I. thēˈäfənē noun
( -es )
Etymology: Medieval Latin theophania, from Late Greek theophaneia, from Greek the- + -phaneia (as in epiphaneia appearance, manifestation) — more at epiphany
1. : a physical presentation or personal manifestation of a deity to an individual : a brief appearance of Deity
the glorious theophany in which Jehovah will avenge himself of his adversaries — R.H.Pfeiffer
2. : something manifesting or revealing deity
in earlier Hebrew traditions angels had often been direct theophanies — George Santayana
an enchanted world where every living thing was a theophany — Evelyn Underhill
II. noun
( -es )
Etymology: Late Latin theophania, from Late Greek, plural, from Greek, pagan festival at which statues of gods were shown, from the- + -phania (from the stem of phainein to show + -ia, neuter plural of -ios, adjective suffix) — more at fancy
Eastern Church : epiphany