By Julie Tourangeau
Recently, someone I love insisted that we’re all avatars.

They were referencing physicist Tom Campbell’s My Big TOE, a theory of everything that describes reality as a kind of simulation, where consciousness plays out through virtual characters—avatars—across time and space. According to this view, you are the player, the character, and the experience, all in one. Everyone is divine. Everyone is an avatar. All is learning.
It sounds expansive.
But something in me said—no.
Because here’s the truth I’ve come to remember:
Not everyone is an avatar. And not every consciousness carries the Logos.
What Is the Logos?

In ancient Christian and Hermetic traditions, Logos means more than “word.”
It is the divine intelligence, the sacred ordering principle of the cosmos.
It is truth, justice, love, and moral alignment—woven into creation itself.
The Gospel of John opens with:
“In the beginning was the Logos, and the Logos was with God, and the Logos was God.”
The Logos is what formed the world, but it is also what redeems it.
It is the moral compass embedded into the fabric of being.
To embody the Logos is to live in divine alignment, not just awareness.
Consciousness Alone Is Not Enough
Yes, we are all expressions of Source.
Yes, we are all fragments of one universal intelligence.
But that doesn’t mean every person is aligned with the divine.
Awareness is not the same as wisdom.
Consciousness without the Logos is like a sword without a sheath—dangerous, ungrounded, and capable of great harm.
The idea that “everyone is an avatar” becomes spiritually reckless when it’s used to erase discernment, accountability, and truth.
Good Intentions Are Not the Logos
It’s tempting to say that anyone with good intentions is a divine avatar.
But good intentions alone do not make you a vessel of the Logos.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
You can want to help and still enable harm.
You can care deeply and still act inside a matrix of delusion.
You can be sincere—and still be wrong.
In the realm of the Logos, intention must be married to alignment.
Compassion must walk hand-in-hand with discernment.
Spirituality must include truth, not just comfort.
An avatar isn’t someone who means well.
An avatar is someone who sees clearly, acts righteously, and lives in alignment with divine law—even when it costs them comfort, approval, or belonging.
The Fall of Atlantis: What Happens Without the Logos
In esoteric traditions, Atlantis didn’t fall because of science or storms.
It fell because of spiritual arrogance.

The Atlanteans had immense power. They manipulated energy, bent reality, and channeled cosmic forces.
But they believed:
“We are gods. Therefore, we can do anything.”
They stopped listening to the Logos.
They used their gifts to control, conquer, and dominate.
They lost their alignment—and with it, their civilization.
That same pattern is playing out now.
Modern spiritual circles are repeating Atlantean errors:
• “There’s no good or evil, just vibration.”
• “We are all gods.”
• “Everyone is perfect as it is.”
These sound enlightened.
But when used to deny suffering, bypass accountability, or excuse harm, they become distortions of truth.
Not Everyone Is an Avatar
The word avatar originally meant something sacred.

In Sanskrit, it refers to the descent of divinity into form—a soul who chooses to carry the divine blueprint into the world.
In early Christianity, Jesus was called the Logos made flesh—not because he was above humanity, but because he embodied divine truth in the face of empire.
He was not playing a simulation.
He was holding the pattern.
Likewise, in Hermetic teachings, the avatar was not a character in a game.
It was a vessel of divine order—a person who had undergone inner alchemy and chose to live in harmony with sacred law.
To the Hermetics, as to the mystics, the true avatar:
• Purifies the self
• Aligns with truth
• Walks in service of something greater
They don’t just wake up.
They commit.
The Danger of Declaring Divinity Without Alignment
Today, we are flooded with declarations of personal divinity.
But without the Logos, divinity becomes self-worship.
It becomes narcissism in sacred language.
It becomes another Atlantis—polished on the outside, rotting from within.
To say “I am god” while ignoring justice, truth, and love is not awakening.
It’s the beginning of collapse.
You Didn’t Come Here to Play the Game. You Came to Remember the Pattern.
You are not just an expression of consciousness.
You are here to carry something ancient and unshakable:
The Logos.
That means your life is not a simulation.
It is a temple.
And what you build with it matters.
When others say, “We’re all avatars,”
You can say:
“Only those who choose the Logos truly are.”
And then you live like it.
For Those Who Remember
If you’re reading this and it lands in your bones, then you already know.
You’ve seen how misuse of spiritual power can break worlds.
You’ve watched how the false light rises, blinds, and consumes.
You’ve remembered what happens when the Logos is ignored.
But this time, you’re here to speak.
You’re here to walk.
You’re here to restore the balance.
You are not here to level up in a game.
You are here to be a flame—steady, ancient, and sovereign.
This is not a simulation.
This is a sacred return.