The holy and blessed Apostles, Thomas and Bartholomew of the
Twelve, and Adai and Man of the Seventy, who discipled the
East, committed to all the Churches in the East the Holy Leaven,
to be kept for the perfecting of the administration of the
Sacrament of our Lord’s Body until His coming again.
And should any Christians dispute the fact of the above mentioned
Apostles having committed to those of the East this sanctified
Leaven, on the ground that Peter, the head of the Apostles,
and his companions did not commit it to the Western, and should
object to us on this wise: “If what you say is true,
then one of these two consequences must result: either
the Apostles did not agree in their mode of discipling, which
is unseemly to think, or this tradition of yours is false”.
Against these we reply: The Easterners from the day of their
discipleship up to this day have kept their faith as a sacred
trust, and have observed, without change,. the Apostolical
Canons; and notwithstanding all the persecutions which they
have suffered from many kings, and their subjection to the
severe yoke of a foreign power, they have never altered their
creed nor changed their canons.
Such as are well versed in such matters know full well the
labour and care required on the part of Christians to observe
these canons, and more especially to preserve this Leaven,
in a difficult country, where there is no Christian sovereign
to support them, nor any commander to back them, and where
they are continually persecuted, vexed, and troubled. Had this
Leaven not been of Apostolical transmission they would not,
most assuredly, have endured all these afflictions and trials
to keep it together with orthodox faith. Then, as to their
argument drawn from Peter and the great Apostles who discipled
the West, we have this to oppose them, that those Apostles
did transmit the same to the Westerns but that with their alteration
of the faith, the canons also were corrupted by their (Western)
subjection to the will of heretical kings. And, in proof of
this statement, we urge that if they all held the traditions
of the Apostles, the Franks would not offer an unleavened,
and the Romans (Greeks) a leavened oblation; since the Apostles
did not transmit it in two different ways. Therefore, the Westerns
have changed the faith and the canons, and not the Easterners.