K R Ross

Distinction: Christ the Redeemer and Mary the Co-Redemptrix

Objection Syllogism:
@chrisgriffin

The objection argues that Christ is the Sole Mediator in a way that excludes secondary or cooperative roles, rendering the titles "Co-Redemptrix" and "Mediatrix" false.

Major Premise (Universal Principle of Mediation): The saving office of Redemption and the ultimate Mediation between God and humanity must be held by one, unique, and infinite Source of grace. (This premise asserts the exclusivity and uniqueness of the principal saving office).

Minor Premise (Application to Mary's Titles): The titles Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix of All Graces attribute to Mary roles that appear to share or divide this singular saving office of Redemption and Mediation. (This premise assumes that "Co-" and "Mediatrix" imply an equality or a conflict with the unique Source).

Conclusion (The Objection): Therefore, the titles Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix of All Graces are not only unacceptable, but false, as they compromise the dogma of Christ's unique Redemption and sole mediation of all graces.
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The Theological Rebuttal (The Scholastic Syllogism)

Rebuttal and Conclusion: He who does not distinguish confounds…

Ad majorem, Christus Redemptor omnium et Mediator omnium gratiarum, concedo simpliciter.
Distinguo ad minorem, tituli Mariae:


The Catholic theological response, based on the Scholastic distinction, denies the Minor Premise by defining Mary's role as strictly by association, secondary, subordinate and instrumental, thereby confirming Christ's unique primary role.

Major Premise (Universal Principle of Primary Redemption and Primary Mediation): Christ is the sole Redeemer and unique principal Mediator and the Source of all grace, by virtue of His Divine and Human Natures. (This premise is affirmed by both sides).

Minor Premise (Application of Subordinate Mediation): Mary's roles as Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix are entirely by association, secondary, subordinate, instrumental, and dependent upon Christ's principal mediation, acting merely as a collaborator and channel for the graces Christ merited. (This premise re-defines the nature of Mary's role as secondary, denying that it is equal or compromising).

Conclusion (Rebuttal): Therefore, Mary's titles of Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix of All Graces do not compromise Christ's unique mediation but rather emphasize the universal distribution of the grace He alone Originated.
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The theological tradition, particularly within Scholasticism exemplified by the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas, systematically distinguishes between the unique, principal causality of Jesus Christ in the work of salvation and the singular, subordinate cooperation of Mary, the Mother of God. This distinction reserves the Source and Originator of grace and redemption to Christ alone, while assigning the role of Collaborator and universal Dispenser to Mary.

I. Christ: The Redeemer and Originator of Grace

In the economy of salvation, Jesus Christ possesses the unique and singular role as the Redeemer of humanity.

Sole Mediator: Christ is the one, perfect Mediator between God and man, uniting the divine and human natures in His person (Hypostatic Union).

Source of Grace: As the Incarnate Word, Christ is the Originator and Source (or Fount) of all supernatural life and grace. His soul, united to the Godhead, possesses the fullness of grace (plenitudo gratiae), from which all graces flow.

Merit of Redemption: Christ merited salvation de condigno (by intrinsic worth and strict justice). His Passion and death on the Cross possessed infinite value, constituting the single, sufficient, and principal payment for the sins of the world.

Christ's work is thus principal and sufficient—He is the ultimate agent, the one who possesses the power of grace and redemption in His own right.

II. Mary: The Co-Redemptrix and Dispenser of Grace

Mary
participates in the work of salvation in a manner that is entirely secondary, dependent, and instrumental to her Son. Her titles of Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix/Dispenser of Grace reflect two distinct, yet related, aspects of this cooperation.

A. Co-Redemptrix (Cooperation in Acquisition)

The title Co-Redemptrix (Latin cum meaning "with") emphasizes Mary's active and unique collaboration in the acquisition of salvation itself, reserving the principal act of redeeming to Christ.

Necessary Cooperation: Mary's consent to the Incarnation (Fiat) was necessary to bring the Redeemer into the world. She is thus intrinsically linked to the redemptive work from the beginning.

Spiritual Suffering: She cooperated remotely and proximately by offering her Son and suffering spiritually in union with Him at the foot of the Cross, a participation known as the Compassio.

Merit of Cooperation: Her cooperation is understood as having merited redemption de congruo (by fittingness and charity), in contrast to Christ’s merit de condigno. Her cooperation is dependent on and derivative from Christ's merits.

God the Father chose His Divine Son as Redeemer and Mediator. This is Divine Prerogative.

God the Son chose Mary, the Mother of God, His Mother, to be Co-Redeemer and Co-Mediatrix (Channel) of All Graces. This is Divine Prerogative.

From Jesus through Mary. Through Mary to Jesus. This is the order of salvation by God’s Will. Who are we to argue?

Thus, the devotion of and to the United Sacred and Immaculate Hearts of Jesus and Mary.

B. Mediatrix and Dispenser of Grace (Cooperation in Distribution)

The title Mediatrix (often specified as Mediatrix of All Graces) emphasizes Mary's role in the subsequent distribution(or application) of the graces that Christ merited.

The Channel: Having brought the Source of Grace (Christ) into the world, Mary is now the universal Dispenserand Channel through which the graces of Christ are administered to humanity.

Intercession: She acts as the most powerful intercessor, obtaining and distributing the Father's gifts to man by virtue of her Maternity and Queenly power.

Mary's causality is thus subordinate and instrumental—she is the collaborator and channel through whom Christ, the Source, conveys His gifts. Her entire status is derived from her relationship to the Redeemer.

Ex. 1. Water Source. 2. Aqueduct. Each is necessary by God’s Holy Will. Could God have delivered the water directly to each person directly without the channel? Yes, in absolute terms, in the realm of possibles, God is All-Powerful. However, the question at hand here is not what is “possible” to God in this case but the ORDER of salvation actually chosen by God as is His Right as Creator, and Author of Life and death. Could God have required Isaac’s sacrifice? Yes, in strict justice. However, in the order of salvation actually chosen by God, Isaac was spared; whereas God’s Only Son, Jesus Christ was not. Both are very great mysteries that we should contemplate often.
351K
canonist

KR, your argument was meant to be referenced: it can however only have 3 terms (Major, Minor, and Middle Terms). The predicate of your Minor premise introduced a fourth term…

K R Ross

Ok. Thanks! In the Rebuttal syllogism there is a major premise, a minor premise and the conclusion. I simply changed the minor premise to include the distinction. You’re right however: syllogisms have three terms only. I will review again.

K R Ross

@canonist
Logical Soundness of My Rebuttal Syllogism:

I reviewed the formal logic rules with regards to syllogisms applied to my specific deductive argument.
My analysis and review confirms that my inclusion in the minor premise of the phrase:
'in a secondary, supporting and associative role' is essential.
This descriptive qualifier, though lengthy, precisely defines and distinguishes the co-related terms Redeemer and Mediator from the co-related terms: 'Co-Redemptrix/Co-Mediatrix'
In logic, this entire qualified description functions as a single, complex term, thereby successfully preventing the formal fallacy of four terms, or “Quaternio Terminorum”, which is often caused by an ambiguous, or equivocal middle term.
Conclusion: My logical structure is sound as it establishes a logical non-contradiction through definitional distinction.

Jeffrey Ade

Thank you for this enlightening post defending Our Blessed Mother! God bless you!

K R Ross

Apologia pro Jesu per Mariam. To defend the honour of Mary is to defend the honour of Jesus as in every natural family on earth. To denigrate Mary, as Luther, Calvin, Knox, Cranmer, Zwingli and Hus did, is to denigrate Jesus. What is so clear to the Holy Trinity, to the angels and saints in heaven, to natural godly families on earth, and to Satan in hell is obscure and opaque to the Protestant heretical founders, yesterday as today, and, now, finally, at the highest levels of the institutional Church ie. Roman Protestants, less Catholic than some High church anglicans. We should shudder in holy outrage as St. Louis Marie Grignon de Montfort did: "It is through the most Blessed Virgin Mary, that Jesus Christ came into the world, and it is also through her, that He will reign in the world." Such is the Economy of Salvation. Genesis 3:15: “ 15 And I will establish a feud between thee and the woman, between thy offspring and hers; she is to crush thy head, while thou dost lie in ambush at her heels.” This is what Lucifer saw in eternity, rejected, and the reason why, according to the Church Fathers, he fell from Heaven to the eternal 🔥 of Hell…along with all of his anti-Marian followers.

chris griffin

@K R Ross...I had no idea that you were so highly trained which shows in your excellent style and vocabulary. I still must demure on the following basis...
1. There is no reason to change. Mary and Jesus are fine just like they are. Mary cannot originate and dispense grace.
2. Mary as Redemptrix would give Protestants rock solid evidence that Catholics worship 3 Gods in 1 person, PLUS God the Blessed Virgin.
3.Co-redemptrix is wrong. "Co" in American English has come to mean "equal" as in Co-pilot, Co-defendant, Co-owner, Co-worker, Co-Chair, Co-signer etc. which of course Jesus and Mary are not equal.
4..Your phrase "through Mary to Jesus" admits that she is inferior to Jesus which she is. Jesus is God, Mary is creature and never the twain shall meet. Therefore the only proper term to use would be Sub-Redemptrix.
5. Many Bibles say Genesis 3:15 referrers to a male...Jesus.
Thank you very much. Yes, Cana was marvelous.

Jeffrey Ade shares this

Mary's titles of Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix of All Graces do not compromise Christ's unique mediation but rather emphasize the universal distribution of the grace He alone Originated.

5319
canonist

Chris, I agree with you, the BVM is Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix, but the syllogism you articulate above is fallacious (Fallacy of the Four Terms).

K R Ross

@canonistChris’ position was the Objection (mine and the Church’s position the rebuttal): Christ is the sole Redeemer and sole Mediator. Which logically excludes Mary from being Redeemer (Originator) and Mediator (Source). Therefore, to say Mary is Co-Redemptrix and Co-Mediatrix in that sense is false. True, but only in the false context of the above incorrect and incomplete syllogism.
A distinction needs to be made: Mary is Co-Redemptrix and Co-Mediatrix not in the sense of sole Originator nor sole Mediator, but in the sense (hence, the distinction) an associative, secondary, non-causal sense: distributes the effects of the Redemption, all graces, as the sole Channel not as the sole Source.
This distinction to the minor premise is perfectly logical. They went to Mary when the wine ran out. Mary went to Jesus with their request. Jesus did His first miracle turning water into the very best wine. Why? His Mother asked Him too. He hastened His Time for her which shows her role as Co-Mediatrix.
What’s the fix? Can you rewrite the syllogism correctly please?

Jeffrey Ade

@K R Ross Are you referring to me? I just quoted your excellent article and shared it because this onslaught against Our lady is over the top diabolical! So my share comment is an exact quote from your article, which I love by the way! God bless you!

K R Ross

@Jeffrey AdeNo, not you: Canonist. Cheers! In Xto. God bless you for the share. Ad meioram Dei gloriam!

Jeffrey Ade

@K R Ross AMDG!