The epiphany I had a few years ago, is that the picture, the print is what truly matters.
Everything else is secondary at best.
What all we do, what equipment we buy, what skills we acquire, it's all for the final directive: The Print.
What medium we use, be it film, digital, what equipment we exposed the picture with, is just the means to an end.
Too often, film bigots and digital bigots lose sight of the prime directive. They worship the medium instead of the print. Often bigots (on principal) will ignore the work of others, if that work was not done with the "right" medium, regardless of just how fantastic those compositions are. They demonize the work made with the "wrong" medium.
Back in the early part of the 20th century, and I paraphrase what Alfred Stieglitz said "The print is everything; nothing else matters".
Another epiphany that occurred to me years ago: Skills and technique do matter. Vision and concept without the means to reveal the print is worthless. Conversely, all the technique and skill in the world with out vision and concept is just as worthless. In other words "Faith, without works, is dead".
Yet another: Most cliches in photography are wrong. Pooh, poohing techique and skill is dead wrong, yet considered so "advent garde" and "cool" in the art community because it "clouds" artistic vision..what a load of craaap.
It's about the picture, stupid.
Don't first choose the right camera. Choose the composition first.