Church Father
"Leo the Great — the first pope to fully articulate the Roman primacy in theological terms, who defined the Christology of Chalcedon and faced Attila the Hun at the gates of Rome"
Leo was born c. AD 400, probably in Tuscany, and was elected Pope in AD 440 while on a diplomatic mission in Gaul. The central theological achievement of his pontificate was the Tome — a letter to the Patriarch of Constantinople (AD 449) defining the two natures of Christ against Monophysitism. When his letter was read at the Council of Chalcedon in AD 451, the assembled bishops responded: “Peter has spoken thus through Leo.” In AD 452, Attila the Hun stood at the gates of Rome after ravaging northern Italy. Leo rode out to meet him and persuaded him to withdraw. When the Vandals sacked Rome in AD 455, Leo negotiated to spare the people from massacre.
"Peter himself still performs the duties he received — and sheds light on whatever requires illumination, throughout the whole Church. He is the one who still presides over all bishops as their head."
"Each form does the acts which belong to it, in communion with the other; namely, the Word performing what belongs to the Word, and the flesh carrying out what belongs to the flesh."
Ordination chain from Christ to this Father — and onward to students. Solid links cite named primary sources. Unknown means no ordainer is historically attested. Nodes with a profile are linked.
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