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twf
Guest
Constantine - don’t worry about it too much. It is a challenging concept for many (has been for myself in the past as well), and it isn’t something that one must fully understand in order to be a good Catholic. Let me just say this - rest assured that the Latin Church does not in anyway suggest that we cannot have a direct, personal, and intense union with the Lord Jesus Christ (and, of course, the other two persons of the Blessed Trinity). Believing that Our Lady is mediatrix of all graces (something that has not been defined as dogma - but is widely accepted) does not in any way detract from this. It is, in fact, a very mystical concept. It was through and in Mary that the Holy Spirit brought the God-Man into the world; Mary’s “yes” to the Holy Spirit gave way to the perfect marriage of God and Man in her womb in the person of Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ in the Incarnation IS all grace, so by that reasoning alone, Mary is the instrument by which all grace entered the world. As Mother of the Church she continues to play a central role in the redemptive mystery - within the Church, the mystical extension of the Incarnation, the Holy Spirit, through Mary’s intercession, forms each of us, the adopted brothers of Christ and sons of Mary, into the God-man…I have to look more into this but quite honestly I am troubled by how I understand this.
As Catholics we could accurately state that all sacramental grace is mediated through the hands of a sinful, mortal priest. I receive the grace of new life through the priest when he baptizes me. I receive the grace of forgiveness through the priest when he absolves me. I receive the Lord Jesus Christ - body and blood, soul and divinity - from the hands of the priest when he places the Host on my tongue. I thus receive all sacramental grace…in fact Jesus Himself, through the priest, yet this does not in any way diminish my personal encounter with the Risen Lord. Think of it this way - as the priest hands Christ to us in Holy Communion…so Our Lady, by the power and grace of the Holy Spirit, gives birth to Christ within our hearts.
Metroplitan Ware, I believe, acknowledged that the title co-redemptrix could be true of Our Lady, with the understanding that it is also true, in a lesser sense, of each of us. The Latin Church fully agrees with that. As St. Paul teaches, we are all called to share in the sufferings of Christ, mystically united to His cross, in order to mediate salvation to our brothers and sisters, as Our Lady did at the foot of the cross.
Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I am filling up what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ on behalf of his body, which is the church*…(Col. 1:24, NAB)
I would say that yes Our Lady is the Mediatrix and yes she is the Co-redemptrix - as she is most perfectly united to Her Divine Son and most perfectly participates in His redemptive work…but each of us, as baptized Christians who have put on Christ are co-mediators and co-redeemers in a less perfect sense.