Pope Leo I
Redirected from St. Leo the Great
Pope Leo I was Pope from 440 to 461.
According to the Liber pontificalis he was a native of Tuscany.
By 431, as a deacon, he occupied a sufficiently important position for Cyril of Alexandria to apply to him in order that Rome's influence
should be thrown against the claims of Juvenal of Jerusalem[?] to patriarchal jurisdiction over Palestine -- unless this letter is addressed rather to Pope Celestine I. About the same time Johannes Cassianus[?] dedicated to him the treatise against Nestorius written at his request. But nothing shows more plainly the confidence felt in him than his being chosen by the emperor to settle the dispute between Aetius and Albinus, the two highest officials in Gaul.
During his absence on this mission, Pope Sixtus III died (August 11, 440), and Leo was unanimously elected by the people to
succeed him. On September 29 he entered upon a pontificate which was to be epoch-making for the centralization of the government of the Church.
An uncompromising foe of heresy, Leo found that
in the diocese of Aquileia, Pelagians were received
into church communion without formal repudiation
of their errors; he wrote to rebuke this
culpable negligence, and required a solemn abjuration before a synod.
Manicheans fleeing before the Vandals had come to Rome in 439 and secretly organized there; Leo
became aware of this and proceeded
against them (c. 443), holding a public
debate with their representatives, burning their books, and warning the Roman Christians against them. The edict of Valentinian III against them (June 19, 445) was brought about by his efforts.
Nor was his attitude less decided against the Priscillianists. Bishop Turrubius of Astorga,
astonished at the spread of this sect in Spain, had
addressed the other Spanish bishops on the subject,
sending a copy of his letter to Leo, who did not let
slip the opportunity to exercise influence in Spain.
He wrote an extended treatise (July 21, 447) against the sect, examining its false teaching in detail, and calling for a Spanish general council to investigate whether it had any adherents in the episcopate -- but this was prevented by the political circumstances of Spain.
Leo enforced his authority in 445 against Dioscurus[?], Cyril's successor in the patriarchate of Alexandria, insisting that the ecclesiastical practise of his see should follow that of Rome; since
Mark, the disciple
of Peter and founder of the Alexandrian Church, could have had no other tradition than that of the prince of the apostles.
The fact that the African province of Mauretania Caesariensis had
been preserved to the empire and thus to the
Nicene faith in the Vandal invasion, and in its isolation was disposed to rest on outside support, gave Leo
an opportunity to assert his authority there, which
he did decisively in regard to a number of questions of discipline.
In a letter to the bishops of Campania, Picenum, and Tuscany (443) he required the observance of all his precepts and those of his predecessors; and he sharply rebuked the bishops of Sicily (447) for their deviation from the Roman custom as to the time of baptism, requiring them
to send delegates to the Roman synod to learn the proper practise.
The assertion of Roman power over Illyria had
been a strong point with previous popes.
Pope Innocent I had constituted the metropolitan of
Thessalonica his vicar, in order to oppose the growing
power of the patriarch of Constantinople there.
But now the Illyrian bishops showed a tendency to
side with Constantinople, and the popes had
difficulty in maintaining their authority. In 444 Leo
laid down in a letter to them the principle that Peter
had received the primacy and oversight of the
whole Church as a requital of his faith, and that
thus all important matters were to be referred to
and decided by Rome. In 446 he had occasion
twice to interfere in the affairs of Illyria, and in
the same spirit spoke of the Roman pontiff as the
apex of the hierarchy of bishops, metropolitans, and
primates. From the end of the fifth century,
however, the influence of Constantinople was again predominant here.
Not without serious opposition did he succeed in
asserting his authority over Gaul. Patroclus of
Arles (d. 426) had received from Pope Zosimus the
recognition of a primacy over the Gallican Church which was strongly
asserted by his successor Hilary (429-449). An
appeal from Celidonius of Besançon gave
Leo occasion to proceed against
Hilary, who defended himself stoutly at
Rome, refusing to recognize Leo's
judicial status. But Leo restored
Celidonius and restricted Hilary to his own diocese,
depriving him even of his metropolitan rights over the province of Vienne.
Feeling that his dominant idea of the Roman universal monarchy was
threatened, Leo appealed to the civil power for
support, and obtained from Valentinian III
the famous decree of June 6, 445, which recognized
the primacy of the bishop of Rome based on the
merits of Peter, the dignity of the city, and the
Nicene Creed (in their interpolated form);
ordained that any opposition to his rulings, which
were to have the force of law, should be treated as
treason; and provided for the forcible extradition
by provincial governors of anyone who refused to
answer a summons to Rome. Hilary made his
submission, although under his successor, Ravennius,
Leo divided the metropolitan rights between Arles and Vienne (450).
A favorable occasion for extending the authority
of Rome in the East offered in the renewal of the
Christological controversy by Eutyches, who
in the beginning of the conflict
appealed to Leo and took refuge with him on his
condemnation by Flavian. But on receiving full
information from Flavian; Leo took his side decisively.
At the "Robber Synod" of Ephesus Leo's representatives delivered the famous "tome" or statement of the faith of the Roman Church in
the form of a letter addressed to Flavian, which
repeats, in close adherence to Augustine, the
formulas of western Christology, without really
touching the problem that was agitating the East. The
council did not read the letter, and paid no
attention to the protests of Leo's legates, but deposed
Flavian and Eusebius, who appealed to Rome.
Leo demanded of the emperor that an ecumenical
council should be held in Italy, and in the
meantime, at a Roman synod in October 449, repudiated
all the decisions of the "Robber Synod."
Without going into a critical examination of its dogmatic
decrees, in his letters to the emperor and others he
demanded the deposition of Eutyches as a Manichean and Docetic heretic.
With the death of Theodosius II (450) and the sudden change in the
Eastern situation, Anatolius the new patriarch of
Constantinople fulfilled Leo's requirements, and
his "tome" was everywhere read and recognized.
He was now no longer desirous of having a council,
especially since it would not be held in Italy. It
was called to meet at Nicaea, then transferred to
Chalcedon, where his legates held at least an
honorary presidency, and where the bishops
recognized him as the interpreter of the voice of Peter
and as the head of their body, requesting of him
the confirmation of their decrees. He firmly
declined to confirm their disciplinary arrangements,
which seemed to allow Constantinople a practically
equal authority with Rome and regarded the civil
importance of a city as a determining factor in its
ecclesiastical position; but he strongly supported
its dogmatic decrees, especially when, after the
accession of the Emperor Leo I (457) there seemed to be a disposition toward compromise with the
Eutychians. He succeeded in having an orthodox
patriarch, and not the Monophysite Timotheus Ælurus, chosen as patriarch of Alexandria on the murder of Proterius.
The approaching collapse of the Western Empire
gave Leo a further opportunity to appear as the
representative of lawful authority. When Attila
invaded Italy in 452 and threatened Rome, it was
Leo who, with two high civil functionaries, went to
meet him, and so impressed him that he withdrew
-- at least according to Prosper, although Jordanis,
who represents Leo's contemporary Priscus, gives
other grounds. His intercession could not
prevent the sack of the city by Genseric in 455, but
murder and arson were repressed by his influence.
He died probably on November 10, 461.
The significance of Leo's pontificate lies in the fact of his assertion of the universal episcopate of the Roman bishop, which comes out in his letters, and still more in his ninety-six extant orations.
According to him the Church is built upon Peter, in pursuance of the
promise of Matt. xvi. 16-19. Peter participates
in everything which is Christ's;
what the other apostles have in common with him
they have through him. The Lord prays for Peter
alone when danger threatens all the apostles,
because his firmness will strengthen the others. What
is true of Peter is true also of his successors. Every
other bishop is charged with the care of his own
special flock, the Roman with that of the whole
Church. Other bishops are only his assistants in this great task.
Through the see of Peter, Rome has become the capital of the world in a wider sense than before. For this reason, when the earth was
divided among the apostles, Rome was reserved to
Peter, that here, at the very center, the decisive
triumph might be won over the earthly wisdom of
philosophy and the power of the demons; and thus
from the head the light of truth streams out through the whole body.
In Leo's eyes the decrees of the Council of Chalcedon acquired their validity from his confirmation. The wide range of this theory justifies the application to him of the title of the first pope.
The Roman Catholic church marks 11 April as the feast day of Saint Leo.
The Eastern Orthodox churches mark 18 February as the feast day of Saint Leo.
Zeal for Orthodoxy.
Asserts His Authority in Gaul.
Leo's Significance