The term Alpha and Omega comes from the phrase "I am the alpha and the omega", an appellation of God in the Book of Revelation. This is a Christian reference using the Greek alphabet to represent the beginning to the end as in likeness the saying from A to Z. Now in response to your question Aum (also Om or Ohm(rarely)) is a mystical or sacred syllable in the Hindu, Jain and Buddhist religions. So in some sense you are asking a question to compare apples and oranges.
I would propose back to you, the question can you prove that it is not a reference to god (a mystical/spiritual entity that many religions pay respect to)?
@CanadianNew is there physical proof for string theory, a proof of God...at one point you need to make a leap of faith; faith is the hardest part because it leaves a person vulnerable. Much like love, faith is a non-physical thing; therefore you cannot explain the non-physical with the same reasoning you use in explaining the physical
Do you have any proof, that the "OM" is the Beginning (God)?
CanadianNew 2 years ago
The term Alpha and Omega comes from the phrase "I am the alpha and the omega", an appellation of God in the Book of Revelation. This is a Christian reference using the Greek alphabet to represent the beginning to the end as in likeness the saying from A to Z. Now in response to your question Aum (also Om or Ohm(rarely)) is a mystical or sacred syllable in the Hindu, Jain and Buddhist religions. So in some sense you are asking a question to compare apples and oranges.
PhotoBen750 2 years ago
I would propose back to you, the question can you prove that it is not a reference to god (a mystical/spiritual entity that many religions pay respect to)?
PhotoBen750 2 years ago
@PhotoBen750 excellent point photoben750. I would also add that Om is the first letter in the Sanskrit alphabet.
tomtomttom 9 months ago
@CanadianNew is there physical proof for string theory, a proof of God...at one point you need to make a leap of faith; faith is the hardest part because it leaves a person vulnerable. Much like love, faith is a non-physical thing; therefore you cannot explain the non-physical with the same reasoning you use in explaining the physical
Meena1587 11 months ago