance with us
according to the flesh, but the LORD Himself did not assume from her flesh of
the same substance with us: but the LORD'S body was not a man's body, although
that which issued from the Virgin was a human body. resisting all the
expositions of the holy Fathers.
IV. He has sent Leo the minutes of their proceedings that he may see all the
details.
But not to make my letter too long by detailing everything, we have sent
your holiness the proceedings which some time since we took in the matter:
therein we deprived him as convicted on these charges, of his priesthood, of the
management of his monastery and of our communion: in order that your holiness also
knowing the facts of his case may make his wickedness manifest to all the
GOD-loving bishops who are under your reverence; lest perchance if they do not know
the views which he holds, and of which he has been openly convicted, they may
be found to be in correspondence with him as a fellow-believer by letter or by
other means. I and those who are with me give much greeting to you and to all
the brotherhood in Christ. The LORD keep you in safety and prayer for us, O most
GOD-loving father(3)
LETTER XXIII.
TO FLAVIAN, BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
To his well-beloved brother Flavian the bishop, Leo the bishop.
I. He complains that Flavian has not sent him a full account of Eutyches' case.
Seeing that our most Christian and merciful Emperor, in his holy and
praiseworthy faith and anxiety for the peace of the Catholic Church, has sent us a
letter(4) upon the matters which have roused the din of disturbance among you,
we wonder, brother, that you have been able to keep silence to us upon the
scandal that has been caused, and that you did not rather take measures for our
being at once informed by your own report, that we might not have any doubt about
the truth of the case. For we have received a document from the presbyter
Eutyches(5), who complains that on the accusation of bishop Eusebius he has been
wrongfully deprived of communion, notwithstanding that he says he attended your
summons and did not refuse his presence: and moreover asserts that he presented a
deed of appeal in the very court, which was however not accepted: whereupon he
was forced to put forth letters of defence(6) in the city of Constantinople.
Pending which matter we do not yet know with what justice he has been separated
from the communion of the Church. But having regard to the importance of the
matter, we wish to know the reason of your action and to have the whole thing
brought to our knowledge: for we, who desire the judgments of the LORD'S priests to
be deliberate, cannot without information decide one way or another, until we
have all the proceedings accurately before us.
II. And now demands it.
And therefore, brother, signify to us in a full account by the hand of the
most fit and competent person, what innovation has arisen against the ancient
faith, which needed to be corrected by so severe a sentence. For both the
moderation of the Church and the devout faith of our most godly prince insist upon
our showing much anxiety for the peace of Christendom: that dissensions may be
cleared away and the Catholic Faith kept unimpaired, and that those whose faith
has been proved may be fortified by our authority, when those who maintain what
is wrong have been recalled from their error. And no difficulty can arise on
this side, since the said presbyter has professed himself by his own statement,
ready to be corrected if anything be found in him worthy of rebuke. For it
beseems us in such matters to take every precaution that charity be kept and the
Truth defended without the din of strife. And therefore because you see, beloved,
that we are anxious about so great a matter, hasten to inform us of everything
in as full and clear a manner as possible (for this ought to have been done
before), lest in the cross-statements of both sides we be misled by some
uncertainty, and the dissension, which ought to be stifled in its infancy, be fostered
for our heart is impressed by GOD'S inspiration with the need of saving from
violation by anyone's misinterpretation those constitutions of the venerable
fathers which have received Divine ratification and belong to the groundwork of the
Faith. GOD keep thee safe, dear brother. Dated 18 February (449), in the
consulship of the illustrious Asturius and Protogenes.
LETTER XXIV.
TO THEODOSIUS AUGUSTUS II.
Leo the bishop, to Theodosius Augustus.
I. He praises the Emperor's piety and mentions Eutyches' appeal.
How much protection the LORD has vouchsafed His Church through your
clemency and faith, is shown again by this letter which you have sent me: so that we
rejoice at there being not only a kingly, but also a priestly mind within you.
Seeing that, besides your imperial and public cares, you have a most devout
anxiety for the Christian religion, lest schisms or heresies or other offences
should grow up among GOD's people. For your realm is then in its best state when
men serve the eternal and unchangeable Trinity by the confession of one
Godhead(7). What the disturbance was which occurred in the Church of Constantinople,
and which could have so moved my brother and fellow-bishop Flavian, that he
deprived Eutyches, the presbyter, of communion, I have not yet been able to
understand clearly. For although the aforesaid presbyter sent in writing a complaint
concerning his trouble to the Apostolic See, yet he only briefly touched on some
points, asserting that he kept the constitutions of the Nicene synod and had
been vainly blamed for difference of faith.
II. He finds fault with Flavian's silence.
But the statement of bishop Eusebius, his accuser, copies of which the
said presbyter has sent us, contained nothing clear about his objections, and
though he charged a presbyter with heresy, he did not say expressly what opinion he
disapproved of in him: although the bishop himself also professed that he
adhered to the decrees of the Nicene synod: for which reason we had no means of
learning anything more fully. And because the method of our Faith and the laudable
anxiety shown by your piety requires the merits of the case to be known, there
must now be no place allowed for deception, but we must be informed of the
points on which he considers him unsound, that the right judgment may be passed
after full information. I have sent a letter to the aforesaid bishop, from which
he may gather that I am displeased at his still keeping silence upon what has
been done in so grave a matter, when he ought to have been forward in disclosing
all to us at the outset: and we believe that even after the reminder he will
acquaint us with the whole, in order that, when what now seems obscure, has been
brought into the light, judgment may be passed agreeably to the teaching of
the Gospels and the Apostles. Dated the 18th of February(8), in the consulship of
the illustrious Asturius and Protogenes (449).
LETTER XXV.
FROM PETER CHRYSOLOGUS, BISHOP OF RAVENNA, TO EUTYCHES, THE PRESBYTER.
[In answer to a letter from Eutyches, he urges him to accept the decisions
of the Church on the Faith in fear and without too close inquiry, and to abide
by the ruling of the bishop of Rome.]
LETTER XXVI(9).
A SECOND ONE FROM FLAVIAN TO LEO.
To the most holy and blessed father and fellow-minister Leo, Flavian
greeting in the LORD.
I. Eutyches' heresy restated.
Nothing, as you know, most beloved of GOD, is more precious to priests
than piety and he right dividing of the word of truth. For all our hope and
safety, and the recompense of promised good depend thereon. For this reason we must
take all pains about the true Faith, and those things which have been set forth
and decreed by the holy Fathers, that always, and in all circumstances, they
may be kept and guarded whole and uninjured. And so it was necessary on the
present occasion for us, who see the orthodox Faith suffering harm, and the heresy
of Apollinaris and Valentinus being revived by the wicked monk Eutyches, not to
overlook it, but publicly to disclose it for the people's safety. For this man:
this Eutyches, keeping his diseased and sickly opinion hid within him, has
dared to attack our gentleness, and unblushingly and shamelessly to instil his own
blasphemy into many minds: saying that before the Incarnation indeed, our
Saviour Jesus Christ had two natures, Godhead and manhood: but that after the union
they became one nature not knowing(1) what he says, or on what he is speaking
so decidedly. For even the union of the two natures that came together in
Christ did not, as your piety knows, confuse their properties in the process: but
the properties of the two natures remain entire even in the union. And he added
another blasphemy also, saying that the Lord's body which sprang from Mary was
not of our substance, nor of human matter: but, though he calls it human, he
refuses to say it was con-substantial with us or with her who bare him, according
to the flesh(2).
II.The means Eutyches has taken to circumvent the Synod.
And this notwithstanding that the acts of Ephesus(3), in the letter
written by the holy and ecumenical synod to the wicked and deposed Nestorius, contain
these express words "the natures which came together to form true unity are
indeed different: and yet from then both there is but one Christ and Son. Not as
if the difference between the two natures was done away with through the union,
but rather that these same natures, His Godhead and His Manhood perfected for
us one LORD Jesus Christ, through an ineffable and incomprehensible meeting
which resulted in unity." And this does not escape your holiness, who have no
doubt read the record of what was done at Ephesus. Yet this same Eutyches attaching
no weight to these words, thinks he is not liable to the penalties fixed by
that holy and ecumenical synod. For this reason, finding that many of the
simpler-minded folk were injured in their faith by his contention, upon his being
accused by the devout Bishop Eusebius, and upon his attending at the holy council,
and with his own mouth declaring what he thought to the members of the synod,
we have deposed him for his estrangement from the true Faith, as your holiness
will learn from the resolutions passed about him: which we have sent with this
our letter. Moreover, it is fair in my opinion that you should be told this also
that this same Eutyches, after suffering just and canonical deposition,
instead of making amends for his earlier by his later conduct(4), and appeasing God
by careful penitence and many tears, and by a true repentance, comforting our
heart which was greatly saddened at his fall: not only did not do so, but even
made every effort to throw the most holy church of this place into confusion:
setting up in public placards full of insults and maledictions, and beyond this
addressing his entreaties to our most religious and Christ-loving Emperor, and
these too over-flowing with arrogance and sauciness, whereby he tried to override
the divine canons in everything.
III. He acknowledges the receipt of Leo's letter.
But after all this had occurred, your holiness' letter was conveyed to us
by the most honourable count Pansophius: and from it we learnt that the same
Eutyches had sent you a letter full of falsehood and cunning, saying that at the
time of trial he had presented letters of appeal to us, and to the holy synod
of bishops who were then present, and had appealed to your holiness: this he
certainly never did, but in this matter, too, he has been guilty of deceit, like
the father of lies, thinking to gain your ear. Therefore, most holy father,
being stirred by all that he has ventured, and by what has been done, and is being
done against us and the most holy Church, use your accustomed promptitude as
becomes the priesthood, and in defending the commonweal and peace of the holy
churches, consent by your own letters to endorse the resolution that has been
canonically passed against him, and to confirm the faith of our most religious and
Christ-loving Emperor. For the matter only requires your weight and support,
which through your wisdom will at once bring about general peace and quietness.
For thus both the heresy which has arisen, and the disorder it has excited, will
easily be appeased by GOD's assistance through a letter from you: and the
rumoured synod will also be prevented, and so the most holy churches throughout the
world need not be disturbed. I and all that are with me salute all the
brethren that are with you. May you be granted to us safe in the LORD, and still
praying for us, O most GOD-loving and holy father.
LETTER XXVII.
TO FLAVIAN, BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
Leo to Flavian, bishop of Constantinople.
An acknowledgment of Flavian's first letter and a promise of a fuller reply.
On the first opportunity we could find, which was the coming of our
honourable son Rodanus, we acknowledge, beloved, the arrival of your packet(6), which
was to give us information about the case which has been stirred up to our
grief among you by misguided error. Since this man, who has long seemed to be
religiously disposed, has expressed himself in the Faith otherwise than is right,
though he never ought to have departed from the catholic tradition, but to have
persevered in the same belief as is held by all. But on this matter we are
replying more fully(7) by him who brought your letter to us, beloved: that we may
give you all necessary instructions, beloved, on the whole matter. For we do not
allow either him to persist in his perverse conviction; or you, beloved, who
with such faithful zeal are resisting his wrong and foolish error to be long
disturbed by the adversary's opposition. Our aforesaid son, by whom we are sending
this letter, we desire you to receive with the affection he deserves, and to
reply when he returns to us. Dated 21st May in the consulship of Asturius and
Protogenes (449).
LETTER XXVIII.
TO FLAVIAN
I. Eutyches has been driven into his error by presumption and ignorance(8).
Having read your letter, beloved, at the late arrival of which we are
surprised(9), and having perused the detailed account of the bishops' acts(1), we
have at last found out what the scandal was which had arisen among you against
the purity of the Faith: and what before seemed concealed has now been unlocked
and laid open to our view: from which it is shown that Eutyches, who used to
seem worthy of all respect in virtue of his priestly office, is very unwary and
exceedingly ignorant, so that it is even of him that the prophet has said: "he
refused to understand so as to do well: he thought upon iniquity in his bed(2)."
But what more iniquitous than to hold blasphemous opinions(3), and not to give
way to those who are wiser and more learned than ourself. Now into this
unwisdom fall they who, finding themselves hindered from knowing the truth by some
obscurity, have recourse not to the prophets' utterances, not to the Apostles'
letters, nor to the injunctions of the Gospel but to their own selves: and thus
they stand out as masters of error because they were never disciples of truth.
For what learning has he acquired about the pages of the New and Old Testament,
who has not even grasped the rudiments of the Creed? And that which, throughout
the world, is professed by the mouth of every one who is to be born again(4),
is not yet taken in by the heart of this old man.
II. Concerning the twofold nativity and nature of Christ.
Not knowing, therefore, what he was bound to think concerning the
incarnation of the Word of GOD, and not wishing to gain the light of knowledge by
researches through the length and breadth of the Holy Scriptures, he might at least
have listened attentively to that general and uniform confession, whereby the
whole body of the faithful confess that they believe in GOD the Father Almighty,
and in Jesus Christ, His only Son(5), our Lord, who was born of the Holy
Spirit and(6) the Virgin Mary. By which three statements the devices of almost all
heretics are overthrown. For not only is GOD believed to be both Almighty and
the Father, but the Son is shown to be co-eternal with Him, differing in nothing
from the Father because He is GOD from. GOD(7), Almighty from Almighty, and
being born from the Eternal one is co-eternal with Him; not later in point of
time, not lower in power, not unlike in glory, not divided in essence: but at the
same time the only begotten of the eternal Father was born eternal of the Holy
Spirit and the Virgin Mary. And this nativity which took place in time took
nothing from, and added nothing to that divine and eternal birth, but expended
itself wholly on the restoration of man who had been deceived(8): in order that he
might both vanquish death and overthrow by his strength(9), the Devil who
possessed the power of death. For we should not now be able to overcome the author
of sin and death unless He took our nature on Him and made it His own, whom
neither sin could pollute nor death retain. Doubtless then, He was conceived of
the Holy Spirit within the womb of His Virgin Mother, who brought Him forth
without the loss of her virginity, even as she conceived Him without its loss.
But if He could not draw a rightful understanding (of the matter) from
this pure source of the Christian belief, because He had darkened the brightness
of the clear truth by a veil of blindness peculiar to Himself, He might have
submitted Himself to the teaching of the Gospels. And when Matthew speaks of "the
Book of the Generation of Jesus Christ, the Son of David, the Son of
Abraham(1)," He might have also sought out the instruction afforded by the statements of
the Apostles. And reading in the Epistle to the Romans, "Paul, a servant of
Jesus Christ, called an Apostle, separated unto the Gospel of GOD, which He had
promised before by His prophets in the Holy Scripture concerning His son, who was
made unto Him(2) of the seed of David after the flesh(3)," he might have
bestowed a loyal carefulness upon the pages of the prophets. And finding the promise
of God who says to Abraham, "In thy seed shall all nations be blest(4)," to
avoid all doubt as to the reference of this seed, he might have followed the
Apostle when He says, "To Abraham were the promises made and to his seed. He saith
not and to seeds, as if in many, but as it in one, and to thy seed which is
Christs(5)." Isaiah's prophecy also he might have grasped by a closer attention to
what he says, "Behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and they shall
call His name Immanuel," which is interpreted" GOD with us(6)." And the same
prophet's words he might have read faithfully. "A child is born to us, a Son is
given to us, whose power is upon His shoulder, and they shall call His name the
Angel of the Great Counsel, Wonderful, Counsellor, the Mighty GOD, the Prince of
Peace, the Father of the age to come(7)." And then he would not speak so
erroneously as to say that the Word became flesh in such a way that Christ, born of
the Virgin's womb, had the form of man, but had not the reality of His mother's
body(8). Or is it possible that he thought our LORD Jesus Christ was not of
our nature for this reason, that the angel, who was sent to the blessed Mary ever
Virgin, says, "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the Most
High shall overshadow thee: and therefore that Holy Thing also that shall be
born of thee shall be called the Son of GOD(9)," on the supposition that as the
conception of the Virgin was a Divine act, the flesh of the conceived did not
partake of the conceiver's nature? But that birth so uniquely wondrous and so
wondrously unique, is not to be understood in such wise that the properties of His
kind were removed through the novelty of His creation. For though the Holy
Spirit imparted fertility to the Virgin, yet a real body was received from her
body; and, "Wisdom building her a house(1)," "the Word became flesh and dwelt in
us(2)," that is, in that flesh which he took from man and which he quickened with
the breath of a higher life(3).
III. The Faith and counsel of GOD in regard to the incarnation of the Word are
set forth.
Without detriment therefore to the properties of either nature and
substance which then came together in one person(4), majesty took on humility,
strength weakness, eternity mortality: and for the paying off of the debt belonging to
our condition inviolable nature was united with possible nature, so that, as
suited the needs of our case(5), one and the same Mediator between GOD and men,
the Man Christ Jesus, could both die with the one and not die with the
other.(6) Thus in the whole and perfect nature of true man was true GOD born, complete
in what was His own, complete in what was ours. And by "ours" we mean what the
Creator formed in us from the beginning and what He undertook to repair. For
what the Deceiver brought in and man deceived committed, had no trace in the
Saviour. Nor, because He partook of man's weaknesses, did He therefore share our
faults. He took the form of a slave(7) without stain of sin, increasing the human
and not diminishing the divine: because that emptying of Himself whereby the
Invisible made Himself visible and, Creator and LORD of all things though He be,
wished to be a mortal, was the bending down(8) of pity, not the failing of
power. Accordingly He who while remaining in the form of GOD made man, was also
made man in the form of a slave. For both natures retain their own proper
character without loss: and as the form of GOD did not do away with the form of a
slave, so the form of a slave did not impair the form of GOD. For inasmuch as the
Devil used to boast that man had been cheated by his guile into losing the
divine gifts, and bereft of the boon of immortality had undergone sentence of death,
and that he had found some solace in his troubles from having a partner in
delinquency(9), and that GOD also at the demand of the principle of justice had
changed His own purpose towards man whom He had created in such honour: there was
need for the issue of a secret counsel, that the unchangeable GOD whose will
cannot be robbed of its own kindness, might carry out the first design of His
Fatherly care(1) towards us by a more hidden mystery(2); and that man who had
been driven into his fault by the treacherous cunning of the devil might not
perish contrary to the purpose of GOD(3).
IV. The properties of the twofold nativity and nature of Christ are weighed
one against another.
There enters then these lower parts of the world the Son of GOD,
descending from His heavenly home and yet not quitting His Father's glory, begotten in a
new order by a new nativity. In a new order, because being invisible in His
own nature, He became visible in ours, and He whom nothing could contain was
content to be contained(4): abiding before all time He began to be in time: the
LORD of all things, He obscured His immeasurable majesty and took on Him the form
of a servant: being GOD that cannot suffer, He did not disdain to be man that
can, and, immortal as He is, to subject Himself to the laws of death. The LORD
assumed His mother's nature without her faultiness: nor in the LORD Jesus
Christ, born of the Virgin's womb, does the wonderfulness of His birth make His
nature unlike ours. For He who is true GOD is also true man: and in this union there
is no lie(5), since the humility of manhood and the loftiness of the Godhead
both meet there. For as GOD is not changed by the showing of pity, so man is not
swallowed up by the dignity. For each form does what is proper to it with the
co-operation of the other(6); that is the Word performing what appertains to
the Word, and the flesh carrying out what appertains to the flesh. One of them
sparkles with miracles, the other succumbs to injuries. And as the Word does not
cease to be on an equality with His Father's glory, so the flesh does not
forego the nature of our race. For it must again and again be repeated that one and
the same is truly Son of GOD and truly son of man. GOD in that "in the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with GOD, and the Word was GOD(7);" man in
that "the Word became flesh and dwelt in us(8)." GOD in that "all things were made
by Him(9), and without Him was nothing made:" man in that "He was made of a
woman, made under law(1)." The nativity of the flesh was the manifestation of
human nature: the childbearing of a virgin is the proof of Divine power. The
infancy of a babe is shown in the humbleness of its cradle(2): the greatness of the
Most High is proclaimed by the angels' voices(3). He whom Herod treacherously
endeavours to destroy is like ourselves in our earliest stage(4): but He whom
the Magi delight to worship on their knees is the LORD of all. So too when He
came to the baptism of John, His forerunner, lest He should not be known through
the veil of flesh which covered His Divinity, the Father's voice thundering from
the sky, said, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased(5)." And
thus Him whom the devil's craftiness attacks as man, the ministries of angels
serve as GOD. To be hungry and thirsty, to be weary, and to sleep, is clearly
human: but to satisfy 5,000 men with five loaves, and to bestow on the woman of
Samaria living water, droughts of which can secure the drinker from thirsting any
more, to walk upon the surface of the sea with feet that do not sink, and to
quell the risings of the waves by rebuking the winds, is, without any doubt,
Divine. Just as therefore, to pass over many other instances, it is not part of the
same nature to be moved to tears of pity for a dead friend, and when the stone
that closed the four-days' grave was removed, to raise that same friend to life
with a voice of command: or, to hang on the cross, and turning day to night,
to make all the elements tremble: or, to be pierced with nails, and yet open the
gates of paradise to the robber's faith: so it is not part of the same nature
to say, "I and the Father are one," and to say, "the Father is greater than
I(6)." For although in the LORD Jesus Christ GOD and man is one person, yet the
source of the degradation, which is shared by both, is one, and the source of the
glory, which is shared by both, is another. For His manhood, which is less
than the Father, comes from our side: His Godhead, which is equal to the Father,
comes from the Father.
V. Christ's flesh is proved real from Scripture.
Therefore in consequence of this unity of person which is to be understood
in both natures(7), we read of the Son of Man also descending from heaven,
when the Son of GOD took flesh from the Virgin who bore Him. And again the Son of
GOD is said to have been crucified and buried, although it was not actually in
His Divinity whereby the Only-begotten is co-eternal and con-substantial with
the Father, but in His weak human nature that He suffered these things. And so
it is that in the Creed also we all confess that the Only-begotten Son of God
was crucified and buried, according to that saying of the Apostle: "for if they
had known, they would never have crucified the LORD of glory(8)." But when our
LORD and Saviour Himself would instruct His disciples' faith by His
questionings, He said, "Whom do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?" And when they had put
on record the various opinions of other people, He said, "But ye, whom do ye
say that I am?" Me, that is, who am the Son of Man, and whom ye see in the form
of a slave, and in true flesh, whom do ye say that I am? Whereupon blessed
Peter, whose divinely inspired confession was destined to profit all nations, said,
"Thou art Christ, the Son of the living GOD(9)." And not undeservedly was he
pronounced blessed by the LORD, drawing from the chief corner-stone(1) the
solidity of power which his name also expresses, he, who, through the revelation of
the Father, confessed Him to be at once Christ and Son of GOD: because the
receiving of the one of these without the other was of no avail to salvation, and it
was equally perilous to have believed the LORD Jesus Christ to be either only
GOD without man, or only man without GOD. But after the LORD'S resurrection
(which, of course, was of His true body, because He was raised the same as He had
died and been buried), what else was effected by the forty days' delay than the
cleansing of our faith's purity from all darkness? For to that end He talked
with His disciples, and dwelt and ate with them, He allowed Himself to be
handled with diligent and curious touch by those who were affected by doubt, He
entered when the doors were shut upon the Apostles, and by His breathing upon them
gave them the Holy Spirit(2), and bestowing on them the light of understanding,
opened the secrets of the Holy Scriptures(3). So again He showed the wound in
His side, the marks of the nails, and all the signs of His quite recent
suffering, saying, "See My hands and feet, that it is I. Handle Me and see that a
spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see Me have(4);" in order that the properties
of His Divine and human nature might be acknowledged to remain still
inseparable: and that we might know the Word not to be different from the flesh, in such
a sense as also to confess that the one Son of GOD iS both the Word and
flesh(5). Of this mystery of the faith(6) your opponent Eutyches must be reckoned to
have but little sense if he bus recognized our nature in the Only-begotten of
GOD neither through the humiliation of His having to die, nor through the glory
of His rising again. Nor has he any fear of the blessed apostle and evangelist
John's declaration when he says, "every spirit which confesses Jesus Christ to
have come in the flesh, is of GOD: and every spirit which destroys Jesus is not
of GOD, and this is Antichrist(7)." But what is "to destroy Jesus," except to
take away the human nature from Him, and to render void the mystery, by which
alone we were saved, by the most barefaced fictions. The truth is that being in
darkness about the nature of Christ's body, he must also be befooled by the
same blindness in the matter of His sufferings. For if he does not think the cross
of the LORD fictitious, and does not doubt that the punishment He underwent to
save the world is likewise true, let him acknowledge the flesh of Him whose
death he already believes: and let him not disbelieve Him man with a body like
ours, since he acknowledges Him to have been able to suffer: seeing that the
denial of His true flesh is also the denial of His bodily suffering. If therefore
he receives the Christian faith, and does not turn away his ears from the
preaching of the Gospel: let him see what was the nature that hung pierced with nails
on the wooden cross, and, when the side of the Crucified was opened by the
soldier's spear, let him understand whence it was that blood and water flowed,
that the Church of GOD might be watered from the font and from the cup(8). Let him
hear also the blessed Apostle Peter, proclaiming that the sanctification of
the Spirit takes place through the sprinkling of Christ's blood(9). And let him
not read cursorily the same Apostle's words when he says, "Knowing that not with
corruptible things, such as silver and gold, have ye been redeemed from your
vain manner of life which is part of your fathers' tradition, but with the
precious blood of Jesus Christ as of a lamb without spot and blemish(1)." Let him
not resist too the witness of the blessed Apostle John, who says: "and the blood
of Jesus the Son of GOD cleanseth us from all sin(2)." And again: "this is the
victory which overcometh the world, our faith." And "who is He that overcometh
the world save He that believeth that Jesus is the Son of GOD. This is He that
came by water and blood, Jesus Christ: not by water only, but by water and
blood. And it is the Spirit that testifieth, because the Spirit is the truth(3),
because there are three that bear witness, the Spirit, the water and the blood,
and the three are one(4)." The Spirit, that is, of sanctification, and the blood
of redemption, and the water of baptism: because the three are one, and remain
undivided, and none of them is separated from this connection; because the
catholic Church lives and progresses by this faith, so that in Christ Jesus
neither the manhood without the true Godhead nor the Godhead without the true manhood
is believed in.
VI. The wrong and mischievous concession of Eutyches. The terms on which he
may be restored to communion. The sending of deputies to the East.
But when during your cross-examination Eutyches replied and said, "I
confess that our LORD had two natures before the union but after the union I confess
but one(5)," I am surprised that so absurd and mistaken a statement of his
should not have been criticised and rebuked by his judges, and that an utterance
which reaches the height of stupidity and blasphemy should be allowed to pass as
if nothing offensive had been heard: for the impiety of saying that the Son of
GOD was of two natures before His incarnation is only equalled by the iniquity
of asserting that there was but one nature in Him after "the Word became
flesh." And to the end that Eutyches may not think this a right or defensible
opinion because it was not contradicted by any expression of yourselves, we warn you
beloved brother, to take anxious care that if ever through the inspiration of
GOD'S mercy the case is brought to a satisfactory conclusion, his ignorant mind
be purged from this pernicious idea as well as others. He was, indeed, just
beginning to beat a retreat from his erroneous conviction, as the order of
proceedings shows(6), in so far as when hemmed in by your remonstrances he agreed to
say what he had not said before and to acquiesce in that belief to which before
he had been opposed. However, when he refused to give his consent to the
anathematizing of his blasphemous dogma, you understood, brother(7), that he abode by
his treachery and deserved to receive a verdict of condemnation. And yet, if
he grieves over it faithfully and to good purpose, and, late though it be,
acknowledges how rightly the bishops' authority has been set in motion; or if with
his own mouth and hand in your presence he recants his wrong opinions, no mercy
that is shown to him when penitent can be found fault with s: because our LORD,
that true and "good shepherd" who laid down His life for His sheep(9) and
who came to save not lose men's souls(1), wishes us to imitate His kindness(2);
in order that while justice constrains us when we sin, mercy may prevent our
rejection when we have returned. For then at last is the true Faith most
profitably defended when a false belief is condemned even by the supporters of it.
Now for the loyal and faithful execution of the whole matter, we have
appointed to represent us our brothers Julius(3) Bishop and Renatus(4) priest [of
the Title of S. Clement], as well as my son Hilary(5), deacon. And with them we
have associated Dulcitius our notary, whose faith is well approved: being sure
that the Divine help will be given us, so that he who had erred may be saved
when the wrongness of his view has been condemned. GOD keep you safe, beloved
brother.
The 13 June, 449, in the consulship of the most illustrious Asturius and
Protogenes.
LETTER XXIX.
TO THEODOSIUS AUGUSTUS.
To Caesar Theodosius, the most religious and devout Augustus Leo pope of
the Catholic Church of the city of Rome(6).
He notifies the appointment of his representatives at the Council of Ephesus.
How much GOD'S providence vouchsafes to consult for the interests of men
is shown by your merciful care which, incited by GOD'S Spirit, is unwilling that
there should be any disturbance or difference: since the Faith, which is
absolutely one, cannot be different from itself in any thing. Hence although
Eutyches, as the minutes of the bishops' proceeds reveals, has been detected in an
ignorant and unwise error, and ought to have withdrawn from his conviction which
is rightly condemned, yet since your piety which loves the Catholic Truth with
great jealousy for GOD's honour, has determined on a synodal judgment at
Ephesus, that that Truth on which he is blind may be brought home to the ignorant old
man; I have sent my brothers Julius the Bishop, Renatus the presbyter, and my
son Hilary the deacon to act as my representatives as the matter requires, and
they shall bring with them such a spirit of justice and kindness that while the
whole misguided error is condemned (for there can be no doubt as to what is
the integrity of the Christian Faith), yet if he who has gone astray repents and
entreats for pardon, he may receive the succour of priestly indulgence: seeing
that in his appeal(7) which he sent us, he reserved to himself the right of
earning our forgiveness by promising to correct whatever our opinion disapproved
of in his opinion. But what the catholic Church universally believes and teaches
on the mystery of the LORD's Incarnation is contained more fully in the letter
which I have sent to my brother and fellow-bishop Flavian. Dated 13th June in
the consulship of the illustrious Asturius and Protogenes (449).
LETTER XXX.
TO PULCHERIA AUGUSTA.
Much shorter than, but to nearly the same effect as, xxxi., which was
written on the same day as this. As xxx. has a Greek translation accompanying it
and is duly dated, whereas xxxi. has neither, the Ballerinii would seem to be
correct in thinking that xxx. was despatched but did not reach Pulcheria (cf.
Lett. xlv. i.) and that xxxi. was for some reason never used. Of the two we have
printed xxxi. by preference, as being the fuller discussion of the subject.
LETTER XXXI.
TO PULCHERIA AUGUSTA(8).
Leo to Pulcheria Augusta.
I. He reminds Pulcheria of her former services to the Church, and suggests her
interference in the Eutychian controversy.
How much protection the LORD has extended to His Church through your
clemency, we have often tested by many signs. And whatever stand the strenuousness
of the priesthood has made in our times against the assailers of the catholic
Truth, has redounded chiefly to your glory: seeing that, as you have learnt from
the teaching of the Holy Spirit, you submit your authority in all things to
Him, by whose favour and under whose protection you reign. Wherefore, because I
have ascertained from my brother and fellow-bishop Flavian's report, that a
certain dispute has been raised through the agency of Eutyches in the church of
Constantinople against the integrity of the Christian faith (and the text of the
synod's minutes has shown me the exact nature of the whole matter), it is worthy
of your great name that the error which in my opinion proceeds rather from
ignorance than ingenuity, should be dispelled before, with the pertinacity of
wrong-headedness, it gains any strength from the support of the unwise. Because even
ignorance sometimes falls into serious mistakes, and very frequently the
simple-minded rush through unwariness into the devil's pit: and it is thus, I
believe, that the spirit of falsehood has crept over Eutyches: so that, whilst he
imagines himself to appreciate the majesty of the Son of GOD more devoutly, by
denying in Him the real presence of our nature, he came to the conclusion that the
whole of that Word which "became flesh" was of one and the same essence. And
greatly as Nestorius fell away from the Truth, in asserting that Christ was only
born man of His mother, this man also departs no less far from the catholic
path, who does not believe that our substance was brought forth from the same
Virgin: wishing it of course to be understood as belonging to His Godhead only; so
that that which took the form of a slave, and was like us and of the same
form(9), was a kind of image, not the reality of our nature.
II. Man's salvation required the union of the two natures in Christ.
But it is of no avail to say that our LORD, the Son of the blessed Virgin
Mary, was true and perfect man, if He is not believed to be Man of that stock
which is attributed to Him in the Gospel. For Matthew says, "The book of the
generation of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham(1):" and follows
the order of His human origin, so as to bring the lines of His ancestry down to
Joseph to whom the LORD'S mother was espoused. Whereas Luke going backwards
step by step traces His succession to the first of the human race himself, to
show that the first Adam and the last Adam were of the same nature. No doubt the
Almighty Son of GOD could have appeared for the purpose of teaching, and
justifying men in exactly the same way that He appeared both to patriarchs and
prophets in the semblance of flesh(2); for instance, when He engaged in a struggle,
and entered into conversation (with Jacob), or when He refused not hospitable
entertainment, and even partook of the food set before Him. But these appearances
were indications of that Man whose reality it was announced by mystic
predictions would be assumed from the stock of preceding patriarchs. And the fulfilment
of the mystery of our atonement, which was ordained from all eternity, was not
assisted by any figures because the Holy Spirit had not yet come upon the
Virgin, and the power of the Most High had not over-shadowed her: so that "Wisdom
building herself a houses" within her undefiled body, "the Word became flesh;"
and the form of GOD and the form of a slave coming together into one person, the
Creator of times was born in time; and He Himself through whom all things were
made, was brought forth in the midst of all things. For if the New Man had not
been made in the likeness of sinful flesh, and taken on Him our old nature, and
being consubstantial with the Father, had deigned to be consubstantial with
His mother also, and being alone free from sin, had united our nature to Him the
whole human race would be held in bondage beneath the Devil's yoke(4), and we
should not be able to make use of the Conqueror's victory, if it had been won
outside our nature.
III. From the union of the two natures flows the grace of baptism. He makes a
direct appeal to Pulcheria for her help.
But from Christ's marvellous sharing of the two natures, the mystery of
regeneration shone upon us that through the self-same spirit, through whom Christ
was conceived and born, we too, who were born through the desire of the flesh,
might be born again from a spiritual source: and consequently, the Evangelist
speaks of believers as those "who were born not of bloods, nor of the will of
the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of GOD(5)." And of this unutterable grace
no one is a partaker, nor can be reckoned among the adopted sons of GOD, who
excludes from his faith that which is the chief means of our salvation.
Wherefore, I am much vexed and saddened that this man, who seemed before so laudably
disposed towards humility, dares to make these empty and stupid attacks on the
one Faith of ourselves and of our fathers. When he saw that his ignorant notion
offended the ears of catholics, he ought to have withdrawn from his opinion,
and not to have so disturbed the Church's rulers, as to deserve a sentence of
condemnation: which, of course, no one will be able to remit, if he is determined
to abide by his notion. For the moderation of the Apostolic See uses its
leniency in such a way as to deal severely with the contumacious, while desiring to
offer pardon to those who accept correction. Seeing then that I possess great
confidence in your lofty faith and piety, I entreat your illustrious clemency,
that, as the preaching of the catholic Faith has always been aided by your holy
zeal, so now, also, you will maintain its free action. Perchance the LORD
allowed it to be thus assailed for this reason that we might discover what sort of
persons lurked within the Church. And clearly, we must not neglect to look after
such, lest we be afflicted with their actual loss.
IV. His personal presence at the council must be excused.The question at issue
is a very grave one.
But the most august and Christian Emperor, being anxious that the
disturbances may be set at rest with all speed, has appointed too short and early a
date for the council of bishops, which he wishes held at Ephesus, in fixing the
first of August for the meeting: for from the fifth of May, on which we received
His Majesty's letter, most of the time remaining has to be spent in making
complete arrangements for the journey of such priests as are competent to represent
me. For as to the necessity of my attending the council also, which his piety
suggested, even if there were any precedent for the request, it could by no
means be managed now: for the very uncertain state of things at present would not
permit my absence from the people of this great city: and the minds of the
riotously-disposed might be driven to desperate deeds, if they were to think that I
took occasion of ecclesiastical business to desert my country(6) and the
Apostolic See. As then you recognize that it concerns the public weal that with your
merciful indulgence I should not deny myself to the affectionate prayers of my
people, consider that in these my brethren, whom I have sent in my stead, I
also am present with the rest who appear: to them I have clearly and fully
explained what is to be maintained in view of the satisfactory exposition of the case
which has been given, me by the detailed report, and by the defendant's own
statement to me. For the question is not about some small portion of our Faith on
which no very distinct declaration has been made: but the foolish opposition
that is raised ventures to impugn that which our LORD desired no one of either
sex in the Church to be ignorant of. For the short but complete confession of
the catholic creed which contains the twelve sentences of the twelve apostles(7)
is so well furnished with the heavenly panoply, that all the opinions of
heretics can receive their death-blow from that one weapon. And if Eutyches had been
content to receive that creed in its entirety with a pure and simple heart, he
would at no point go astray from the decrees of the most sacred council of
Nicaea, and he would understand that the holy Fathers laid this down, to the end
that no mental or rhetorical ingenuity should lift itself up against the
Apostolic Faith which is absolutely one. Deign then, with your accustomed piety to do
your best endeavour, that this blasphemous and foolish attack upon the one and
only sacrament of man's salvation may be driven from all men's minds. And if the
man himself, who has fallen into this temptation, recover his senses, so as to
condemn his own error by a written recantation, let him not be denied
communion with his order(8). Your clemency is to know that I have written in the same
strain to the holy bishop Flavian also: that loving-kindness be not lost sight
of, if the error be dispelled. Dated 13 June in the consulship of the
illustrious Asturius and Protogenes (449).
LETTER XXXII.
TO THE ARCHIMANDRITES OF CONSTANTINOPLE 9.
To his well-beloved sons Faustus, Martinus, and the rest of the
archimandrites, Leo the bishop.
He acknowledges their zeal and refers them to the Tome.
As on behalf of the faith which Eutyches has tried to disturb, I was
sending legates de latere(9a) to assist the defence of the Truth, I thought it
fitting that I should address a letter to you also, beloved: whom I know for certain
to be so zealous in the cause of religion that you can by no means listen
calmly to such blasphemous and profane utterances: for the Apostle's command
lingers in your hearts, in which it is said, "If any man hath preached unto you any
gospel other than that which he received, let him be anathema(1)." And we also
decide that the opinion of the said Eutyches is to be rejected, which, as we
have learnt from perusing the proceedings, has been deservedly condemned: so that,
if its foolish maintainer will abide by his perverseness, he may have
fellowship with those whose error he has followed. For one who says that Christ had not
a human, that is our, nature, is deservedly put out of Christ's Church. But,
if he be corrected through the pity of God's Spirit and acknowledge his wicked
error, so as to condemn unreservedly what catholics reject, we wish him not to
be denied mercy, that the Lord's Church may suffer no loss: for the repentant
can always be readmitted, it is only error that must be shut out. Upon the
mystery of great godliness(2), whereby through the Incarnation of the Word of God
comes our justification and redemption, what is our opinion, drawn from the
tradition of the fathers, is now sufficiently explained according to my judgment in
the letter which I have sent to our brother Flavian the bishop a: so that
through the declaration of your chief you may know what, according to the gospel of
our Lord Jesus Christ, we desire to be fixed in the hearts of all the faithful.
Dated 13th June, in the consulship of the illustrious Asturius and Protogenes
(449).
LETTER XXXIII.
TO THE SYNOD OF EPHESUS 4.
Leo, bishop, to the holy Synod which is assembled at Ephesus.
I. He comments the Emperor's appeal to the chair of Peter.
The devout faith of our most clement prince, knowing that it especially
concerns his glory to prevent any seed of error from springing up within the
catholic Church, has paid such deference to the Divine institutions as to apply to
the authority of the Apostolic See for a proper settlement: as if he wished it
to be declared by the most blessed Peter himself what was praised in his
confession, when the LORD said, "whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am 5?" and
the disciples mentioned various people's opinion: but, when He asked what they
themselves believed, the chief of the apostles, embracing the fulness of the
Faith in one short sentence, said, "Thou art the Christ, the son of the living
God(5) :" that is, Thou who truly art Son of man art also truly Son of the living
God: Thou, I say, true in Godhead, true in flesh and one altogether(6), the
properties of the two natures being kept intact. And if Eutyches had believed this
intelligently and thoroughly, he would never have retreated from the path of
this Faith. For Peter received this answer from the Lord for his confession.
"Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona; for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto
thee, but My Father which is in heaven. And I say unto thee, that thou art Peter,
and upon this rock I will build My Church: and the gates of Hades shall not
prevail against it(7)." But he who both rejects the blessed Peter's confession,
and gainsays Christ's Gospel, is far removed from union with this building; for
he shows himself. never to have had any zeal for understanding the Truth, and
to have only the empty appearance of high esteem, who did not adorn the hoary
hairs of old age with any ripe judgment of the heart.
II. The heresy of Eutyches is to be condemned though his full repentance may
lead to his restitution.
But because the healing even of such men must not be neglected, and the
most Christian Emperor has piously and devoutly desired a council of bishops to
be held, that all error may be destroyed by a fuller judgment, I have sent our
brothers Julius the bishop, Renatus the presbyter, and my son Hilary the deacon,
and with them Dulcitius the notary, whose faith we have proved, to be present
in my stead at your holy assembly, brethren, and settle in common with you what
is in accordance with the Lord's will. To wit, that the pestilential error may
be first condemned, and then the restitution of him, who has so unwisely
erred, discussed, but only if embracing the true doctrine he fully and openly with
his own voice and signature condemns those heretical opinions in which his
ignorance has been ensnared: for this he has promised in the appeal which he sent to
us, pledging himself to follow our judgment in all things(8). On receiving our
brother and fellow-bishop Flavian's letter, we have replied to him at some
length on the points which he seems to have referred to us(9): that when this
error which seems to have arisen, has been destroyed, there may be one Faith and
one and the same confession throughout the whole world to the praise and glory of
God, and that "in the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in
heaven, and things on earth, and things under the earth, and that every tongue should
confess that the LORD Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the Fathers." Dated
13th June in the consulship of the illustrious Asturius and Protogenes (449)-
LETTER XXXIV.
TO JULIAN, BISHOP OF COS.
Leo, the bishop, to Julian, the bishop, his well-beloved brother.
I. Eutyches is now clearly, seen to have deviated from the Faith.
Your letter, beloved, which has just reached me, shows with what spiritual
love of the Catholic Faith you are inspired: and it makes me very glad that
devout hearts all agree in the same opinion, so that according to the teaching of
the Holy Ghost there may be fulfilled in us what the Apostle says: "Now I
beseech you, brethren, through the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye all speak
the same things, and there be no divisions among you: but that ye be perfect
in the same mind and in the same judgment(2)." But Eutyches has put himself
quite outside this unity, if he perseveres in his perversity, and still does not
understand the bonds with which the devil has bound him, and thinks any one is to
be reckoned among the Lord's priests, who is a party to his ignorance and
madness. For some time we were uncertain in what he was displeasing to catholics:
and when we received no letter from our brother Flavian, and Eutyches himself
complained in his letters that the Nestorian heresy was being revived, we could
not fully learn the source or the motive of so crafty an accusation. But as soon
as the minutes of the bishops' proceedings reached us, all those things which
were hidden beneath the veil of his deceitful complaints were revealed in their
abomination.
II. He announces the appointment of legates a latere.
And because our most clement Emperor in the loving-kindness and godliness
of his mind wished a more careful judgment to be passed about the position of
one who hitherto has seemed to be in high esteem, and for this purpose has
thought fit to convene a council of bishops, by the hands of our brothers Julius the
bishop, and Renatus the presbyter, and also my son Hilary, the deacon whom I
have sent ex latere'. in my stead, I have addressed a letter suited to the needs
of the case to our brother Flavian. from which you also, beloved, and the
whole Church may know about the ancient and unique Faith, which this unlearned
opponent has assailed, what we hold as handed down from God and what we preach
without alteration. Yet, because we must not forget the duty of mercy, we have
considered it consonant with our moderation as priests, that, if the condemned
presbyter corrects himself unreservedly, the sentence by which he is bound should
be remitted: if, however, he chooses to lie in the mire of his foolishness, let
the decree remain, and let him have his lot with those whose error he has
followed. Dated 13th June in the consulship of the illustrious Asturius and
Protogenes (449)(5).
LETTER XXXV.
TO JULIAN, BISHOP OF COS.(6).
Leo, bishop of the city of Rome to his well-beloved brother, Julian the
bishop.
I. Eutyches' heresy involves many other heresies.
Although by the hands of our brothers, whom we have despatched from the
city on behalf of the Faith, we hare sent a most full refutation of Eutyches'
excessive heresy to our brother Flavian, yet because we have received, through our
son Basil, your letter, beloved, which has given us much pleasure from the
fervour of its catholic spirit, we have added this page also which agrees with the
other document, that you may offer a united and strenuous resistance to those
who seek to corrupt the gospel of Christ, since the wisdom and the teaching of
the Holy Spirit is one and the same in you as in us: and whosoever does not
receive it, is not a member of Christ's body and cannot glory in that Head in
which he denies the presence of his own nature. What advantage is it to that most
unwise old man under the name of the Nestorian heresy to mangle the belief of
those, whose most devout faith he cannot tear to pieces: when in declaring the
only-begotten Son of God to have been so born of the blessed Virgin's womb that
He wore the appearance of a human body without the reality of human flesh being
united to the Word, he departs as far from the right path as did Nestorius in
separating the Godhead of the Word from the substance of His assumed Manhood(7)?
From which prodigious falsehood who does not see what monstrous opinions
spring? for he who denies the true Manhood of Jesus Christ, must needs be filled
with many blasphemies, being claimed by Apollinaris as his own, seized upon by
Valentinus, or held fast by Manichaeus: none of whom believed that there was true
human flesh in Christ. But, surely, if that is not accepted, not only is it
denied that He. who was in the form of God, but yet abode in the form of a slave,
was born Man according to the flesh and reasonable soul: but also that He was
crucified, dead, and buried, and that on the third day He rose again, and that,
sitting at the right hand of the Father, he will come to judge the quick and
the dead(8) in that body in which He Himself was judged,: because these
pledges(9) of our redemption are rendered void if Christ is not believed to have the
true and whole nature of true Manhood.
II. The two natures are to be found in Christ.
Or because the signs of His Godhead were undoubted, shall the proof of his
having a human body be assumed false, and thus the indications of both
natures be accepted to prove Him Creator, but not be accepted for the salvation of
the creature'? No, for the flesh did not lessen what belongs to His Godhead, nor
the Godhead destroy what belongs to His flesh. For He is at once both eternal
from His Father and temporal from His mother, inviolable in His strength,
possible in our weakness: in the Triune Godhead, of one and the same substance with
the Father and the Holy Spirit, but in taking Manhood on Himself, not of one
substance but of one and the same person [so that He was at once rich in poverty,
almighty in submission, impossible in punishment, immortal in death[2]]. For
the Word was not in any part of It turned either into flesh or into soul, seeing
that the absolute and unchangeable nature of the Godhead is ever entire in its
Essence, receiving no loss nor increase, and so beatifying the nature that It
had assumed that that nature remained for ever glorified in the person of the
Glorifier. [But why should it seem unsuitable or impossible that the Word and
flesh and soul should be one Jesus Christ, and that the Son of God and the Son of
Man should be one, if flesh and soul which are of different natures make one
person even without the Incarnation of the Word: since it is much easier for the
power of the Godhead to produce this union of Himself and man than for the
weakness of manhood by itself to effect it in its own substance.] Therefore neither
was the Word changed into flesh nor flesh into the Word: but both remains in
one and one is in both, not divided by the diversity and not confounded by
intermixture: He is not one by His Father and another by His mother, but the same,
in one way by His Father before every beginning, and in another by His mother at
the end of the ages: so that He was "mediator between God and men, the man
Christ Jesus[3]," in whom dwelt "the fulness of the Godhead bodily[4]:" because it
was the assumed (nature) not the Assuming (nature) which was raised, because
God "exalted Him and gave Him the Name which is above every name: that in the
name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven and things on earth and
things under the earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ
the Lord is in the glory of God the Father[3]."
III. The soul of Christ and the body of Christ were real in the full human
sense, though the circumstances of His birth were unique.
[But as to that which Eutyches dared to say in the court of bishops "that
before the Incarnation there were two natures in Christ, but after the
Incarnation one[6],"he ought to have been pressed by the frequent and anxious questions
of the judges to render an account of his acknowledgment, lest it should be
passed over as something trivial, though it was seen to have issued from the same
fount as his other poisonous opinions. For I think that in saying this he was
convinced that the soul, which the Saviour assumed, had had its abode in the
heavens before He was born of the Virgin Mary, and that the Word joined it to
Himself in the womb. But this is intolerable to catholic minds and ears: because
the Lord who came down from heaven brought with Him nothing that belonged to our
state: for He did not receive either a soul which had existed before nor a
flesh which was not of his mother's body. Undoubtedly our nature was not assumed
in such a way that it was created first and then assumed, but it was created by
the very assumption. And hence that which was deservedly condemned in Origen
must be punished in Eutyches also, unless he prefers to give up his opinion, viz.
the assertion that souls have had not only a life but also different actions
before they were inserted in men's bodies[7]]. For although the Lord's nativity
according to the flesh has certain characteristics wherein it transcends the
ordinary beginnings of man's being, both because He alone was conceived and born
without concupiscence of a pure Virgin, and because He was so brought forth of
His mother's womb that her fecundity bare Him without loss of virginity: yet
His flesh was not of another nature to ours: nor was the soul breathed into Him
from another source to that of all other men, and it excelled others not in
difference of kind but in superiority of power. For He had no opposition in His
flesh [nor did the strife of desires give rise to a conflict of wishes s]. His
bodily senses were active without the law of sin, and the reality of His emotions
being under the control of His Godhead and His mind, was neither assaulted by
temptations nor yielded to injurious influences. But true Man was united to God
and was not brought down from heaven as regards a pro-existing soul, nor
created out of nothing as regards the flesh: it wore the same person in the Godhead
of the Word and possessed a nature in common with us in its body and soul. For
He would not be "the mediator between God and man," unless God and man had
co-existed in both natures forming one true Person. The magnitude of the subject
urges us to a lengthy discussion: but with one of your learning there is no need
for such copious dissertations, especially as we have already sent a sufficient
letter to our brother Flavian by our delegates for the confirmation of the
minds, not only of priests but also of the laity. The mercy of God will, we
believe, provide that without the loss of one soul the sound may be defended against
the devil's wiles, and the wounded healed. Dated 13th June in the consulship of
the illustrious Asturius and Protogenes (449).
LETTER XXXVI.
TO FLAVlAN, BISHOP OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
(He acknowledges the receipt of Flavian's second letter (xxvi) and
protests against the necessity for a general council, though at the same time he
acquiesces in it. Dated 21 June, a week after the Tome).