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Today is the feast day of St Pope Leo the Great. As we have had some excellent posts recently on the themes of authority and catholicity, this might be an opportunity to say something about the role of Leo the Great in the process of establishing the place of the Papacy in these matters.
It is easy (which is why it is ao often done) to assume that from the beginning the Papacy based itself on the Petrine verses in St. Matthew’s Gospel. The Eastern Orthodox like to point out that those claims were cast in terms of ‘primacy’; they are correct. But what did that much-disputed word mean to those who used it in the early Church? If we are to understand this, we need to understand something about Roman ideas of inheritance and authority – ideas which were shared across the whole Empire – including Constantinople.
St. Leo the Great made two main contributions to the developing understanding of what ‘primacy’ mean. The first amounts to an assertion that the past existed in the present, not just because he was Peter’s successor, but in the form of a direct and present link between the Apostle and the Pope. As he put it in his sermon on 19 September 443 (Sermon 3.4)
Regard him [Peter] as present in the lowliness of my person. Honour him. In him continues to reside the responsibility for all shepherds, along with the protection of the sheep entrusted to them. His dignity does not fade even in an unworthy heir.’
This is what Leo understood by the saying of the Chalcedonian Fathers: ‘Peter has spoken through Leo. (See here also W. Ullmann, ‘Leo I and the Theme of Papal Primacy’, Journal of Theological Studies 1960, pp. 26-28).
Under Roman jurisprudence, a person was supposed to be present in his legal representative, even as the deceased was in his heir. The same jurisprudence was present in the eastern empire, so to argue that anyone in Constantinople would have been ignorant of this conception of what it meant for Leo to have said what he had said seems to strain credulity. Indeed, as K. Shatz puts it in Papal Primacy From Its Origins to the Present (1996), Leo made ‘the “church of tradition … into the church of the capital city that extends its laws to the whole world.’ (pp. 33-36 for the argument).
On this understanding the Pope was not simply Peter’s representative but his living successor – Peter spoke through him. Thus, Rome’s judgments and decrees were rendered universal because the Holy Apostle was understood to be present in Leo and in the system of justice he administered. As Leo put in in that same sermon on 19 September 443 (3.3):
Persevering in the fortitude he received, blessed Peter does not relinquish his government of the Church. He was ordained before the others so that, when he is called rock, declared foundation, installed as doorkeeper for the kingdom of heaven, appointed arbiter of binding and loosing (with his definitive judgments retaining forces even in heaven), we might know through the very mysteries of these appellations what sort of fellowship he had with Christ. He now manages the things entrusted to him more completely and effectively. He carries out every aspect of his duties and responsibilities in him and through him whom he has been glorified.
So, if we do anything correctly or judge anything correctly, if we obtain anything at all from the mercy of God through daily supplications, it comes about as the result of his works and merits. In this see his power lives on and his authority reigns supreme. This, dearly beloved, is what the confession has obtained [Matthew 16:18]. Since it was inspired by God the Father in the apostle’s heart, it has risen above all the uncertainties of human thinking and has received the strength of a rock that cannot be shaken by any pounding.
It is Peter’s presence that brings about the Christian universalism that Leo envisoned himself exercising. If we look at his letter to the bishops of Illyricium, 12 January 444, placing them under Anastasius, the bishop of Thessalonica, and telling them that serious disputes must be referred to Rome, we see him exercising that power of which his sermons spoke.
The primacy of Rome was not simply the result of Apostolic succession, or of inhertance from St. Peter, but of this very special relationship which ensured that Peter spoke through the Pope. As Leo says in a sermon given on 29 September: [Sermons 5.4]
our solemnity is not merely the apostolic dignity of the most blessed Peter. He does not cease to preside over his see but unfailingly maintains that fellowship which he has with the eternal Priest. That stability which he received from Christ the rock (by having himself been made ‘rock’) has poured over onto his heirs as well. Whenever there is any show of firmness, it is undoubtedly the shepherd’s fortitude that appears.
Leo’s views are set out in fuller form in a sermon preached on 29 June 443 (Sermon 83.1) in which he makes it clear that since Peter exercises the Lord’s power on His behalf, so too does the Pope exercise the powers of Christ Himself, as Peter speaks through him.
This is not a claim made by any other Bishop. It was made in public by Leo in his sermons and letters, and it was based firmly upon Scripture, patristic testimony and the common law of the Empire. Leo deserves to be called ‘the Great’, not only for what he did in his time as Pope, but also for the rich legacy he left us. His sermons are well worth acquainting yourselves with.
Fascinating article.
I’m asking, with respect, because I don’t know – so ‘inerrancy’ comes from St. Peter to each successive Pope? Or have I missed something? Is St. Peter ‘in’ each Pope in some kind of mysterious way? I have heard Roman Catholics talk about ‘the mysteries’ so I’m wondering if this is one of them.
Thanks for your patience.
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The Church has always taken the view that in matters of faith, that is doctrinal and dogmatic matters, the Pope is guarded against pronouncing falsely. Every Pope inherits, as it were, this safeguarding by virtue of being St Peter’s successor. This does not, of course, guard him from being wrong on other matters.
In the nineteenth century, in the face of rising secularist aggression, the Vatican held a Council at which a formal definition of what infallibility meant was pronounced. It did not go as far as the extreme advocates of Papal authority wanted, and Newman, who had thought it unnecessary, turned out to be correct in thinking that a formal definition would make Popes very careful to be clear when they pronounced infallibly. The Immaculate Conception of Our Lady was, if memory serves, the first pronouncement thus made. But again, as with Infallibility itself, it codified what the Church had always taught, but had seen no need to pronounce on before the rise of widespread atheist hostility to religion.
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“Inerrancy” is a doctrine concerning Scripture, as opposed to Papal ex cathedra announcements. There are different interpretations of it. There is also the doctrine of perspicuity.
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Nicholas
1) Inerrancy – could you describe (a) when this `doctrine’ was invented and (b) what it is supposed to mean?
I have in mind a horrible council from Chicago in the 1970’s which used pretentious language, putting down postulates which were supposed to lead to exactly one thing: God made the heavens and earth in 6 days flat approximately 6000 years ago and then had a coffee break on the seventh day.
It is clear to me that the whole of Scripture is governed by the Spirit of God; and we can discern the Will of God from it; we can also discern the `errors’ and, particularly, the mind-set which led to the `errors’ introduced by those writing it (I’m mostly thinking of the more sanctimonious parts where anyone who lets off in an enclosed space should be put to death – rules which were never applied and, if they had been, would have meant that all the patriarchs would have been put to death).
2) Perspicacity is another word that I never heard until I came across one of the more extreme seminaries (what is now called the Union School of Theology in Bridgend Wales). I do wonder what this means – especially if we look at the debates leading up to the Nicene creed, the views of Athanasius on the Trinity, the other views, why they felt they had to put in the controversial `filioque’ clause – which (in the view of Torrance) would never have been necessary if the position of Athanasius on the Trinity had been accepted without dispute. So – what does `persicacity’ mean? In what sense?
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I think my answer would require a post but the short answer is that I believe there are errors in the bible, but those errors are not a problem for faith and morals, being relatively minor. I am happy to accept scientific explanations and I believe that large parts of the bible were pretty straightforward for the original intended audience to understand. I do not believe in literal six day creation or that Adam and Eve were the first human beings or the only human beings of their generation (ie their children married humans from outside the family, rather than committing incest). I do not believe the author of Genesis intended us to understand the text in the way that fundamentalists do.
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Thank you. That was very clear and helpful.
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I am pleased that you found it helpful.
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