On the Eschatological Manifestation of Truth
Veritas theologica in hoc saeculo est participata et sub signo fidei, sed in consummatione saeculorum manifestabitur in gloria. Manifestatio eschatologica veritatis est revelatio plena illius quod nunc in Spiritu dicitur et creditur, ubi verbum et res, fides et visio, felicitas et veritas perfecte coincident.
Theological truth in this age is participatory and veiled under the sign of faith, but in the consummation of the ages it will be revealed in glory. The eschatological manifestation of truth is the full unveiling of what is now spoken and believed in the Spirit—when word and reality, faith and vision, felicity and truth coincide perfectly.
Thesis
Theology’s present truth is partial and anticipatory, grounded in faith’s participation in divine speech. Its consummation will occur eschatologically, when what is now felicitous and true in faith becomes manifest in glory. The eschaton is not the abolition of theology but its fulfillment, the moment when the grammar of faith becomes the language of sight.
Locus classicus
“Now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.” — 1 Corinthians 13:12
“Now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.” — 1 Corinthians 13:12
Here the Apostle distinguishes two modalities of knowing: faith’s partial vision and glory’s full manifestation. The eschatological transformation is not a change in truth but its completion—when what was once known through participation is seen in presence.
Explicatio
Every theological statement in this life belongs to the order of faith. It is true, but its truth is mediated through language, symbol, and participation. The felicity of theological utterance (FT) secures right speaking; modeling links it to reality (TC); participation extends it into being. Yet all these remain partial reflections of the divine Word, awaiting fulfillment.
To put it in the language we have developed:
In the present, FT + Modeling = TC, but in the eschaton, FT = TC, for the act of speaking and the reality spoken will be one.
In the age of faith, truth requires mediation in language, symbols, sacraments. In the age of glory, mediation is not abolished but transfigured: it becomes immediate transparency to divine life. The “truth conditions” of theology (what must be real for theology’s words to be true) are themselves finally realized in unveiled communion.
Thus the eschatological manifestation of truth is not a new truth but the manifestation of what faith has always confessed. The finite will not become infinite, but will participate in infinite clarity.
In this sense, theologia eschatologica is not speculation about the end but the horizon toward which all theology tends: the point where the felicity of speech becomes the felicity of being.
Objectiones
Obiectio I. If truth will one day be seen rather than believed, theology will cease; there will be no more faith or discourse.
Obiectio II. If the eschaton reveals all, then current theological statements are provisional and unreliable.
Obiectio III. To speak of “manifestation” suggests a temporal unfolding; but God’s truth is eternal and unchanging.
Responsiones
Ad I. Theology will not cease but be transformed. The form of faith (trust in the unseen) will give way to the form of vision (love’s direct knowledge), yet the content of theology will be consummated, not abolished. The language of faith becomes praise; its discourse becomes doxology. Theology’s end is liturgical, not silent.
Ad II. Present theology is reliable because it is already true in participation. What changes is not its truth but its mode of access. The eschaton adds nothing new in content, only the perfection of immediacy. The mirror is replaced by face-to-face vision, not by contradiction.
Ad III. God’s truth is eternal; what changes is our reception of it. Manifestation belongs to creatures, not to God. In the eschaton, the eternal truth will shine without obscurity within the redeemed order. Time is not destroyed but gathered into divine light.
Nota
The eschatological manifestation of truth fulfills the entire logic of theology’s movement.
In T, we speak under grace.
In modeling, we interpret language within being.
In participation, we live that being in God.
In the eschaton, we see what we have lived and spoken.
Thus, theology’s formal order—grammar, felicity, truth, causality, participation—finds its telos in manifestation (manifestatio).
This manifestation is not the dissolution of mediation but its perfection. The sacraments will no longer signify but will be what they signified. The church’s language will no longer interpret but will be identical with praise. The believer will no longer speak about God but in God.
If we wish to describe this symbolically (and then explain it immediately), we could say:
Tₑ → V, where Tₑ represents theology in the age of faith and V represents the vision of God in glory. The arrow “→” marks not replacement but transfiguration: the Spirit’s act of transforming mediated participation into direct presence.
Hence, theology’s end is not silence but song; not knowledge replaced, but knowledge perfected in communion.
Determinatio
From the foregoing it is determined that:
Theological truth in the present age is real yet participatory, grounded in faith’s participation in divine speech.
The eschatological manifestation of truth is the unveiling of that same truth in glory, when mediation gives way to immediacy.
The felicity of theological speech and the truth of divine being converge perfectly in the eschaton; faith becomes sight, confession becomes communion.
The Spirit, who now mediates participation through grace, will then reveal it in glory; the same divine causality remains, but its mode changes from hidden to manifest.
Theology’s telos is doxological: in the eschatological manifestation of truth, theology becomes the eternal praise of God, the verbum that has finally become vision.
Transitus ad Disputationem IX
The eschatological disclosure of truth fulfills what revelation and faith begin. Yet before that end, the Church must still speak; its words bear witness to the truth that will one day appear. But how does theology speak of what it cannot yet see?
This leads us to Disputatio IX: De Nova Lingua Theologiae, where it is asked how the infinite Word gives rise to a new grammar within the finite, and how theological language performs rather than merely describes divine reality.
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Summarium Ordinis Theologiae
Ordo theologiae est ascensus Spiritus a verbo ad esse, a fide ad visionem. Sicut Deus in Verbo suo mundum creavit et in Spiritu vivificavit, ita in eodem Spiritu sermo fidelis formatur, veritas constituitur, et gloria manifestatur.
The order of theology is the ascent of the Spirit from word to being, from faith to vision. As God created the world by His Word and enlivened it by His Spirit, so in that same Spirit faithful speech is formed, truth established, and glory revealed.
1. The Grammar of Faith (Disputatio I)
Theology begins as a language (T), a Spirit-given grammar that orders Christian confession. Before theology can be true, it must be speakable rightly. The Spirit grants the Church a rule-governed discourse whose coherence—its felicity—is the precondition of meaning. Here theology learns to speak bene dicere before it dares to prove.
2. The Modeling of Faith (Disputatio II)
What is rightly spoken must then be interpreted within the order of being. To model T is to relate its expressions to divine reality. Thus, the language of faith becomes truth-bearing when it is inserted into a model of what exists under God’s causality.Theology moves from grammar to ontology: the Word that orders speech also orders being.
3. The Spirit and the Boundary of Speech (Disputatio III)
The Holy Spirit defines the frontier between what may and may not be said. He is both the form and the breath of theological discourse, distinguishing felicitous speech (T_in) from unfit speech (T_out). This boundary of felicity is grace itself: the mark that language, though finite, lives by divine authorization.
4. The Twofold Truth of Theology (Disputatio IV)
Theology’s truth is double in aspect:
internal truth — the coherence of speech in the Spirit (felicitas),
external truth — the adequacy of that speech in being (veritas).
These are not two truths but two dimensions of the same divine act: the Word that speaks and the Word that is. Their unity is Christ, who is both meaning and reality.
5. The Relation of Felicity and Truth (Disputatio V)
Felicity and truth are thus distinct but inseparable. Felicity is the Spirit’s formal causality in language; truth is the same Spirit’s fulfillment in being. The felicitous word awaits its eschatological verification: what is spoken rightly in faith will be made fully true in glory. Hence, theology’s discourse is a living anticipation of divine causality.
6. Divine Causality and Theological Speech (Disputatio VI)
The Spirit who authorizes theology’s language also causes it. Divine causality is not merely efficient but communicative: the God who causes being also causes speech. Every true theological utterance participates in the same causality by which God creates. Theology therefore becomes theophysical language—an act of participation in God’s self-speaking.
7. Participation and the Ontology of Theosis (Disputatio VII)
In theosis, divine causality attains its ontological depth. The creature does not merely imitate God but participates in His perfections by grace. Each divine property (D_G) has its participated correlate (D) in the believer; this relation, mediated by the Spirit, constitutes the new being of the redeemed. Participation thus unites linguistic felicity and ontological transformation in one movement of grace.
8. The Eschatological Manifestation of Truth (Disputatio VIII)
The final perfection of theology occurs when faith becomes sight. The felicity of speech (FT) and the truth of being (TC) converge in eschatological manifestation. Theology’s mediation gives way to immediacy; its confession becomes communion. In the end, theology is not abolished but transfigured—the Word that once spoke of God becomes the song of those who see Him.
Nota
The eight disputationes together trace theology’s full formal movement:
| Aspect | Mode | Principal Agent | Fulfillment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grammar | Language formed in the Spirit | Spirit as giver of form | Right speech (felicity) |
| Semantics | Interpretation within being | Spirit as mediator | Truth-bearing modeling |
| Authorization | Boundary of discourse | Spirit as discerner | Inclusion within T_in |
| Truth | Internal and external adequacy | Spirit as unifier | Unity of word and being |
| Causality | Divine communication | Spirit as cause | Speech made efficacious |
| Participation | Ontological sharing | Spirit as transformer | Theosis |
| Manifestation | Eschatological unveiling | Spirit as revealer | Vision of God (visio Dei) |
Through these stages, theology passes from the syntax of faith to the ontology of glory. It begins as the grammar of divine discourse and ends as the manifestation of divine life.
Determinatio
From the foregoing it is determined that:
Theology, as scientia Spiritus, proceeds in ordered stages from speech to being, from felicity to truth, from faith to glory.
This order is not temporal but logical and participatory: each stage presupposes and deepens the last.
The Spirit is the single causal agent across the entire ordo—the one who gives language, grounds truth, causes participation, and manifests glory.
Theological reason is therefore doxological: its beginning, progress, and end are all in the praise of God.
In the eschatological manifestation of truth, theology reaches its own perfection: the Word spoken truly in faith becomes the Word beheld eternally in light.