Mary’s mediation is like ours in nature, for she, like everyone else, prays to and depends fully on the Son and His Sacrifice. Neither the teaching of Co-Redemptrix nor the teaching of Mediatrix, which you need to understand more, conflict with that truth. No one’s intercession diminishes God’s glory. God’s glory is magnified more completely in our cooperation with His will, as we become like Him and pray (mediate) to Him for one another, as the Scripture commands us to do (James 5:16). Jesus is the One Mediator, but He unites us with Himself in that role of Mediator so that we, living as He lived, mediate (pray and sacrifice) for souls.
Mary, who was most perfectly united with Christ’s will for her life, is most perfectly mediating between us and Jesus while Jesus and His Sacrifice alone open the way for us to the Father. Whenever Mary prays, it is Christ that inspires her to pray, Christ’s life in her that does the praying, and Christ that answers the prayer, so truly we have only One Intercessor, One Mediator, and it is impossible for anyone sharing and praying in the life of Christ to break that unity.
Mary is Mediatrix in the same way we are mediators, only we bring forth Christ only in part, whereas Mary’s role as Theotokos means she brings forth Christ fully.
In
this article you will find that this has always been the Church’s teaching, from the early centuries all the way till now.
The Fathers understood that Mary’s role as Mediatrix does not at all detract from Christ’s role as our One Mediator, but rather is like in nature to our own roles as mediators, and is completely dependent on Christ and can only exist through Him. He is our One Intercessor and One Mediator, and like Him there is no other.
kbarr82:
Co-redemptrix? Was Mary crucified for us? I think not. She intercedes for us, she is “our tainted nature’s solitary boast.”
That intercession is a key part of what the teaching of “Co-Redemptrix” describes. The Apostle Paul wrote, “Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church” (Col 1:24). We all can suffer in unity with Christ, for we all are Christ’s Body, so we all must bear the Cross as Jesus did to be one with Him. Mary, like us, suffers in unity with Christ. In the sense that we all suffer with Christ to bring forth His salvation to others, we all are “co-redeemers,” though we only will suffer with Christ because He inspires us to suffer, because He living in us gives us the strength and will to suffer for Him, and because He accepts the offering and uses it. So again, all redemption is in Christ, and the more greatly we suffer for Christ to bring Christ’s redemptive life to others, the more greatly He is glorified in us and in the world.
The teaching of “Co-Redemptrix,” is like the teaching of “Mediatrix,” and again is tied to Theotokos, the teaching that Mary brings Christ forth.
2 Maccabees 7 prophecies both the redemptive offering of Christ and Mary’s role as co-redemptrix. In that passage, seven sons are martyred for their faith in God and refusal to disobey His Law. The seven sons represent Christ. They are wounded in the same parts of their bodies as Christ was wounded (back, scalp, mouth, wrists and ankles), and their mother urges them on. The faith of the mother in this passage foreshadows the faith of Mary at Golgotha, in which she offers up Christ for the salvation of the world. The mother in 2 Maccabees 7 offers her sons up for the fulfillment of God’s will. She encourages them to keep going, the reverse of Christ’s apostles, who tried to dissuade Him from His sacrificial offering. The mother in 2 Maccabees 7 offers her sons up in faith to the tortures Antiochus has in store for them, foreshadowing how Mary, in perfect faith, offered up her Divine Son to the torments of Satan.
She suffered more than anyone in the world has suffered except her Son, because she was immaculate and perfectly in love with Him, so it tore at her heart to see Him suffer. She had the best possible relationship with Jesus, she loved Him as His Daughter, His Mother and His Bride, she had been with Him all the years of His Life except parts of His last three, and she was completely self-abandoned for love of Him. She also was with Him more openly, standing right next to His Cross in His Passion, than anyone. The enormity of her suffering is the result of her perfect love.
Because she was so fully given to Him, the sacrifice of Jesus was completely given through her, along with all other graces. This doctrine also is part of the Annunciation, for at the Annunciation, she assented by faith to Christ’s coming into the world. At Golgotha, she assented by faith for Christ’s suffering to be completely poured out to us. At the Annunciation and at Golgotha, through faith, Mary brought forth Jesus, our Redemption.