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Popes on Our Lady as Co-Redemptrix & Mediatrix – Part III

‘No Man Goes to Christ but by His Mother’

We return to Pope Leo XII, who, in his Encyclical Octobri mense, on the Rosary, makes Church teaching very clear on the role of Our Lady as mediatrix between God and man: "She is the intermediary through whom this immense treasure of mercies gather by God is distributed unto us.”

Leo XIII also affirms with confidence that this teaching was “accepted with the utmost joy” by the Holy Apostles, the earliest believers and the venerable Fathers of the Church.

He warns against those Catholics who “dare to accuse of excess the devotion to Mary,” for from Mary all graces come to mankind wounded by sin. Yet this accusation of excess is exactly what the new document approved by Leo XIV does.



Pope Leo XIII


But since the salvation of our race was accomplished by the mystery of the Cross, and since the Church, dispenser of that salvation after the triumph of Christ, was founded upon earth and instituted, Providence established a new order for a new people. The consideration of the divine counsels is united to the great sentiment of religion.

The Eternal Son of God, about to take upon Him our nature for the saving and ennobling of man, and about to consummate thus a mystical union between Himself and all mankind, did not accomplish His design without adding there the free consent of the elect Mother, who represented in some sort all humankind, according to the illustrious and just opinion of St. Thomas, who says that the Annunciation was effected with the consent of the Virgin standing in the place of humanity.

With equal truth may it be also affirmed that, by the will of God, Mary is the intermediary through whom is distributed unto us this immense treasure of mercies gathered by God, for mercy and truth were created by Jesus Christ. (6) Thus as no man goes to the Father but by the Son, so no man goes to Christ but by His Mother. How great are the goodness and mercy revealed in this design of God! What a correspondence with the frailty of man!

We believe in the infinite goodness of the Most High, and we rejoice in it; we believe also in His justice and we fear it. We adore the beloved Savior, lavish of His blood and of His life; we dread the inexorable Judge. Thus do those whose actions have disturbed their consciences need an intercessor mighty in favor with God, merciful enough not to reject the cause of the desperate, merciful enough to lift up again towards hope in the Divine Mercy the afflicted and the broken down. Mary is this glorious intermediary; she is the mighty Mother of the Almighty.

But, what is still sweeter, she is gentle, extreme in tenderness, of a limitless loving kindness. As such God gave her to us. Having chosen her for the Mother of His only begotten Son, He taught her all a mother's feeling that breathes nothing but pardon and love. Such Christ desired she should be, for He consented to be subject to Mary and to obey her as a son a mother. Such He proclaimed her from the Cross when He entrusted to her care and love the whole of the race of man in the person of His disciple John. Such, finally, she proves herself by her courage in gathering in the heritage of the enormous labors of her Son, and in accepting the charge of her maternal duties towards us all.

The design of this most dear mercy, realized by God in Mary and confirmed by the testament of Christ, was comprehended at the beginning, and accepted with the utmost joy by the Holy Apostles and the earliest believers. It was the counsel and teaching of the venerable Fathers of the Church. All the nations of the Christian age received it with one mind. And even when literature and tradition are silent there is a voice that breaks from every Christian breast and speaks with all eloquence.

No other reason is needed that that of a divine faith which, by a powerful and most pleasant impulse, turns us towards Mary. Nothing is more natural, nothing more desirable than to seek a refuge in the protection and in the loyalty of her to whom we may confess our designs and our actions, our innocence and our repentance, our torments and our joys, our prayers and our desires – all our affairs.

All men, moreover, are filled with the hope and confidence that petitions which might be received with less favor from the lips of unworthy men, God will accept when they are recommended by the Most Holy Mother, and will grant with all favors. The truth and the sweetness of these thoughts bring to the soul an unspeakable comfort. But they inspire all the more compassion for those who, being without divine faith, honor not Mary and have her not for their mother; and for those also who, holding Christian faith, dare to accuse of excess the devotion to Mary, thereby sorely wounding filial piety.

Encyclical Octobri Mense, §§ 4-5

Posted on November 22, 2025


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