top of page
  • Facebook
  • Apple Music
Search

The Forgotten Center

  • Writer: Jeff Perry
    Jeff Perry
  • Dec 13, 2025
  • 4 min read


Most Christians know how to talk about forgiveness, spiritual growth, and “God’s plan for your life.” But very few know how to talk about the beatific vision. The phrase sounds distant and technical, as if it belongs in a lecture hall instead of a pulpit. Yet according to Scripture and the best of the Christian tradition, the beatific vision is the hope of all Christians. It is the very thing Jesus prays for in John 17, and

the goal toward which salvation is moving, even if you have never heard its name. In short, the beatific vision is the hope that believers will behold God.


The term “beatific” speaks of blessedness and happiness, of the full flourishing of the human person in the presence of God. Augustine describes this as the living, experiencing, and enjoying of God’s own blessedness, continuing to explain that it is when the soul sees the One for whom it was made.


Andrew Davison captures this simply by saying that the vision of God is the fullness of happiness because believers share in God, and God is happy. Our joy is not self-generated, but it flows from the One who is blessed forever, and it flows as we behold Him.


The Center of the Christian Tradition


Even if the doctrine feels unfamiliar now, it was anything but unfamiliar to the Christians who came before us. The fathers spoke of the beatific vision as the great end of humanity, the Medieval theologians treated it as the high point of all doctrine, the crown of the entire theological enterprise, and the Reformers did not discard it; rather, they worked to clarify it. They insisted that the vision is granted through Christ alone, by grace alone, as the climactic gift of redemption.


Herman Bavinck stood firmly in this line when he writes that the beatific vision is not an add-on but the crown of salvation itself, the moment when believers behold the God for whom the soul was created. Nathaniel Sutanto’s exposition of Bavinck makes the point unmistakable. Salvation is not complete until we see God.


Why We Lost the Beatific Vision


If Scripture and tradition speak so clearly, why has this doctrine nearly vanished in many evangelical circles? The answer reveals more about us than about Scripture.

Samuel Parkinson argues that post-Enlightenment Protestantism traded contemplation for activism and transcendence for moralism. This shift did not happen overnight; rather, it was the slow absorption of cultural values that prized productivity, utility, and visible results. In short, the church became utterly pragmatic.


As the contemplative heart of Christianity weakened, the beatific vision faded from preaching and pastoral imagination, and with it, the Christian life lost its horizon. Hope became thinner and more earthbound as the goal of the Christian life became more about the here and now.


Why This Hope Matters Now


Scripture refuses to let us settle for a horizon that small. The Bible does not anchor the believer’s future merely in a renewed society or a healed world, however good those gifts are. It anchors it in the unveiled presence of God. The psalmist’s cry, “Whom have I in heaven but thee,” is the heart of biblical hope.


When the beatific vision is eclipsed, salvation can be quietly reduced to spiritualized moralism. But when this doctrine is recovered, everything reshapes itself around it. Humanity’s purpose comes into view: we exist to behold God in the glory of Christ. This is what redemption prepares us for and what creation has pointed toward from the beginning.


It is the goal of redemption, the longing of faith, and the promise that moves the Christian life forward. It orients worship, for every Lord’s Day is a foretaste of seeing God. It reshapes sanctification, for holiness is preparation for sight. It strengthens perseverance, for suffering is endured in light of “the glory that is to be revealed.”


Parkinson is right: the loss of this doctrine is an unseemly marriage of Protestant theology with Enlightenment pragmatism. But the vision itself is not lost; it is waiting to be retrieved.


Where We Go Next


In the rest of this series, I want to explore the following questions: What is the beatific vision? How does Scripture speak of it? How have Christians understood it? And why does rediscovering it change everything about how we live now?


If Christ prayed that we would be with Him where He is, to behold His glory, then the beatific vision cannot be a peripheral doctrine. It is the final answer to His own prayer, and therefore the destiny of all who belong to Him.


Sources:

Severin Valentinov Kitanov, Beatific Enjoyment in Medieval Scholastic Debates: The Complex Legacy of Saint Augustine and Peter Lombard (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2014), xiii.


Andrew Davison, “A Sideways Glance at the Beatific Vision: Exploring the Network of Christian Doctrine in Light of the Beatific Vision,” Credo Magazine 14, no. 3 (2022).


Nathaniel Gray Sutanto, “Herman Bavinck on the Beatific Vision,” International Journal of Systematic Theology (Early Access, August 2022), 5.


Samuel G. Parkinson, To Gaze upon God: The Beatific Vision in Doctrine, Tradition, and Practice (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2024), 138-140.






 
 
 

Comments


Some of the links above may be affiliate links. This means that, at zero cost to you, this site may earn an affiliate commission if you click through the link and finalize a purchase. This may include Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, Printify, or other affiliate companies

Reclamation
  • Facebook
  • Apple Music

Thanks for submitting!

bottom of page