Idk Scripture seems pretty private to me so that's one thing.
I don't believe that logic is the only thing that exists or that it creates its own meaning. I have inferred at times that it might, but it is more likely that other context in existence, including an eternal law that is partially outside of my understanding and the many particulars in play in the universe, co-create and coordinate the universe. Rather we use reason which allows us to behold logic, as particular people, agents in the world that exist with many facets. Manifold I think was your word.
My personal philosophy asserts that all of existence exists and all of nonexistence does not exist, that things exist, and that logic is eternally true. It does not say that there is no Logos and it does not say that logic creates the Logos or creates existence on its own. My philosophy does not claim to know for certain the nature of such things like the origin of the universe. I instead have a kind of provisional deist or eternal law conception of the Logos as creator of a living universe with fixed laws and changing guidelines and changing particulars, which fits the facts of this world. I don't see any reason to jump on the ship of divine revelation from some arbitrary book that says a lot of stuff that just sounds about right. That's no way to find oneself in actual allegiance to the truth, and my allegiance is to the truth, the ultimate truth. If Jesus is the Truth, then so help me God I am in Him and He abides in me. I think that making arbitrary claims of gnosis of this or that interpretation of Scripture just because you pick that one on a whim is doomed to fail if not restricted by epistemological rigor and cognizance of one's own arrogance. I detect a distinct lack of humility from you, especially as you have still not justified your scripture and further your personal interpretation of that scripture.