what does the eh mean? do you believe God is the divine and eternal soul or not? souls and personality seem to be the same thing. humans are made in Gods image and the Son of God is fully human and so if you take away humanity from God you distort the image of God.
so it is easy to say something like "personality is a deeply fundamental part of reality". it is the modern atheistic world that believes that the most fundamental things of reality have nothing to do with humanity. but what hope do they have unless of their soul they pick him... maybe not in words or official doctrines but in the Life of his Spirit that he gives freely and according to their ability to receive. God gives to all because he is not lacking... though humans themselves might be in various types of stages.
I believe God is divine, eternal, uncircumscribed, altogether beyond description, a "boundless sea of being," the "fullness of all qualities and perfections in their highest and infinite form", and that He consists of three persons, the relationship of which is clearly expressed by the Creed of 381 in its unaltered form (sans the filioque), and that one of the persons, the Word, became incarnate for our sakes and is our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, who is fully and perfectly human and divine, taking his humanity from the Virgin Mary, who conceived by the Spirit; and that the distinct humanity and divinity of our Lord exist without admixture, confusion, separation, or division, the divinity of God being revealed through His assumed humanity, in short, what the creed of 381 says, (and what is more, I believe in one Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, of which the Syriac Orthodox, Coptic Orthodox and Armenian Apostolic churches are three among several members, also including the Eastern Orthodox and other Oriental churches; I look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come) and further, I believe and confess until the last breath that which we receive in the Eucharist is truly the blood and body of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, given for the remission of sin and participation in life everlasting.
The Eh? was simply because I did not, and still do not, get your point; I am not sure whether or not what you are saying is compatible with the ancient faith or not; it sounds potentially accurate, but your use of novel terminology is unsettling.
However, I utterly reject your (as far as I can tell, unprecedented) exegesis of the two swords procured by the disciples as referring to the Son and Spirit; I also utterly reject the idea that the cherubim depicted on the ark represented the Son and Spirit in any respect, for neither the Son and Spirit are angels, nor are they attributes or posessions or God, but are full participants in the divine nature. Therefore it would not be proper to depict them as two angels in such a context.
If there is a mystagogical symbolism, it might refer to the humanity and divinity of our Lord and the human-divine synergy of Salvation, it might refer to the Church and Scripture, or to Scripture and Tradition, it might refer to the Body and Blood, it might refer to the power of the church to bind and loose, or to the laity and clergy of the church, or eternal salvation and damnation; or to any other binary pairing found in Scripture.
The two swords however it might be best to regard as literal, because St. Peter abused one to slice off the ear of a guard sent to arrest Jesus, an injury instantly and miraculously healed by our Lord, who it seems cannot tolerate the divine image being disfigured and would not suffer his over-zealois disciple's mutilation to remain unrepaired.