Mary’s disembodied place in the structure of a complementary anthropology and ecclesiology is enmeshed with an inadequate female sexual theology in the Catholic Church. Inattentive to females’ actual experiences of reproductive bodies and sexualities, their vulnerability is masked within the sense of the Marian aspect of the church—the female, the feminine—as somehow exemplary, with diminished agency or authority within the church or over their own bodies. This understanding of Mary impedes females’ sexual flourishing, not least because it is an impossible standard for womanhood but also because it is constructed, monitored, and controlled primarily by a select group of men. This article examines the theological influences on recent papal perceptions of Mary (Popes Paul VI, John Paul II, Benedict XVI, and Francis), the papal perceptions themselves that have fed the construction of her as a nonsexual, disembodied ideal female, and the ecclesiological repercussions of the complementary Marian/Petrine dichotomy applied disparately within the church.