Died at Rome, 19 Nov., 496. Gelasius, as he himself states in his letter to the Emperor
Anastasius (Ep. xii, n. 1), was Romanus natus. The assertion of the "Liber
Pontificalis" that he was natione Afer is consequently taken by many to mean
that he was of African origin, though Roman born. Others, however, interpreting natione
Afer as "African by birth", explain Romanus natus as "born a Roman
citizen". Before his election as pope, 1 March, 492, Gelasius had been much employed
by his predecessor, Felix II (or III), especially in drawing up ecclesiastical documents,
which has led some scholars to confuse the writings of the two pontiffs.
On his election to the papacy, Gelasius at once showed his strength of character and
his lofty conception of his position by his firmness in dealing with the adherents of
Acacius (see ACACIUS, PATRIARCH OF CONSTANTINOPLE). Despite all the efforts of the
otherwise orthodox patriarch, Euphemius of Constantinople (q. v.), and the threats and
wiles by which the Emperor Anastasius tried to obtain recognition from the Apostolic See,
Gelasius, though hard-pressed by difficulties at home, would make no peace that
compromised in the slightest degree the rights and honor of the Chair of Peter. The
constancy with which he combated the pretensions, lay and ecclesiastical, of the New Rome;
the resoluteness with which he refused to allow the civil or temporal pre-eminence of a
city to determine its ecclesiastical rank; the unfailing courage with which he defended
the rights of the "second " and the "third" sees, Alexandria and
Antioch, are some of the most striking features of his pontificate. It has been well said
that nowhere at this period can be found stronger arguments for the primacy of Peter's See
than in the works and writings of Gelasius. He is never tired of repeating that Rome owes
its ecclesiastical princedom not to an oecumenical synod nor to any temporal importance it
may have possessed, but to the Divine institution of Christ Himself, Who conferred the
primacy over the whole Church upon Peter and his successors. (Cf. especially his letters
to Eastern bishops and the decretal on the canonical and apocryphal books.) In his dealing
with the emperor he is at one with the great medieval pontiffs. "There are two powers
by which chiefly this world is ruled: the sacred authority of the priesthood and the
authority of kings. And of these the authority of the priests is so much the weightier, as
they must render before the tribunal of God an account even for the kings of men."
Gelasius's pontificate was too short to effect the complete submission and reconciliation
of the ambitious Church of Byzantium. Not until Hormisdas (514-23) did the contest end in
the return of the East to its old allegiance. Troubles abroad were not the only occasions
to draw out the energy and strength of Gelasius. The Lupercalia, a superstitious and
somewhat licentious vestige of paganism at Rome, was finally abolished by the pope after a
long contest. Gelasius's letter to Andromachus, the senator, covers the main lines of the
controversy.
A stanch upholder of the old traditions, Gelasius nevertheless knew when to make
exceptions or modifications, such as his decree obliging the reception of the Holy
Eucharist under both kinds. This was done as the only effective way of detecting the
Manichaeans, who, though present in Rome in large numbers, sought to divert attention from
their hidden propaganda by feigning Catholicism. As they held wine to be impure and
essentially sinful, they would refuse the chalice and thus be recognized. Later, with the
change of conditions, the old normal method of receiving Holy Communion under the form of
bread alone returned into vogue. To Gelasius we owe the ordinations on the ember days (Ep.
xv), as well as the enforcement of the fourfold division of all ecclesiastical revenues,
whether income from estates or voluntary donations of the faithful, one portion for the
poor, another for the support of the churches and the splendour of Divine service, a third
for the bishop, and the fourth for the minor clergy. Though some writers ascribe the
origin of this division of church funds to Gelasius, still the pontiff speaks of it (Ep.
xiv, n. 27) as dudum rationabiliter decretum, having been for some time in force.
Indeed, Pope Simplicius (475, Ep. i, n. 2) imposed the obligation of restitution to the
poor and the Church upon a certain bishop who had failed in this duty; consequently it
must have been already regarded as at least a custom of the Church. Not content with one
enunciation of this charitable obligation, Gelasius frequently inculcates it in his
writings to bishops. For a long time the fixing of the Canon of the Scriptures was
attributed to Gelasius, but it seems now more probably the work of Damasus (367-85). As
Gelasius, however, in a Roman synod (494), published his celebrated catalogue of the
authentic writings of the Fathers, together with a list of apocryphal and interpolated
works, as well as the proscribed books of the heretics (Ep. xlii), it was but natural to
prefix to this catalogue the Canon of the Scriptures as determined by the earlier Pontiff,
and thus in the course of time the Canon itself came to be ascribed to Gelasius. In his
zeal for the beauty and majesty of Divine service, Gelasius composed many hymns, prefaces,
and collects, and arranged a standard Mass-book, though the Missal that has commonly gone
by his name, the "Sacramentarium Gelasianum", belongs properly to the next
century. How much of it is the work of Gelasius is still a moot question. Though pope but
for four years and a half, he exerted a deep influence on the development of church
polity, of the liturgy and ecclesiastical discipline. A large number of his decrees have
been incorporated into the Canon Law.
In his private life Gelasius was above all conspicuous for his spirit of prayer,
penance, and study. He took great delight in the company of monks, and was a true father
to the poor, dying empty-handed as a result of his lavish charity. Dionysius Exiguus in a
letter to his friend, the priest Julian (P.L., LXVII, 231), gives a glowing account of
Gelasius as he appeared to his contemporaries.
As a writer Gelasius takes high rank for his period. His style is vigorous and elegant,
though occasionally, obscure. Comparatively little of his literary work has come down to
us, though he is said to have been the most prolific writer of all the pontiffs of the
first five centuries. There are extant forty-two letters and fragments of forty-nine
others, besides six treatises, of which three are concerned with the Acacian schism, one
with the heresy of the Pelagians, another with the errors of Nestorius and Eutyches, while
the sixth is directed against the senator Andromachus and the advocates of the Lupercalia.
The best edition is that of Thiel.
The feast of St. Gelasius is kepton 21 Nov., the anniversary of his interment, though
many writers give this as the day of his death.
P.L., LIX, 9-191; CXXVIII, 439; CXXIX, 1210; THIEL, Epistolae Romanorum Pontificum
Genuinae (Braunsberg, 1868), I, 285-613, 21-82; JAFFE, Regesta Pontificum Romanorum
(Berlin), I, 53-60; DUCHESNE, Le Liber Pontificalis (Paris, 1886) I, 254-257; GRISAR,
Geschichte Roms und der Papst eim Mittelalter, I, 452-457, passim; THOENES, De Gelasio I
Papa (Wiesbaden, 1873); Roux, Le Pape Gelase (Bordeaux-Paris, 1880). For the Sacramentary
of Gelasius see PROBST, Die altesten romischen Sacramentarien und Ordines (Munster, 1892);
BISHOP, The Earliest Roman Mass-book in Dublin Review (Octoher, 1894); WILSON. The
Gelasian Sacramentary (Oxford, 1894): WILSON, A Classified Index to the Leonine, Gelasian
and Gregorian Sacramentaries (Cambridge, 1890); also P.L., LXXIV, 1049.
JOHN P.X. MURPHY
Transcribed by Joseph E. O'Connor
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VI
Copyright © 1909 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, September 1, 1909. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York