, . From the left:
Saint Augustine,
Pope Gregory I,
Saint Jerome, and
Saint Ambrose, with their
attributes. The details of the title
Doctor of the Church vary from one
autonomous ritual church to another.
Latin Church In the
Latin Church, the four Latin Doctors (
Ambrose,
Augustine,
Jerome, and
Gregory) had been given a special pre-eminence since the eighth century, but in 1298
Pope Boniface VIII declared them Doctors of the Church.
Pope Pius V recognized the four Great Doctors of the Eastern Church (
John Chrysostom,
Basil the Great,
Gregory of Nazianzus, and
Athanasius of Alexandria) in 1568. To these names others have subsequently been added. The requisite conditions are enumerated as three:
eminens doctrina,
insignis vitae sanctitas,
Ecclesiae declaratio (i.e. eminent learning, a high degree of sanctity, and proclamation by the church).
Benedict XIV explains the third as a declaration by the
supreme pontiff or by a
general council. Until 1970, no woman had been named a Doctor of the Church. Since then four additions to the list have been women:
Teresa of Ávila (also known as Saint Teresa of Jesus) and
Catherine of Siena by
Pope Paul VI;
Therese of Lisieux by
Pope John Paul II; and
Hildegard of Bingen by
Benedict XVI. Teresa and Thérèse were both
Discalced Carmelites, Catherine was a
Dominican tertiary, and Hildegard was a
Benedictine. Traditionally, in the
Liturgy, the Office of Doctors was distinguished from that of
Confessors by two changes: the Gospel reading
Vos estis sal terrae ("You are the salt of the earth"), Matthew 5:13–19, and the eighth Respond at Matins, from Sirach 15:5,
In medio Ecclesiae aperuit os ejus, * Et implevit eum Deus spiritu sapientiae et intellectus. * Jucunditatem et exsultationem thesaurizavit super eum. ("In the midst of the Church he opened his mouth, * And God filled him with the spirit of wisdom and understanding. * He heaped upon him a treasure of joy and gladness.") The
Nicene Creed was also recited at Mass, which is normally not said except on Sundays and the highest-ranking feast days. The 1962 revisions to the Missal dropped the Creed from feasts of Doctors and abolished the title and the Common of Confessors, instituting a distinct Common of Doctors. On 20 August 2011,
Pope Benedict XVI announced that he would soon declare
John of Ávila a Doctor of the Church. It was also reported in December 2011 that Pope Benedict intended to declare
Hildegard of Bingen as a Doctor of the Church, though she had not yet been canonized. Pope Benedict XVI declared Hildegard of Bingen a saint on 10 May 2012, clearing the way for her to be named a Doctor of the Church, then declared both John of Ávila and Hildegard of Bingen Doctors of the Church on 7 October 2012.
Pope Francis declared the 10th-century Armenian monk
Gregory of Narek the 36th Doctor of the Church on 21 February 2015. The decision was somewhat controversial, as Gregory was a monk of the
Armenian Apostolic Church, a
non-Chalcedonian church that was not in communion with the Catholic Church during Gregory's life and has sometimes been described as
monophysite. However, the Armenian Apostolic Church does not accept monophysitism, and in 1996, Pope
John Paul II and
Catholicos Karekin I, patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church, signed a joint declaration which said that the division between the two churches was due to historical misunderstandings, not a real difference in Christology. Further, Gregory had been recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church since it received the
Armenian Catholic Church into full communion. Saint Cardinal
John Henry Newman was proclaimed a doctor of the Church on All Saints Day, Saturday, November 1, 2025 by
Pope Leo XIV at
Saint Peter's Square at
Vatican City. He was named co-patron of Catholic education joining
Saint Thomas Aquinas. On 31 July 2025, a statement from the
Holy See Press Office reported that during an audience granted to Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints,
Pope Leo XIV had "confirmed the affirmative opinion of the Plenary Session of Cardinals and Bishops, Members of the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, regarding the title of Doctor of the Universal Church, would be conferred on Saint
John Henry Newman." In November 2023, the
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops had voted to support a petition by the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales for the Vatican to name John Henry Newman a Doctor of the Church.
List of Doctors (For earlier authorities on Christian doctrine, see Church Fathers and Ante-Nicene Fathers) • indicates a saint who is also held in high esteem by the
Eastern Orthodox Church.
Proposed Doctors In October 2018, on the occasion of the canonization of
Oscar Romero, martyred Archbishop of
San Salvador,
José Luis Escobar Alas, the current Archbishop of San Salvador, petitioned Pope Francis to name Romero a Doctor of the Church. In October 2019, the Polish Catholic Bishops Conference formally petitioned Pope Francis to consider making
Pope John Paul II a Doctor of the Church in an official proclamation, in recognition of his contributions to theology, philosophy, and Catholic literature, as well as the formal documents of his papacy. In January 2023,
Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco proposed that
Pope Benedict XVI be declared a doctor of the Church "as soon as possible", in view of his theological intelligence and contribution to the formation of current doctrine of the
Catholic Church, such as the new
catechism. In January 2024,
Archbishop Georg Gänswein also spoke in favor of the pontiff's
canonization and his elevation to the status of doctor of the church. In April 2024, during a private audience Pope Francis received a formal request from the
superior general of the
Discalced Carmelites, Miguel Márquez Calle, to declare
Teresa Benedicta of the Cross a Doctor of the Church. The Discalced Carmelites first launched an international commission to gather the necessary documentation required for the declaration in 2022, in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of her conversion to Catholicism and the 80th anniversary of her martyrdom.
List of proposed Doctors Other recognised Doctors In addition, parts of the Catholic Church have recognised other individuals with this title. In
Spain,
Fulgentius of Cartagena,
Ildephonsus of Toledo and
Leander of Seville though the
Dicastery for the Causes of Saints considers this declaration an informal one.
Scholastic epithets Though not named Doctors of the Church or even canonized, many of the more celebrated doctors of theology and law of the Middle Ages were given an epithet which expressed the nature of their expertise. Among these are Bl.
John Duns Scotus,
Doctor subtilis ("subtle doctor");
Alexander of Hales,
Doctor irrefragabilis ("unanswerable doctor");
Roger Bacon,
Doctor mirabilis ("wondrous doctor");
William of Ockham,
Doctor singularis et invincibilis ("valuable and invincible doctor");
Jean Gerson,
Doctor christianissimus ("most Christian doctor"); and
Francisco Suárez,
Doctor eximius ("exceptional doctor").
Syro-Malabar Catholic Church The
Syro-Malabar Catholic Church recognises Ambrose, Jerome, Gregory, Augustine, Athanasius, Basil, Gregory of Nazianzus and John Chrysostom, as well as
Ephrem the Syrian,
Pope Leo I,
John of Damascus,
Cyril of Alexandria,
Cyril of Jerusalem,
Epiphanius of Salamis and
Gregory of Nyssa.
Chaldean Catholic Church The
Chaldean Catholic Church honours as doctor
Polycarp,
Eustathius of Antioch, Meletius,
Alexander of Jerusalem,
Athanasius, Basil,
Cyril of Alexandria,
Gregory Nazianzus,
Gregory of Nyssa,
John Chrysostom,
Fravitta of Constantinople,
Ephrem the Syrian,
Jacob of Nisibis,
Jacob of Serugh,
Isaac of Armenia,
Isaac of Nineveh, and
Maruthas of Martyropolis. == Eastern Orthodox Church ==