The central claim of this proposal is that Christian metaphysics must be re-ordered under the primacy of God’s self-revelation in Jesus Christ, the Logos, such that all philosophical reflection is governed by the grammar of Revelation as articulated in Dei Verbum and the Catechism. This re-ordering is motivated by Jean-Luc Marion’s warning against the idol of concept, specifically the danger that a metaphysical concept of God might precede and pre-condition God’s self-disclosure. At the same time, it takes inspiration from Joseph Ratzinger and Benedict XVI’s vision of the Logos as the key to integrating faith and reason without subjugating revelation to a prior philosophical measure. The proposal does not reject the substance of Thomistic metaphysics, particularly the insight that creatures exist through participation in God’s esse and that God’s relation to the world entails no change in God. Rather, it re-situates Thomistic metaphysics within a new first principle, the revealed Logos and the gift of being. In short, it urges a provenance priority or donative priority: creaturely being is always being-as-received, and God’s own being is underived and without acquisition. All newness, dependence, and composition belong on the creature’s side, the term of the gift, while what we say of God’s actions ad extra refers to instituted effects in creatures and does not impose change or limitation on the Creator. By following this Rule of Placement, locating all temporal novelty in the created termini of God’s action and never in God’s eternal act, the proposal aims to safeguard both divine freedom and the authentic scope of natural reason.
The guiding question is this: after God has spoken and given himself in Christ, what is the right ordering of philosophy and theology? How do we affirm all that reason can know of being, as Dei Verbum 6 insists, while refusing to let a natural concept of God set the boundaries for the revealed God? The argument developed here proposes that the Church’s teaching on Revelation, together with Marion’s phenomenology of givenness and Ratzinger’s Logos-centered theology, converges on a paradigm in which metaphysics becomes an obedient handmaid to revelation’s content, rather than a platform that controls or diminishes that content.
In Givenness and Revelation, Marion draws attention to a historical and conceptual tension: the term revelation as a theological master-concept arrives relatively late, yet it now dominates theology. This belatedness generates an aporia: how can revelation be the cornerstone of theology and faith and yet have been conceptually unarticulated as such for so long? Marion argues that this paradox needs to be explained, because the late crystallization of the concept risks carrying hidden assumptions, especially an epistemological interpretation that treats revelation primarily as a supplement of information or a higher tier of knowledge. Against this, Marion proposes to reconceive revelation as donation, the pre-eminent saturated phenomenon that exceeds objectifying mastery and demands a conversion of the subject into witness. The critique is not a denial of God’s self-disclosure but a purification of the stance by which theology receives it, so that concepts serve what is given rather than governing it.