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Pope Leo the Great

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Title: Pope Leo the Great


1
Pope Leo the Great
  • By Allie Scanlon and Kelsie Sanbe

2
Pope Leo the Great
  • Date of birthUnknown
  • Date of Death November 10, 481
  • He reigned from 440-461

3
Biography
  • Also known as Pope Leo I
  • Leo was a native of Tuscany.
  • His fathers name was Quintinaus.

4
Pope Leo the Greats Papacy
  • He was elected to succeed Sixtus and was
    consecrated on September 29, 440 and governed
    the Roman Chuch for the next twenty-one years.
  • His papacy was marked by greatness He tirelessly
    preached against the heresies of Manichaeism,
    Pelagianism, Priscillianism, and Nestorianism.
  • Leo fought against the heresy of Eutyches, who,
    like Nestorius, denied the hypostatic union

5
Education and Early Life
  • Little information is known about Pope Leo the
    Greats education or early life.
  • The most know about his early life is the year he
    was born.

6
The Great
  • He was an extraordinary shepherd of the Catholic
    Church that he came to be known not only as Pope
    Saint Leo I, but also is one of the only two
    Popes in two thousand years to be called "the
    Great.
  • Leo got the name "the Great" because of his
    political achievements.

7
Stance on Papal Authority
  • Leo the Great played an important role in the
    development of the doctrine of papal primacy. Leo
    argued that popes were direct successors of the
    original apostles into whose care Jesus had
    entrusted the care and growth of Christianity.
    Saying, anyone who rejected papal authority was
    placed him- or herself outside the "body of
    Christ."

8
  • During a time of decline for the Roman Empire,
    Leo sought to strengthen the Church. He
    suppressed surviving pagan festivals and closed
    the remaining pagan temples. He sent missionaries
    to Africa, which was being ravaged by the
    barbarians. He instituted many reforms, including
    impressing strict discipline on the bishops.
    Although he spoke of the papacy as "a burden to
    shudder at," Leo met the challenge with great
    fidelity and self-sacrifice.

9
Writings
  • His most famous writing, commonly known as the
    Toe of St. Leo (449)was the basis of the Council
    of Chalcedon's (451) dogmatic definition of
    Christ as one Divine Person possessing two
    complete natures, human and divine.
  • It condemned Eutyches and clearly taught the
    mystery of the Incarnation.

10
The Tome
  • The letter of Pope Leo to Flavian, bishop of
    Constantinople, about Eutyches
  • Commonly known as the "Tome of Leo"

11
The Tome
  • At the Second Council of Ephesus, Leo's
    representatives delivered his 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.

12
Leader of the Church
  • Leo was also a courageous leader. In 452 he met
    Attila the Hun, known as "the Scourge of God,"
    and succeeded in saving Rome from being sacked.
  • Tradition holds that at the meeting Attila saw
    Peter and Paul wielding swords above Leo, and
    this ominous threat motivated Attila to retreat.
  • For this reason, Leo was called "the Shield of
    God."

13
Pope Leo
  • In the ninety-six sermons which have come down to
    us, we find Leo stressing the virtues of
    almsgiving, fasting, and prayer, and also
    expounding Catholic doctrine with clarity and
    conciseness, in particular the dogma of the
    Incarnation.

14
  • He was determined to shield his flock from
    heresy, and when he discovered that many
    Manichaeans, who had fled from the Vandals in
    Africa, had settled in Rome and were spreading
    their errors, he summoned them before a council
    of clergy and laymen.
  • Against the disobedient, Leo invoked the secular
    authority their books were burned, and they
    themselves were banished or else left Rome of
    their own volition.

15
Altar Piece
  • Pope St. Leo the Great's altar piece in St.
    Peter's Basilica, Rome, depicting the saintly
    pontiff turning Attila away from the city in that
    justly famous episode of 452.

16
Pope Leo the Great
  • St. Peter and St. Paul above the serene St. Leo
    the Great who went forth to face Attila and his
    Huns

17
Death
  • Pope Leo the Great died in Rome, Italy.

18
Pope Leos Death
  • Leo died on 10 November, 461, and was buried in
    the vestibule of St. Peter's on the Vatican.
  • In 688 Pope Sergius had his remains transferred
    to the basilica itself, and a special altar built
    over them.

19
Death
  • In 1754 Benedict XIV exalted him to the dignity
    of Doctor of the Church.
  • In the Latin Church the feast day of the great
    pope is held on 11 April, and in the Eastern
    Church on 18 February.

20
Works Cited
  • http//www.newadvent.org/cathen/09154b.htm
  • http//www.ewtn.com/library/mary/leo.htm
  • http//atheism.about.com/library/glossary/western/
    bldef_leogreat.htm
  • http//saints.sqpn.com/saintl04.htm
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