
I wear two symbols around my neck: a crucifix and a pendant bearing the last letter of the Greek alphabet – Omega (Ω).
The crucifix: acknowledgement of the Christian tradition into which I was born.
That formed my earliest understanding of the world – about good and evil, love, sacrifice, and meaning.
Provided a moral compass.
A mythic language: stories, rituals, and symbols that teach that suffering can be redemptive, that love often entails loss, and resurrection requires death.
The Omega symbol represents emergentism – my cosmic framework for a metamodern world.
A framework that marks “the end” not merely as an ending but as a future toward which consciousness evolves – the culmination of complexity, integration, and divinity-in-becoming.
God viewed less as the Creator behind and more as the horizon ahead: the attractor of which we all are part and co-create, that draws everything into coherence.
Divinity not behind us as origin but ahead of us as potential – a telos of evolution, unification, and God-consciousness.
I see Christianity as a powerful mythos nested within this larger, unfolding narrative: the Universe as ever-evolving potential.
Christ is transfigured.
I honour Christianity as the language that taught me to speak of the Sacred, even as I now talk with a new dialect.
These symbols, side by side, represent my Confession: respect for my spiritual heritage as I carry its lessons forward into something new.
The crucifix signals my origin; the Omega symbol, my orientation.
Christianity, the ground I stand on; emergence, the path I walk.
These symbols remind me I am shaped by tradition and an architect of the divine unfolding.