On the Eschatological Manifestation of Truth
Quaeritur
Utrum veritas divina, quae in hoc saeculo nonnisi per interpretationem felicitatis intra modellos theologicos acceditur, in consummatione saeculorum manifestetur immediate in gloria; et utrum haec manifestatio non sit nova veritas, sed modus perfectus eiusdem veritatis quae nunc solum per fidem, per modellos, et per illuminationem Spiritus attingitur.
Whether the divine truth—which in this age is accessible only through the interpretation of felicitous predicates within theological models—will in the consummation of the ages be manifested immediately in glory; and whether this manifestation is not a new truth but the perfected mode of access to the same truth now reached only through faith, through models, and through the illumination of the Spirit.
Thesis
The speech of theology in the present age is real yet mediated; it participates through faith in divine discourse. Its truth arises only as these felicitous predicates are interpreted within the models by which God grants understanding. Its perfection will occur eschatologically, when what is now felicitously and truly spoken in the Spirit will be manifested in glory. The eschaton is not the abolition of theology but its fulfillment. It is the moment when the grammar of faith becomes the language of sight.
Locus Classicus
1. 1 Corinthians 13:12 (NA28)
ἄρτι βλέπομεν δι’ ἐσόπτρου ἐν αἰνίγματι, τότε δὲ πρόσωπον πρὸς πρόσωπον.
“For now we see in a mirror, dimly, but then face to face.”
Paul marks the distinction between mediated and immediate knowing, between truth under the form of faith and truth under the form of glory. The object does not change; the mode of apprehension is transfigured.
2. Augustine, Sermon 88.6
Ipsa visio Dei finis erit desideriorum nostrorum.
“The vision of God will be the end of all our desires.”
Augustine expresses the teleology implicit in Paul. Faith awakens desire and vision consummates it. The eschatological manifestation of God is not an addition to faith but the fulfillment toward which faith has always been drawn.
3. Thomas Aquinas, ST I–II, q.3, a.8
Ultima et perfecta beatitudo non potest esse nisi in visione divinae essentiae.
“Ultimate and perfect beatitude can consist only in the vision of the divine essence.”
For Aquinas, the visio Dei is the perfection of participation. The finite intellect is elevated and sustained so that it may see God in God’s own light. Participation is thus not abolished in glory but brought to its final act.
From Paul through Augustine to Aquinas, a single line is traced. Faith and vision are not two different truths but two modalities of the same participation, first veiled, then manifest.
Explicatio
The eschatological manifestation of divine truth cannot be understood without the Christological and pneumatological structures already established. The finite intellect does not ascend to a vision of God by intrinsic power, nor does it apprehend divine essence through an unmediated natural capacity. Rather, the intellect beholds divine truth precisely within the medium God has appointed: the glorified humanity of the Logos. In the state of glory, mediation does not disappear but becomes perfect. The humanity of Christ, assumed by the eternal Word, becomes transparent to the divine light. This transparency constitutes the immediacy of eschatological knowledge.
Thus, the vision of God is immediate in its mode, yet Christological in its structure. The intellect sees God by the divine light, yet this light is communicated through the human nature of the Incarnate Word, now glorified. The humanity of Christ does not obstruct the vision but renders it possible. The hypostatic union becomes the metaphysical grammar of eschatological manifestation.
In the present life, theological cognition belongs to the ordo fidei. It is real knowledge, yet mediated through the grammar of faith, the models by which theology interprets divine truth, and the participatio constitutiva by which the Spirit illuminates the intellect. In this state the formula holds:
In statu viae:
T + M → FT → TC
The felicity of speech FT, when interpreted through theological modeling M, yields genuine truth-conditions TC. When interpreted through theological modeling M, these felicitous predicates FT yield mediated truth-conditions TC. Thus truth is known only through this interpretive act, and always under the form of sign.”
But in the state of glory the structure shifts. The Spirit who now mediates truth through faith will then manifest it without veil. The humanity of Christ, which now veils divine splendor for the sake of finite comprehension, will then be the instrument through which divine light is communicated without remainder. In this state the formula becomes:
In statu gloriae:
FT = TC
The felicity of speech and the truth it bears coincide, for the intellect is upheld by God to know God in God’s own light. Mediation is not removed but perfected. The sign becomes transparent to what it signifies. The sacrament becomes pure presence. Participation becomes manifestation.
This consummation does not imply that the intellect becomes infinite or that nature is absorbed into divinity. The creature remains creature. Yet the Spirit elevates the intellect into a mode of vision proportioned to divine self-disclosure, a proportion not natural but graced. The intellect sees because it is illumined; it understands because it is united; it knows because it is upheld. I
While in this vision there is no comprehension of the divine essence in itself, there is an unimpeded reception of divine truth in the medium of Christ.
The ordo theologiae therefore reaches its telos in glory. Grammar culminates in manifestation; modeling becomes sight; felicity becomes unity; truth becomes life. Theology becomes doxology. Theologia viatorum becomes theologia beatorum. The same truth known now under the form of faith will then be known under the form of glory. There is nothing added and nothing removed. There is only an unveiling.
Thus eschatological vision is not a new truth but the same truth shining in its proper light. The Incarnation, which grounds all theological speech, becomes the light in which God is seen. The Spirit, who grants felicity in the ordo fidei, becomes the lumen gloriae in the ordo gloriae. Participation reaches its end not by ceasing but by becoming complete. And the intellect, perfected by grace, rests in the One who made it capable of divine truth.
Explicatio Analytica: De Transformatione Ordinis Cognitionis
The transition from the ordo fidei to the ordo gloriae is not merely a shift in epistemic attitude. It marks a transformation in the entire architecture of theological cognition—its grammar, its model-theoretic mediation, and its metaphysical ground. The movement is not from “indirect truth” to “direct truth” in abstraction, but from participatory cognition that remains mediated to participatory cognition perfected in the glorified Christ. Analytically expressed: cognition shifts from being hyperintensional and partial to being hyperintensional and complete.
1. Hyperintensionality: From Partial Participation to Full Manifestation
In the ordo fidei, theological predicates exhibit hyperintensional structure. Their meaning cannot be captured by extension (what they apply to) or by inferential role (how they behave in reasoning). In hyperintensional contexts, even necessarily equivalent expressions may diverge in meaning because meaning depends on more than extension or inference.
In theological speech, this “more” refers to the Spirit’s act of constituting felicity: a predicate acquires theological sense only when the Spirit authorizes it as belonging to the language of faith T and thus marks it as felicitous FT. This authorization is entirely intra-linguistic. It does not provide truth, reference, or extension. It simply determines which predicates count as legitimate modes of confessing the divine.
Thus in the ordo fidei, theological language is hyperintensionally thick because its meaning is conditioned by the mode of participation in the divine Word, not because any semantic connection to reality has yet been established. The predicates of faith belong to a grammar whose intelligibility is grounded in the Spirit’s enabling activity, but they do not yet possess truth-conditions. They become eligible for interpretation; they do not yet attain it.
In the ordo gloriae, the hyperintensional structure remains, but its opacity is removed. The predicate Deus lux est is no longer grasped through the limited and veiling modalities of present participation but through the Spirit’s lumen gloriae, which proportionates the intellect to the manifest divine presence. Hyperintensionality does not dissolve; it becomes transparent. The intellect no longer stands outside the light interpreting; it stands within the light that reveals.
Thus the eschatological movement is not from hyperintensional to extensional clarity. It is from hyperintensional opacity to hyperintensional manifestation.
2. Model-Theoretic Structure: From Interpretation to Identity
In the present age the structure of theological cognition can be represented schematically:
T → FT → (I: FT → M) → semantic content (reference, extension, truth-conditions).
The grammar of faith T yields felicitous predicates FT prior to any semantic interpretation. FT is a syntactic-pragmatic subset whose authorization belongs entirely to the Spirit’s internal governance of the theological language.
Only after felicity is established can an interpretive function I map these predicates into a theological model M. Only through this mapping do predicates acquire reference, extension, and truth-conditions.
Thus the model is indispensable not for felicity, but for any possibility of truth. Divine reality is not directly accessed by grammar; it is engaged only through a mediating interpretive structure.
In the ordo gloriae, the need for such mediation ceases—not because the intellect becomes unbounded nor because comprehension replaces apprehension, but because the model and the divine reality coincide in the glorified Christ. The resurrected Christ is the interpretive structure; He is the manifestation in whom divine meaning is perfectly given.
Thus the eschatological formula becomes:
FT + presence = manifestation,
not FT = truth, but FT enters into the presence that makes truth immediate. Interpretation is no longer a mapping; it is an indwelling. Model and reality are one.
In model-theoretic terms, the intensional distance collapses because the structure mediating divine self-presentation becomes identical to the reality presented.
3. Constitutive Causality: From Grounding to Immediate Ontological Presence
Earlier disputationes described causalitas constitutiva—divine causality as the act by which creatures receive being, intelligibility, and the very capacity for linguistic felicity. In the ordo fidei, this causality sustains the intelligibility of the world, the meaningfulness of language, theological predicates as felicitous speech, and the possibility of models that interpret such speech.
While none of this yet yields truth, it yields conditions for the possibility of truth.
In the ordo gloriae, constitutive causality is not replaced but intensified. The Spirit remains the ground of cognition, now not through the mediation of illumination but through immediate ontological presence. The Spirit does not merely authorize predicates; He becomes the light by which the intellect beholds what those predicates could only gesture toward.
Thus, in statu viae, the Spirit grants participatory access, and in statu gloriae, the Spirit grants manifest access. Participation thus becomes manifestation by removing what obscured; not by adding what was lacking.
4. Transparency and Manifestation: A Metaphysics of Perfected Signification
In the ordo fidei, every sign operates through a double movement: it points beyond itself even while concealing in part what it signifies. Sacraments grant real presence under veiled form.
In the ordo gloriae, signs do not vanish; they become transparent. The humanity of Christ—once the veil of humility—becomes the perfect sign through which divine glory is immediately manifested. The metaphysical grammar of the hypostatic union that structured theological speech in this life now structures eschatological vision in perfected form. Finite signification is not abolished; it is completed.
5. The Epistemic Structure of Vision: Apprehensio Without Comprehensio
Eschatological cognition is neither omniscience nor metaphysical fusion. It is an apprehensio immediata without a comprehensio totalis.
The intellect no longer ascends through models; it encounters divine reality directly in the medium God has given (the glorified Christ) and by the light God has given (lumen gloriae). But the intellect remains creaturely and does not comprehend the divine essence as God comprehends Himself. Vision is immediate without abolishing distinction.
6. The Formal Horizon of Theology: From Grammar to Manifestation
The eschatological transformation reveals the unity of theology’s various formal moments: grammar, felicity, modeling, interpretation, truth, causality, participation, and manifestation.
These are not sequential but teleological. Each is ordered toward the consummation in which mediated participation becomes manifest presence. Theology anticipates doxology and confession anticipates communion.
In the end, theology becomes praise, grammar becomes illumination, and faith becomes sight. The same divine reality spoken under the veil of the nova lingua is disclosed in the glory of immediate presence. The language that once reached toward God now rests in the God who reveals Himself.
Objectiones
Ob I. If in the ordo gloriae the felicitous utterance and its truth coincide, then language seems to lose its significance. For where there is direct vision, verbal mediation becomes superfluous. This appears to imply that theological speech itself passes away, contradicting the claim that signs become transparent rather than abolished.
Ob II. Participation in divine truth implies a transformation of the intellect. But if the lumen gloriae renders the intellect proportionate to divine reality, the distinction between Creator and creature seems imperiled. An intellect elevated beyond its nature appears to be divinized in essence, contrary to the metaphysical boundary of the duae naturae.
Ob III. In the ordo viae truth is mediated by models, analogies, and participatory structures. If the ordo gloriae abolishes this mediation, then the eschatological state appears to negate creatureliness itself, since creatures can know only mediately. Perfect immediacy seems incompatible with finite being.
Ob IV. If hyperintensionality reaches its consummation in eschatological manifestation, then the finite intellect seems to apprehend divine truth in its fullness. But full apprehension appears to imply full comprehension, and full comprehension of God is impossible for a creature. Thus the doctrine seems to collapse into contradiction.
Responsiones
Ad I. Although language does not disappear, its opacity does. The grammatical, sacramental, and ecclesial mediations of truth are fulfilled rather than replaced. The finite sign becomes a transparent vehicle of divine presence. Speech is not rendered irrelevant but perfected: its role shifts from indicating what is absent to manifesting what is present. The continuity of language reflects the continuity of creatureliness; its transfiguration reflects the eschatological immediacy of divine truth.
Ad II. The elevation of the intellect by the lumen gloriae does not divinize its essence but perfects its capacity to apprehend God according to a creaturely mode. The boundary of natures remains inviolable. The intellect is upheld, not transformed into divine intellect. The distance between Creator and creature remains infinite; what changes is the mode of access, not the nature of the knower.
Ad III. Mediation is not abolished but transfigured. In the ordo viae, mediation is necessary because of sin, finitude, and historical distance. In the ordo gloriae, mediation remains insofar as creatureliness remains, but its mode shifts from obscured signification to luminous manifestation. While the creature does not become unmediated, the mediation becomes immediate. Presence replaces absence and transparency replaces opacity.
Ad IV. Apprehension without comprehension is the hallmark of eschatological knowing. The intellect sees God immediately yet without circumscribing Him. Hyperintensional richness is not exhausted but is made luminous. The finite intellect apprehends God truly, not totally. The contradiction dissolves once the distinction between visio and comprehensio is maintained. The former belongs to the blessed; the latter belongs to God alone.
Determinatio
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Eschatological knowledge retains hyperintensionality, for divine truth always exceeds finite conceptualization, yet in the ordo gloriae that excess becomes manifest rather than opaque.
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The structure of theological cognition shifts from interpretive mediation to luminous immediacy, not by erasing creaturely limits but by perfecting participation through the lumen gloriae.
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Language remains, but its role is transfigured: it becomes the transparent bearer of divine manifestation, fulfilling rather than abandoning its function in the ordo viae.
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Constitutive causality is intensified, for the Spirit not only grounds being and speech but now grounds vision itself, rendering the intellect proportionate to divine presence without altering its nature.
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Model and reality converge in Christ, who is both the interpreted and the interpreter, the content and the form. Eschatological truth is not deduced but beheld.
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The finite intellect attains apprehensio immediata, a direct yet creaturely knowledge of God, preserving the infinite qualitative distinction while fulfilling the telos of theological desire.
Having now considered the eschatological horizon in which theological grammar is fulfilled, model-theoretic mediation is completed, and hyperintensional meaning reaches its consummation in divine manifestation, the inquiry must turn to the grammar itself as it exists in statu viae.
For if eschatological vision reveals the end toward which theological speech tends, then the proper structure of theological language in this life—its grammar, its logic, and its pneumatological authorization—must be understood in light of that end. The nova lingua is not an invention of faith but the temporal form of participation in divine truth.
We proceed therefore to Disputatio IX: De Nova Lingua Theologiae et Origine Significationis Revelatae, to examine the emergence, structure, and Spirit-formed logic of the language by which God is spoken before God is seen.
The first eight disputationes constitute a single formal unit: an ordered ascent from language to glory.
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Disputatio I – De Expressionibus Theologicis ut Syntacticis. Theology begins as language T: a Spirit-given grammar that orders Christian confession. Before theology can be true, it must be speakable rightly; felicity is its first condition.
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Disputatio II – De Theologia ut Systemate Modelorum. Rightly ordered speech must be interpreted within models of reality. Theology moves from grammar to ontology as T is inserted into the world created and ordered by God.
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Disputatio III – De Spiritu Sancto et Finitudine Felicitatis. The Holy Spirit is the boundary of discourse, distinguishing T_in from T_out. Finitude of felicity marks speech as truly authorized yet never exhaustive.
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Disputatio IV – De Veritate Theologiae Duplex. Theology’s truth is twofold: the veritas interna (felicity within T), and the veritas externa (adequation to being). Their unity is Christ, who is both Word and Reality.
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Disputatio V – De Relatione inter Veritatem et Felicitatem Theologicam. Felicity and truth are distinct yet inseparable—form and fulfillment of the same pneumatological act. The felicitous word is ordered toward its eventual verification.
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Disputatio VI – De Causalitate Divina et Loquela Theologica. Divine causality grounds both being and speaking. The Spirit is causa principalissima of theological utterance; theology becomes a theophysical event rather than mere representation.
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Disputatio VII – De Participatione et Ontologia Theoseos. Participation is defined as constitutive dependence: divine perfections D_G are communicated as participated correlates D. Theosis is the ontological depth of salvation; it is a real sharing in divine life without confusion of essences.
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Disputatio VIII – De Manifestatione Eschatologica Veritatis. The entire ordo culminates in manifestation, for the same divine reality that is now approached through felicitous predicates interpreted within theological models will then be manifest in the immediacy of glory. Theologia is perfected as doxologia; the word of faith becomes the vision of God.
Disputatio II – De Theologia ut Systemate Modelorum. Rightly ordered speech must be interpreted within models of reality. Theology moves from grammar to ontology as T is inserted into the world created and ordered by God.
Disputatio III – De Spiritu Sancto et Finitudine Felicitatis. The Holy Spirit is the boundary of discourse, distinguishing T_in from T_out. Finitude of felicity marks speech as truly authorized yet never exhaustive.
Disputatio IV – De Veritate Theologiae Duplex. Theology’s truth is twofold: the veritas interna (felicity within T), and the veritas externa (adequation to being). Their unity is Christ, who is both Word and Reality.
Disputatio V – De Relatione inter Veritatem et Felicitatem Theologicam. Felicity and truth are distinct yet inseparable—form and fulfillment of the same pneumatological act. The felicitous word is ordered toward its eventual verification.
Disputatio VI – De Causalitate Divina et Loquela Theologica. Divine causality grounds both being and speaking. The Spirit is causa principalissima of theological utterance; theology becomes a theophysical event rather than mere representation.
Disputatio VII – De Participatione et Ontologia Theoseos. Participation is defined as constitutive dependence: divine perfections D_G are communicated as participated correlates D. Theosis is the ontological depth of salvation; it is a real sharing in divine life without confusion of essences.
Disputatio VIII – De Manifestatione Eschatologica Veritatis. The entire ordo culminates in manifestation, for the same divine reality that is now approached through felicitous predicates interpreted within theological models will then be manifest in the immediacy of glory. Theologia is perfected as doxologia; the word of faith becomes the vision of God.
Taken together, the first octad shows that:
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Theology is scientia Spiritus: the Spirit gives its language, orders its truth, grounds its causality, enables its participation, and manifests its end.
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The movement from T → M → FT → TC → participatio → manifestatio is not a sequence of separate domains but one continuous act of divine communication embraced at different logical levels.
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The final form of theology is praise: the intellect’s assent and the soul’s joy coincide where truth and felicity are one in the sight of God.
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