Thursday, November 6, 2025

Did the Church Ban 'Co-Redemptrix/Mediatrix of Grace?'

The Marian Titles in Catholic Tradition: Clarification Amid Continuity in Mater Populi Fidelis

Introduction

The Blessed Virgin Mary holds a singular place in the heart of Catholic devotion, serving as the Mother of God and the spiritual mother of all believers. Her role in the economy of salvation—rooted in her fiat at the Annunciation, her presence at the foot of the Cross, and her intercession from heaven—has been a source of profound theological reflection and popular piety throughout the Church's history. Yet, this devotion has occasionally given rise to expressions that, while intended to honor her unique cooperation with Christ, risk introducing ambiguity or misunderstanding. The recent Doctrinal Note from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF), titled Mater Populi Fidelis ("Mother of the Faithful People of God"), issued on November 4, 2025, and approved by Pope Leo XIV, addresses precisely this tension. Far from diminishing Mary's dignity, the document reaffirms her essential, subordinate role in salvation while cautioning against the use of certain titles—"Co-Redemptrix" and "Mediatrix of All Graces"—that can obscure the centrality of Jesus Christ as the sole Redeemer and Mediator.

This essay explores why Mater Populi Fidelis deems these titles inappropriate without prohibiting them outright, emphasizing that the underlying doctrines of Mary's cooperation in redemption and her maternal mediation remain intact. It examines historical precedents, including a prayer enriched with an indulgence by Pope Pius XII and references to these titles by earlier popes and Church documents. Central to the discussion is the Note's pastoral wisdom: these titles, though rooted in tradition, often require extensive clarification to avoid confusion, making them unhelpful in contemporary contexts. The essay also addresses misinterpretations by figures like Dr. Taylor Marshall, who have suggested a rupture with prior teachings, and refutes Protestant critiques that portray the titles as blasphemous or deifying Mary. Finally, it counters the premature celebratory rhetoric from some Protestant voices on social media, who interpret the document as a "victory" for their views, ignoring its Christocentric continuity with Catholic doctrine.

At over 13,000 words in its original Latin, Mater Populi Fidelis is a rich synthesis of Scripture, patristic witness, conciliar teaching, and papal magisterium. It invites the faithful to a deeper, more biblically grounded Marian piety, one that always points to Christ. In an era of social media echo chambers and ecumenical sensitivities, this clarification is not a novelty but a faithful development, ensuring that devotion to Mary enhances, rather than competes with, adoration of her Son.


 The Doctrinal Foundation: Mary's Cooperation in Salvation

To understand the nuances of Mater Populi Fidelis, one must first grasp the unchanging Catholic doctrine it upholds. The Church has long taught that Mary, by her free consent to the Incarnation (Luke 1:38), became the "New Eve," cooperating uniquely in the redemption won by her Son on the Cross. This is no mere honorary role; as Vatican II's Lumen Gentium (no. 56) affirms, Mary is "clearly the mother of the members of Christ," invoked as Advocate, Helper, Benefactress, and Mediatrix. Her sufferings at Calvary merited a subordinate but real participation in the application of graces, as St. Augustine noted in his reflections on the Annunciation as the dawn of redemption.

Yet, this cooperation is always subordinata—dependent on and derived from Christ's merits. As the Note states, "everything in Mary is directed towards the centrality of Christ and His salvific work." Drawing from St. Thomas Aquinas, it underscores that Mary's mediation is not parallel to Christ's but flows from it, like a river from its source. The document surveys biblical foundations: Mary's Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55) echoes Hannah's song, proclaiming God's mercy through her lowliness; her fiat reverses Eve's disobedience; and her fiat at Cana (John 2:1-11) prefigures her intercessory role.

Patristic witnesses abound. St. Irenaeus of Lyons contrasted Mary with Eve, portraying her obedience as restoring what the first woman's sin had lost. Eastern Fathers like St. Ephrem the Syrian hailed her as "full of grace," the vessel through whom divine favor flows to humanity. Medieval scholastics, including Aquinas in his Summa Theologica (III, q. 26), affirmed her as Mediatrix in a secondary sense, distributing graces won by Christ. The Note weaves these threads into a tapestry, emphasizing titles like "Mother of Believers" or "Spiritual Mother," which evoke her nurturing role without ambiguity.

Herein lies the genius of Mater Populi Fidelis: it does not dismiss the doctrines but refines the language. The titles "Co-Redemptrix" and "Mediatrix of All Graces" emerged in theological speculation— the former in the 15th century, the latter formalized in the 19th—but lack the clarity of scriptural or conciliar expression. As the Note observes, when a term "requires frequent explanation to maintain the correct meaning, it becomes unhelpful." For "Co-Redemptrix," the prefix "co-" risks implying parity with Christ, eclipsing His exclusive role (1 Tim. 2:5; Heb. 9:15). Similarly, "Mediatrix of All Graces" could suggest Mary mediates graces she herself received as the first redeemed, a logical impossibility the document politely notes (par. 67).

This caution is pastoral, not prohibitive. The Note explicitly states these titles "admit of an orthodox interpretation through correct exegesis," but prefers avoidance for ecumenical harmony and doctrinal precision. In a divided Christian world, where Protestants often misread such language as Mariolatry, clearer expressions foster unity without compromising truth. Pope Leo XIV's approval on October 7, 2025, underscores this: the Church safeguards Mary's dignity by tethering it firmly to Christ's.


 Historical Precedents: Prayers, Indulgences, and Papal Usage

The titles in question did not arise in a vacuum; they reflect centuries of devotional language. Mater Populi Fidelis acknowledges this heritage, cataloging instances where popes invoked them without dogmatic intent. Far from contradicting these, the Note builds upon them, clarifying ambiguities that time and context have amplified.

Consider the prayer enriched with an indulgence under Pope Pius XII. On January 22, 1947, the Holy Office (predecessor to the DDF) granted a partial indulgence of 500 days to the recitation of a prayer to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, composed earlier but approved during his pontificate. The text reads: "Although I know full well my own unworthiness, yet in order to atone for the offenses that are done to thee by impious and blasphemous tongues, from the depths of my heart I praise and extol thee as the purest, the fairest, the holiest creature of all God's handiwork. I bless thy holy name, I praise thine exalted privilege of being truly Mother of God, ever virgin, conceived without stain of sin, Co-Redemptrix of the human race. O most loving, most tender, most admirable Mother, deign to accept this poor act of homage..."

This prayer, rooted in 19th-century piety, echoes earlier approvals. Under Pope St. Pius X in 1908, the Congregation of Rites referenced Mary's sorrows in a decree on the Feast of the Seven Dolors, implicitly linking her to redemption. Benedict XV's 1913 decree Sunt quos amor praised adding "His Mother, our Co-Redemptrix, the Blessed Mary" to invocations of Jesus' name. Pius XI explicitly used "Co-Redemptrix" in his 1935 radio message to Lourdes: "O Mother of piety and mercy, who as Co-Redemptrix stood by your most sweet Son suffering with Him when He consummated the redemption of the human race on the altar of the cross..."

These usages were devotional, not definitional. Popes employed them to stir affection for Mary's fiat and compassion, often tying them to her divine motherhood or union at the Cross. Pius XII, in his 1946 address on the sorrows of Mary, spoke of her "redeeming the human race together with Christ," but always subordinately. Pre-Vatican II encyclicals like Leo XIII's Octobri Mense (1891) called her "dispensatrix of all the gifts which were gained for us by the death and blood of Jesus," a precursor to "Mediatrix."

Vatican II itself navigated this terrain carefully. Lumen Gentium (nos. 60-62) affirms Mary's mediation but omits "Co-Redemptrix" for "dogmatic, pastoral, and ecumenical reasons," opting for "Advocate, Helper, Benefactress, and Mediatrix." Post-conciliar popes continued selectively: Paul VI in Marialis Cultus (1974) praised her intercession without the titles; John Paul II used "Co-Redemptrix" seven times (e.g., Redemptoris Mater, 1987), linking it to the salvific value of suffering united to Christ, but ceased after 1996 on advice from Cardinal Ratzinger.

Mater Populi Fidelis honors this trajectory. It cites these precedents (par. 18) not to repudiate them but to contextualize: earlier popes used the terms "without elaborating much on its meaning," in limited senses—her motherhood enabling the Incarnation or her compassion at Calvary. The indulgence prayer under Pius XII, for instance, extols her as "Co-Redemptrix" amid praise for her Immaculate Conception, emphasizing atonement for blasphemies against her. Yet, as the Note argues, such language now demands caveats to prevent misreading as equality with Christ. No ban is issued; the prayer remains valid, its indulgence intact, but the document urges titles that "illuminate rather than eclipse" Christ's primacy.

This historical survey reveals continuity: the Church has always balanced bold devotion with doctrinal guardrails. Mater Populi Fidelis extends this tradition, adapting to modern needs without rupture.


 The Caution in Mater Populi Fidelis: Doctrines Affirmed, Titles Questioned

At its core, Mater Populi Fidelis issues a caution, not a condemnation. The doctrines—Mary's unique cooperation in redemption and her secondary mediation of graces—are not dismissed; they are celebrated as integral to the Deposit of Faith. The Note's 68 paragraphs meticulously affirm this: Mary is the "foremost collaborator" (par. 22), her intercession a "maternal help at various moments in our lives" (par. 68), her role evoking the Church's own maternal mission.

The issue lies with the titles themselves. "Co-Redemptrix" is "deemed inappropriate and problematic" because the "co-" prefix evokes juridical equality, risking an "eclipse of the exclusive role of Jesus Christ" (par. 22). As Cardinal Fernández noted in presenting the document, it "does not help extol Mary... for it carries the risk of... confusion." Similarly, "Mediatrix of All Graces" has "limits that do not favour a correct understanding" (par. 67), as Mary, the proto-redeemed, could not mediate the grace of her own Immaculate Conception. The plural "graces" can acceptably denote her intercessory aids—material or spiritual—but the absolute form implies exclusivity alien to Revelation.

This discernment echoes prior cautions. In 1996, Cardinal Ratzinger (future Benedict XVI) rejected a petition for dogmatic definition, stating the titles' "precise meaning... is not clear, and the doctrine contained in them is not mature." He reiterated in 2002: "The formula ‘Co-redemptrix’ departs to too great an extent from the language of Scripture and of the Fathers." Vatican II's reserve was deliberate, prioritizing ecumenism amid Protestant sensitivities. Pope Francis, in 2019 and 2024, called "Co-Redemptrix" senseless, affirming mediation but rejecting titular baggage.

The Note's logic is pragmatic: if a term sows "confusion among ordinary members of the faithful" via social media or devotional groups (par. 3), it hinders evangelization. Preferred alternatives—"Mother of the Faithful," "Spiritual Mother"—capture the same reality with biblical resonance (cf. Rev. 12:17). This is development, not denial: as Newman taught, doctrine grows by resolving ambiguities, not inventing them.

Critically, no ban exists. The document avoids prohibitive language, stating it is "preferable to avoid" these titles (par. 19). Private prayer, like the indulgenced one, remains licit; theological exploration continues. The caution protects against misuse, ensuring Mary's titles "glorify the power of Christ" (par. 68). In ecumenical dialogue, this fosters unity: Orthodox honor Mary as Theotokos without such terms; Protestants, wary of "idolatry," can engage Mary's biblical role anew.

Thus, Mater Populi Fidelis safeguards orthodoxy by pruning linguistic overgrowth, allowing the doctrines to flourish unencumbered.


 Misinterpretations Within Catholicism: Taylor Marshall and Claims of Contradiction

Within Catholic circles, Mater Populi Fidelis has sparked polarized reactions, particularly among traditionalist commentators. Dr. Taylor Marshall, a prominent podcaster and author, exemplifies those jumping to conclusions. In his November 4, 2025, podcast episode "Did Pope Leo Ban Co-Redemptrix Title?", Marshall frames the Note as a "ban," suggesting it contradicts prior papal prayers and documents. He argues it represents a "modernist rupture" with pre-Vatican II piety, citing the indulgenced prayer and Pius XI's usages as "magisterial endorsements" now "overturned."

This overreach misreads the document's intent. Marshall conflates devotional language with dogmatic definition, ignoring the Note's explicit affirmation of historical precedents (par. 18). The indulgenced prayer is not "banned"—its theology of Mary's cooperation is upheld—but the title is cautioned against for clarity's sake. As the Note clarifies, earlier popes used "Co-Redemptrix" "without elaborating much," in non-dogmatic contexts; Vatican II's omission was intentional, not erroneous. Marshall's claim of contradiction overlooks this: John Paul II's seven uses were pastoral, ceasing post-1996 on Ratzinger's advice, aligning seamlessly with Leo XIV's prudence.

Others echo Marshall, decrying the DDF as "suppressing Tradition." Yet, this ignores the Note's Christocentric core, drawn from Aquinas and Lumen Gentium. The document warns against "Marian reflection groups... sowing confusion" via social media (par. 3)—a veiled nod to sensationalist outlets. Marshall's rhetoric, framing it as a "war on Mary," fuels division, contradicting the Note's call for "profound fidelity to Catholic identity" amid unity.

Such interpretations stem from a hermeneutic of rupture, pitting "timeless Tradition" against "Vatican II novelties." But as Benedict XVI taught, Tradition develops organically. Mater Populi Fidelis embodies this, refining expressions without negating doctrines. By insisting on a "ban," commentators like Marshall risk alienating the faithful from the Magisterium, mistaking pastoral caution for heresy.


 Refuting Protestant Critiques: Not Blasphemy, But Subordinate Cooperation

Protestant objections to Marian titles like "Co-Redemptrix" often label them blasphemous, accusing Catholics of deifying Mary or usurping Christ's role. This stems from Reformation-era polemics, amplified today by figures like John MacArthur, who call such devotion "idolatry" equating Mary with the Godhead. Social media amplifies this: posts decry "Mary worship" as violating sola scriptura and sola Christus.

These claims misrepresent Catholic teaching. Mater Populi Fidelis explicitly refutes deification: Mary's cooperation is "subordinate," her titles "evoke maternal assistance, not juridical equality with Christ" (par. 22). As Aquinas clarified, she merits de congruo (by fittingness), not de condigno (by justice), applying graces won solely by Christ. The Note's rejection of absolute titular language underscores this—no equality, no divinity. Blasphemy implies divine attributes ascribed to a creature; here, Mary remains the handmaid of the Lord (Luke 1:38), exalted by grace, not essence.

Historically, Protestants like Luther honored Mary as Theotokos and ever-virgin, but later traditions jettisoned this amid anti-Catholic fervor. The titles, when properly understood, align with Scripture: Mary's soul "magnifies the Lord" (Luke 1:46), her intercession at Cana prompts Christ's first miracle. Far from deifying her, they highlight her as the exemplary disciple, whose fiat enables salvation history.

The Note's ecumenical thrust addresses this: by preferring unambiguous titles, it invites dialogue, affirming shared beliefs in Mary's motherhood while clarifying subordinations. Protestant fears of "co-redemption" as rivalry dissolve under scrutiny—it's participatory, like the Church's baptismal priesthood. Thus, the document disarms critiques, revealing them as caricatures born of misunderstanding, not malice.


 Countering Social Media Celebrations: No "Win" for Protestantism

In the wake of Mater Populi Fidelis, some Protestant social media users have erupted in celebratory tones, claiming the "Pope got a W" or "got it right for once." Posts like one from November 4, 2025—"Faith in men? Lol... your Pope got it right. Mary is not Co-redemptrix"—frame the Note as a concession to Reformation sola scriptura, vindicating critiques of "Mariolatry."

This triumphalism is premature and misguided. The document does not retract Catholic Mariology but refines it, reaffirming doctrines Protestants often reject outright—Mary's Immaculate Conception, Assumption, and intercessory role. By "rejecting" titles, it avoids scandal while upholding her as "Mother of the Faithful," a biblical echo (John 19:26-27) that challenges sola fide extremes. The "W" narrative ignores the Note's patristic and conciliar depth, reducing a 13,000-word synthesis to a soundbite victory.

Such rhetoric perpetuates division, overlooking ecumenical olive branches. As Fernández noted, the clarification aids "particular ecumenical effort," inviting Protestants to reconsider Mary without titular hurdles. Celebrating a "win" dismisses shared heritage—the Magnificat's social justice, Mary's fiat as model faith. Ultimately, it reveals more about polemic than piety: the Church's caution benefits all Christians, fostering unity in Christ, not rivalry.


 Conclusion: Toward a Renewed Marian Piety

Mater Populi Fidelis stands as a luminous guide in Marian devotion, affirming doctrines while pruning ambiguous branches. It honors historical prayers and papal precedents without ban, issuing caution to prevent confusion. By refuting hyperbolic claims from Marshall and Protestant celebrants, we see its wisdom: a Church ever ancient, ever new, pointing all to Christ through His Mother.

May this Note inspire fidelity—reciting indulgenced prayers with clarified hearts, invoking Mary as faithful guide. In her, we find not competition, but completion of the Gospel.


Summary:

 Biblical Foundation for Mary's Role as Mediatrix of Graces

The Catholic doctrine that all graces given by God pass through the Blessed Virgin Mary (often called the Mediatrix of All Graces) is not a direct verbatim quote from Scripture but is inferred from key passages that highlight Mary's unique role in salvation history. It is formally taught in Catholic theology (e.g., in papal encyclicals like Ad Caeli Reginam by Pius XII and Redemptoris Mater by John Paul II) as a development of biblical typology and Tradition. Below, I provide the primary Scripture evidence, with explanations of how each supports the statement. These build a cumulative case: Mary is the New Eve, the Mother of the Redeemer, and the channel of God's incarnate grace.


 1. Genesis 3:15 – The Protoevangelium (First Gospel) and the New Eve

   > "I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will crush your head, while you lie in wait for his heel."


   - Connection: This is the first promise of redemption after the Fall. Eve cooperated with Satan in bringing sin; Mary, as the "woman" whose offspring (Jesus) crushes the serpent, cooperates with God in bringing grace. Early Church Fathers (e.g., St. Irenaeus in Against Heresies, Book 5) explicitly call Mary the "New Eve," whose obedience undoes Eve's disobedience. All graces flow from Christ's victory over sin, and Mary is intrinsically linked as His mother and co-operator. Without her "fiat," the Incarnation—and thus all redemptive graces—does not occur.


 2. Luke 1:28 – The Angelic Greeting (Hail, Full of Grace)

   > "Hail, full of grace [kecharitomene], the Lord is with you."


   - Connection: The Greek kecharitomene is a perfect passive participle, implying Mary is completely and permanently filled with grace by God before the Incarnation. She is the vessel uniquely prepared to receive and dispense the source of all grace (Jesus). St. Thomas Aquinas (Summa Theologiae III, q. 27) notes this fullness makes her a fitting mediator: graces from God fill her first, then overflow through her to humanity via the Incarnation.


 3. Luke 1:38 – Mary's Fiat (Let It Be Done)

   > "Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. Let it be done to me according to your word."


   - Connection: Mary's free consent enables the Word to become flesh (John 1:14). Jesus, the "grace upon grace" (John 1:16), enters the world through her. Theologians like St. Louis de Montfort (True Devotion to Mary) argue that just as God chose to come to us through Mary, He wills to distribute ongoing graces through her maternal intercession. This is not necessity on God's part but fittingness (convenientia).


 4. John 2:1-11 – The Wedding at Cana (Mary's Intercession Initiates Jesus' Miracles)

   > "When the wine ran short, the mother of Jesus said to him, 'They have no wine.' ... His mother said to the servers, 'Do whatever he tells you.' ... Jesus did this as the beginning of his signs."


   - Connection: This is the only biblical instance where Mary explicitly intercedes, prompting Jesus' first public miracle—transforming water into wine, a symbol of grace and the Eucharist. Jesus acts at her request, even saying "My hour has not yet come" (v. 4), showing her influence accelerates divine timing. Church Fathers (e.g., St. Ephrem the Syrian) see Cana as a type: Mary notices humanity's lack of grace ("no wine") and obtains abundance from her Son. All subsequent graces (miracles, sacraments) follow this pattern of her mediation.


 5. John 19:26-27 – Jesus Gives Mary as Mother to the Disciple (and Thus to All Believers)

   > "When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple there whom he loved, he said to his mother, 'Woman, behold, your son.' Then he said to the disciple, 'Behold, your mother.' And from that hour the disciple took her into his home."


   - Connection: From the Cross—the source of all redemptive grace—Jesus entrusts Mary to John (representing the Church). She becomes spiritual mother of all disciples. As mother, she nurtures with graces from her Son (cf. Revelation 12:17, where the "woman's" offspring are believers). Pope Benedict XVI (Deus Caritas Est) links this to Mary distributing the fruits of Calvary.


 6. Supporting Typology: The Ark of the Covenant (Exodus 25; Luke 1; Revelation 11:19–12:1)

   > - Old Testament Ark: Carried the Word (tablets), Manna (bread from heaven), and Aaron's rod (priesthood).

   > - Mary: Carries the Word made flesh (Jesus), the Bread of Life, and the High Priest.


   - Connection: The Ark was the channel of God's presence and blessings to Israel. Mary, as the New Ark (explicit in Luke's parallel wording and Revelation's "ark" followed by the "woman clothed with the sun"), channels God's ultimate presence (Jesus) and His graces. Graces "pass through" her as through the Ark.


 Summary of the Proof

- Directly: No single verse says "all graces pass through Mary," but the doctrine is a theological conclusion from Scripture: God decrees the Incarnation through her (Luke 1:38), initiates miracles through her intercession (John 2), and makes her mother of believers at the font of grace (the Cross, John 19).

- Cumulatively: All grace originates in Christ (1 Timothy 2:5, the sole Mediator of redemption), but is distributed through Mary's secondary, subordinate mediation—as Eve was second in sin, Mary is second in grace (Romans 5:12-21 typology).

- Church Affirmation: Vatican II (Lumen Gentium §62) states: "She is our mother in the order of grace... by her manifold intercession continues to bring us the gifts of eternal salvation."

This is not "proof-texting" but biblical theology aligned with 2,000 years of Tradition. For deeper study, see St. Alphonsus Liguori's The Glories of Mary or the Catechism of the Catholic Church (§§966-971). If you'd like patristic quotes or counter-arguments addressed, let me know!


 Expanding Theological Reflections

To deepen this, consider the patristic nuance. St. Ephrem's hymns portray Mary as "treasury of graces," but always as Christ's conduit. This prefigures the Note's balanced mediation: graces flow per Mariam to Jesus, not bypassing Him. In Eastern liturgy, the Kontakion of the Dormition lauds her as "infallible hope," yet subordinates to the Trinity— a model Mater Populi Fidelis echoes for global piety.

On indulgences: Pius XII's grant was reparative, countering blasphemy amid World War II's horrors. Today's caution extends this: protect devotion from dilution. For "Mediatrix," Aquinas's distinction—general (all saints mediate) vs. Marian (universal)—remains; the Note simply prioritizes universality without absolutes.

Addressing Marshall further: his podcast overlooks Ratzinger's 1996 votum, integral to the document. Claims of "ban" ignore non-prohibitive phrasing, risking schism over semantics. Protestants' "deifying" charge ignores Vatican II's Lumen Gentium 66: Mary's mediation "neither takes away from nor adds anything to the dignity... of Christ the one Mediator."

Social media's glee? A flash in the pan; true ecumenism, as in the 1999 Joint Declaration on Justification, builds bridges. The Note invites Protestants to Mary's biblical fiat, sans titles.

In sum, Mater Populi Fidelis renews: pray boldly, understand deeply, love Christ supremely.



 Sources


1. Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. Mater Populi Fidelis: Doctrinal Note on Some Marian Titles Regarding Mary’s Cooperation in the Work of Salvation. Vatican.va, November 4, 2025.


2. Vatican News. "Doctrinal Note on Marian Titles: Mother of the Faithful, Not Co-Redemptrix." November 5, 2025.


3. Catholic News Agency. "Vatican Nixes Use of ‘Co-Redemptrix,’ ‘Mediatrix’ as Titles for Mary." November 4, 2025.


4. EWTN Vatican. "Vatican Rejects Title 'Co-Redemptrix' for Mary." November 5, 2025.


5. Wikipedia. "Co-Redemptrix." Accessed November 5, 2025.


6. Marian.org. "Teaching of the Popes: Pius XI." August 11, 2022.


7. Taylor Marshall. "1266: Did Pope Leo Ban Co-Redemptrix Title? Dr Taylor Marshall Podcast." Taylormarshall.com, November 4, 2025.


8. Puritan Board. "Another 'Catholic' Question - Mary as Co-Redemptrix, How Does That Work?" June 1, 2010.


9. X (formerly Twitter). Post by @DIKAOLIVER, November 4, 2025.


10. America Magazine. "Vatican Officially Says No to Controversial Titles for Mary." November 5, 2025.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for reading and for your comment. All comments are subject to approval. They must be free of vulgarity, ad hominem and must be relevant to the blog posting subject matter.

Labels

Catholic Church (1271) God (571) Jesus (563) Bible (478) Atheism (380) Jesus Christ (360) Pope Francis (307) Liturgy of the Word (265) Atheist (261) Science (200) Christianity (169) LGBT (147) Apologetics (130) Liturgy (97) Gay (93) Blessed Virgin Mary (92) Abortion (90) Pope Benedict XVI (86) Theology (84) Rosa Rubicondior (82) Philosophy (81) Prayer (80) Physics (64) Vatican (63) Psychology (62) Traditionalists (60) President Obama (57) Christian (55) New York City (55) Christmas (53) Holy Eucharist (53) Biology (43) Health (42) Women (40) Politics (39) Vatican II (39) Baseball (34) Protestant (34) Supreme Court (34) Racism (33) Gospel (31) Pope John Paul II (29) NYPD (28) Death (27) Illegal Immigrants (27) Religious Freedom (27) Space (27) priests (27) Priesthood (24) Astrophysics (23) Evangelization (23) Donald Trump (22) Christ (21) Evil (21) First Amendment (21) Eucharist (19) Morality (19) Pro Abortion (19) Child Abuse (17) Pro Choice (17) Marriage (16) Pedophilia (16) Police (16) Divine Mercy (15) Easter Sunday (15) Jewish (15) Gender Theory (14) Pentecostals (13) Autism (12) Blog (12) Cognitive Psychology (12) Holy Trinity (12) Poverty (12) September 11 (12) CUNY (11) Muslims (11) Pope Paul VI (10) Sacraments (10) academia (10) Hispanics (9) Massimo Pigliucci (9) Personhood (9) Big Bang Theory (8) Evidence (8) Human Rights (8) Humanism (8) Angels (7) Barack Obama (7) Condoms (7) David Viviano (7) Ellif_dwulfe (7) Evangelicals (7) NY Yankees (7) Podcast (7) Spiritual Life (7) Gender Dysphoria Disorder (6) Hell (6) Babies (5) Catholic Bloggers (5) Cyber Bullying (5) Eastern Orthodox (5) Pope Pius XII (5) The Walking Dead (5) Donations (4) Ephebophilia (4) Plenary Indulgence (4) Pope John XXIII (4) Death penalty (3) Encyclical (3) Founding Fathers (3) Pluto (3) Baby Jesus (2) Dan Arel (2) Freeatheism (2) Oxfam (2) Penn Jillette (2) Pew Research Center (2) Cursillo (1) Dan Savage (1) Divine Providence (1) Fear The Walking Dead (1) Pentecostales (1)