Continued…
And we know that Pope St. Leo flat out rejected Canon XVIII of Chalcedon. He wrote to the Empress Pulcheria: “’As for the resolution which is contrary to the Nicene Decree,* I declare it to be invalid and annul it by the authority of the holy Apostle Peter*.’” (Scott pg. 198)
The Patriarch Anatolius of Constantinople wrote the following regarding Canon 28 to Pope St. Leo:
“‘As for those things which the universal Council of Chalcedon recently ordained in favor of the church of Constantinople, let Your Holiness be sure that there was no fault in me, who from my youth have always loved peace and quiet, keeping myself in humility. It was the most reverend clergy of the church of Constantinople who were eager about it, and they were equally supported by the most reverend priests of those parts, who agreed about it. Even so, the whole force of confirmation of the acts was reserved for the authority of Your Blessedness. Therefore, let Your Holiness know for certain that I did nothing to further the matter, knowing always that I held myself bound to avoid the lusts of pride and covetousness.’ (To Pope Leo, Ep 132 [on the subject of canon 28 of Chalcedon], 451 A.D.)”
Source:
catholic-legate.com/Apolo…ThePapacy.aspx
Also worth citing is an extant citation attributed to St. Methodius. I will lett Scott introduce it:
“Prof. d’Herbingy quotes the Orthodox Russian writer, A. Pavlov, who discovered a Slav MS. Of the twelfth century and published the text in the Vizantiiskii Vremennik of 1897 (t. iv, pp. 150-2) which gives an account of the answer of S. Methodius, the Byzantine apostle of the Slavs, about this XVIIIth Canon:
‘It is necessary to know that this decision was not accepted by the blessed Pope Leo. . . . And it is not true, as this canon affirms, that the holy fathers have accorded the primacy and honour to old Rome because it was the capital of the empire. But it is from on high that it began, it is of grave divine that this primacy has derived its origin. Peter, the most exalted of the apostles, heard from the mouth of our Lord these words (Matt. xvi. 17). This is why he possesses among the hierarchs pre-eminent rank and the first see. It is notorious, besides, that, although emperors have dwelt at Milan and Ravenna, and that their palaces are found there to our own day, these cities have not received on that account the primacy. For the dignity and the pre-eminence of the priestly hierarchy have not been established by the favour of civil power, but by Divine choice and by apostolic authority. . . . How would it be possible, because of an earthly emperor, to displace divine gifts and apostolic privileges and to introduce innovations into the prescriptions of the immaculate faith. Immovable, indeed, unto the end are the privileges of old Rome. So, in so far as being set over all the Churches, the Pontiff of Rome has no need to betake himself to all the holy ecumenical councils, but without his participation manifested by the sending of some of his subordinates, ever ecumenical council is non-existent and it is he who renders legal everything that has been decided in the council.’
Methodius, the writer, is a Byzantine, and he concludes:
‘If there is anyone who appears opposed to what we say, let him examine well what the same most holy Pope Leo wrote to Marcian and Pulcheria of pious memory, what he wrote also to the Bishop of Constantinople, the above-named Anatolius and he will be convinced of the truth of these things.’” (Pgs. 198-199)
Luke Rivington writes about Canon XVIII and the Fathers who wrote it: “It was not true, as they asserted, that the Fathers (if the Nicene Fathers were meant) ‘gave’ her (patriarchal [16]) privileges to the See of Rome; they only recognised what was already ancient. It was not true that what the Nicene Fathers recognised as ancient custom was due to the secular position of the See of Rome. Her privileges were settled by herself as See o[f] St. Peter. It was not true that the Fathers of Constantinople had bestowed anything in the way of jurisdiction, but merely the second rank in the way of honorary precedence. It was not true that Constantinople had any right over Pontus, Thrace, and Asia Minor.”
Sources:
“The Eastern Churches and the Papacy”, S. Herbert Scott, London: Sheed & Ward, 1928
Luke Rivington, “The Primitive Church and the See of Peter”, from:
mwt.net/~lnpalm/byzantin.htm