Gelasius I

Gelasius I

pope|445–496|Rome
Pope Gelasius I (c. 445–496) served as bishop of Rome from 492 to 496 — a short pontificate that was nonetheless one of the most intellectually consequential in papal history. He is best known for his letter to Emperor Anastasius I articulating the doctrine of the 'two powers' — the idea that the world is governed by two distinct authorities, the sacred authority of bishops and the royal power of emperors, each supreme in its own sphere. This formulation would shape Western political thought for a thousand years. His surviving letters — 45 in this collection — show a pope navigating the aftermath of the Acacian Schism with a combination of theological rigor and political firmness. He wrote to Eastern bishops, Western clergy, and the emperor himself, consistently asserting Roman authority while trying to manage the practical realities of a divided church. He also produced important decrees on liturgy, church discipline, and the treatment of the Manichaeans. Gelasius's letters are significant because they represent the papacy at a crucial turning point — asserting ideological independence from Constantinople at the very moment when political independence was becoming a reality. His voice is sharp, doctrinally precise, and uncompromising — a pope who believed that Rome's authority came from Peter and was not subject to imperial approval.
45
Letters sent
2
Letters received
47
Total letters
10
Correspondents

Top correspondents

All letters (47)

From Sidonius Apollinarisc. 467

You prove — and I do not deny — that I have been remiss, since I have not yet included any letter addressed to you...

sidonius apollinaris #9015
From Sidonius Apollinarisc. 471

You prove -- and I do not deny it -- that I have been at fault, since I have not yet attached any letter bearing...

sidonius apollinaris #16
To Cleroc. 494

Having granted the Brindisians the bishop they requested — Julian, now his brother and fellow bishop — Gelasius...

gelasius i #22
To Romanaec. 494

Gelasius instructs the bishops of Sicily to administer the resources of their churches in accordance with canon law.

gelasius i #23
To Herculentioc. 494

Frequent and insistent complaints reach Gelasius about bishops who neither know the ancient canons nor obey his own...

gelasius i #26
To Papac. 494

A similar decree concerning two serfs of Maxima, an illustrious and magnificent lady, who have been ordained as...

gelasius i #27
To Papac. 494

Two clergymen of the church of Grumentum — Silvester and Faustinianus — have tearfully complained to Gelasius that...

gelasius i #28
To Uuiversisperc. 495

Because some persons are not ashamed to disturb ecclesiastical order through illicit ambition and to infringe the...

gelasius i #33
To Natalis, of Salonac. 495

A second letter on the same subject as the preceding.

gelasius i #34
To Actoribusc. 495

A receipt concerning certain revenues of the Roman Church for the year 494.

gelasius i #35
To Vincomaloc. 495

A second receipt of the same kind.

gelasius i #36
To Papac. 495

It is indeed established and prescribed by Gelasius's own orders that no one in a church or oratory not dedicated...

gelasius i #37
To Johannic. 496

Gelasius expresses indignation at the audacious conduct of Asellus, who held the office of archdeacon.

gelasius i #40
To Johannic. 496

A religious woman named Olibula has petitioned Gelasius with tears that she is being oppressed by the claims of her...

gelasius i #43