In Luke 1:47 She also acknowledged that she need a savior!
Although an honor was bestowed upon her to deliver the child, thats it, that is her only role, and thats why she is remembered, other than that shes a sinner just like the rest of us, not a mediator, not a queen of heaven, just another sinner saved by grace.
I think Jesus made that pretty clear too in Matthew 12:48
He replied to him, "Who is my mother, and who are my brothers", oh looky, Jesus said, he had brothers!
And if you want to debate it 12:46 says they were his brothers.
Why do you want to cling to Marryology when the church didnt even buy into that, till way late in history. When A pope declared it contary to the historical perspective.
Can you just spend some time considering the magnitude of being called to be the mother of the Savior of the world? I mean, we're not talking about a man who would be an earthy king or president. We are talking about God! The notion that, in the presence, in the household, of the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, that there would be need or want for anything of this earth is just so...temporal.
Do you imagine that when you are in the presence of God you will yearn for sex? Yearn for more children? Be in want of anything at all? Or, do you think that we will finally understand all that God had hoped we would understand in our earthly life? I believe the latter. We will understand why He allowed certain sufferings to befall us. We will understand why He gave us rules to guide us on the path of life. I believe we will be so fulfilled in His Presence that there will be nothing else we desire. Mary had that in her womb and in her home and in her heart.
Mary was the first person in all of creation to know that the time had come. She bore God Almightly in her womb. What a ridiculous and magnificent privilege. She had no need of anything/anyone else, any more than we will have need or want of anyone/anything else.
In fact, your theology would affirm that very truth, that as long as you have Jesus, nothing else at all matters.