Letter 32: He acknowledges their zeal and refers them to the Tome To his well-beloved sons Faustus, Martinus, and the rest of the archimandrites, Leo the bishop. As on behalf of the faith which Eutyches has tried to disturb, I was sending legates de latere to assist the defense of the Truth, I thought it fitting that I should address a letter to you also,...

Pope Leo the GreatTheodorus|c. 444 AD|Pope Leo the Great|Human translated
christologydiplomaticimperial politicsmonasticismproperty economics
Travel & mobility

He acknowledges their zeal and refers them to the Tome.

To his beloved sons Faustus, Martinus, and the rest of the archimandrites [heads of monasteries] — Leo the bishop.

Since I was already sending representatives on behalf of the Faith that Eutyches [a monk in Constantinople who taught that Christ had only one nature after the incarnation] has tried to disturb, to assist in the defense of the Truth, I thought it fitting to address a letter to you as well, beloved. I know for certain that you are so zealous for the cause of true religion that you cannot calmly listen to such blasphemous and profane claims. For the Apostle's command lives in your hearts: "If anyone has preached to you a gospel other than the one you received, let him be accursed" (Galatians 1:9). We also rule that the teaching of the said Eutyches is to be rejected — teaching which, as we have learned from examining the official records, has been deservedly condemned. If its foolish proponent persists in his stubbornness, he will share the fate of those whose error he has followed. For anyone who says that Christ did not have a human nature — that is, our nature — is rightly excluded from Christ's Church. But if, through the mercy of God's Spirit, he comes to his senses and acknowledges his wicked error, fully condemning what Catholics reject, we do not wish him to be denied mercy. The Lord's Church should suffer no loss, for the repentant can always be readmitted — it is only error that must be shut out. On the mystery of our great faith, through which the Incarnation of the Word of God brings us justification and redemption: what we believe, drawn from the tradition of the Fathers, is now sufficiently explained in the letter I have sent to our brother Bishop Flavian [Leo's "Tome" — his landmark doctrinal letter defining that Christ has two complete natures, divine and human, united in one person]. Through this declaration from your chief pastor, you may know what, according to the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, we desire to be established in the hearts of all the faithful. Dated June 13, in the consulship of the illustrious Asturius and Protogenes (449).

Human translation - New Advent (NPNF / ANF series)

Latin / Greek Original

Original text not yet available in this corpus.

This letter still needs a Latin or Greek source-text backfill. The source link, when available, is preserved so the text can be checked and added later.

View source

Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from New Advent / NPNF.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/3604032.htm

Related Letters

Pope Leo the GreatTheodorusc. 443 AD · leo great #23

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 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 ...

Basil of CaesareaTheodorusc. 364 AD · basil caesarea #124

It is sometimes said that slaves to the passion of love, when by some inevitable necessity they are separated from the object of their desire, are able to stay the violence of their passion by indulging the sense of sight, if haply they can look at the picture of the beloved object. Whether this be true or not I cannot say; but what has befallen...

Gregory the Great (Wisigothic)Theodorusc. 598 AD · gregory great #2065

The verbal gift of the young Acosimus that was made to you is hereby confirmed in writing.

Theodoret of CyrrhusTheodorusc. 440 AD · theodoret cyrrhus #40

Your eloquence, which I have long admired from afar, has now been demonstrated to me afresh through your excellent...

Pope Gregory the GreatTheodorusc. 595 AD · gregory great #6008

Gregory to Theodorus, Demetrius, Philip, Zeno, and Alcissonus, Bishops of Epirus. The notification of your letters, most dear brethren, has made known to us that our brother Andrew has, by the favour of God, been solemnly ordained bishop of the city of Nicopolis. And, since you signify that his consecration has taken place with the assent of the...