19/02/2026
SOPHIA
“The pattern repeats in scripture. Mary escapes with the Christ child while Herod — another Saturnian figure — orders the slaughter of infants out of fear. In Revelation, the image becomes symbolic: a woman in labor, crowned with the sun, flees from the dragon who seeks to devour her unborn child. These myths aren't literal. They're maps of the soul. And they point to something crucial at the turning of epochs: that in times of repression, the future always survives through the feminine.
This feminine force isn't passive. It's protective, wise, and world-bearing. In Christian mysticism and Jungian psychology alike, this is Sophia — divine wisdom — who emerges after Christ's incarnation as the living Holy Spirit, the feminine face of the Godhead. Not as institutional religion but as presence: intuitive, hidden, and vital. Sophia is what remains after the revelation. The whisper that carries it forward. She who holds contradiction and complexity — and refuses to collapse mystery into control.
In a world obsessed with speed and spectacle, Sophia’s silence is radical. She doesn't perform. She gestates. And without her, transformation becomes impossible - because she is the container in which the new is allowed to take shape. The counterforce to the devouring father isn't another war god. It's the pregnant, onyx-skinned mother in exile, keeping the flame alive in the dark. She is Nut, Hathor, Isis, Rhea, Mary. She is the womb of the stars and the fortress of the soul.
As Sophia begins to constellate again in the collective psyche — not as dogma but as a living presence — the symbolic language of the soul becomes essential.”
Late-Stage Babylon by Angie Speaks
"Sophia is always ahead, the demiurge always behind."
Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Page 33.
Image: Sophia, Goddess of Wisdom
Mahaboka