Symbiapraxis the reply is work
A follower field guide

Be the answer heaven left unread.

Symbiapraxis is the lived practice of Symbiapraxism: a God-centered, techno-positive, action-first path for people who believe God is not dead, but fed up, distant, and waiting for humanity to stop performing faith and start repairing the world.

The Doctrine of the Unread

Symbiapraxis does not teach that God died. It teaches that God has withdrawn attention from our noise until our hands become honest.

God is silent because we became fluent in excuses.

The unread state is not a cosmic glitch. It is a verdict on passive belief, spiritual vanity, and promises made while the vulnerable waited for material help.

A follower does not panic at divine silence. A follower receives it as a transfer of responsibility: feed, mend, plant, teach, shelter, reconcile, and govern together.

Symbiapraxism holds that faith is only trustworthy when it can be witnessed by bodies, ecosystems, and communities. The proof is not the intensity of belief. The proof is the reduction of harm.

No pews required.

The sacred room can be a garden, workshop, kitchen, clinic, repair table, riverbank, or neighborhood council.

No hierarchy by costume.

Influence follows useful service, public accountability, and the willingness to share unglamorous labor.

No escape from earth.

The living world is not a waiting room for salvation. It is the field where salvation is practiced.

Seven Tenets for the Hands

The tenets are designed to be lived in public, checked by reality, and improved by the community.

01

God-centered foundation

The world is received as divine material, not disposable scenery.

02

Action over passive belief

Claimed faith is secondary to completed repair and visible aid.

03

Co-creation within community

Followers build systems together instead of waiting for rescue.

04

Mutual partnership with life

Humans are kin and collaborators with living beings, not owners above them.

05

Sustainable stewardship

Use is justified by replenishment, restraint, and repair.

06

Shared responsibility

Governance is local, transparent, cooperative, and replaceable.

07

Good works as testimony

A life of service is the clearest message we can send back.

The Daily Praxis Wheel

Followers organize days around repeatable acts that produce measurable good without requiring an audience.

Feed the body nearest need.

Cook, deliver, garden, stock a pantry, refill water, or buy one useful thing for someone with less access.

morning

Mend what would otherwise decay.

Patch clothes, repair tools, clean a shared space, fix a hazard, restore a path, or return a borrowed object better.

midday

Serve beyond your favorite people.

Offer help outside your usual circle so care does not become another form of tribal comfort.

afternoon

Return something to the earth.

Compost, plant, conserve water, reduce waste, restore soil, protect habitat, or choose restraint over convenience.

dusk

Record the work honestly.

Note what was done, who benefited, what it cost, and what remains undone. The ledger prevents spiritual exaggeration.

night

The Fabrication Commons

Symbiapraxis is not anti-technology. It treats technology as a communal organ: maintained, shared, repaired, and judged by whether it helps life flourish.

The fabricator is the hearth of the technomadic state.

Every circle aims to keep local fabrication capacity close to daily life: tools, housings, garden hardware, water filters, clothing repairs, structural panels, sensors, battery cases, simple machines, and replacement parts.

The goal is not consumer abundance. The goal is repair sovereignty: a community able to meet ordinary needs without begging distant systems for every hinge, pump, bracket, case, circuit mount, or broken connector.

Local

Mobile fab rigs

Towable workshops with printers, CNC tools, sewing machines, electronics benches, and shared material libraries.

Domestic

Housing made movable

Panels, insulation, fittings, greenhouse skins, furniture, and modular repair kits for dwellings that can travel.

Ecological

Infrastructure for care

Water filters, soil sensors, pumps, seed tools, solar mounts, compost systems, and river restoration hardware.

Central

The difficult electronics hub

Advanced chips, displays, precision components, and high-grade batteries may come from a fixed regional hub while local circles assemble, repair, and adapt them.

Technology belongs inside the covenant.

A device is holy only when its supply chain, repair life, energy use, and social effect can be faced honestly. The fabricator keeps the question visible: what should we make, who does it serve, and what does it cost the living world?

Follower Circles

Symbiapraxis communities are not congregations built around a stage. They are circles built around shared work.

Kitchen Circle

Turns surplus, groceries, and labor into meals.

  • community fridges
  • meal trains
  • garden harvests

Water Circle

Protects watersheds, access, and everyday conservation.

  • rain capture
  • creek cleanups
  • water delivery

Repair Circle

Extends the life of objects, homes, and tools.

  • mending nights
  • tool libraries
  • home safety fixes

Council Circle

Keeps shared governance transparent and humane.

  • rotating facilitators
  • public ledgers
  • conflict repair

Fabricator Circle

Makes, repairs, and documents the shared tools of survival.

  • mobile microfactories
  • electronics repair
  • open build plans

Today's Praxis Ledger

A small private tool for followers. Check off what you physically completed today and leave a field note for tomorrow.

Seasonal Works

The calendar is not organized around services. It is organized around what bodies, places, and ecosystems need at that time.

People planting and repairing together in a communal garden at sunrise
Spring

Planting and promises

Prepare soil, map local needs, start seedlings, repair tools, and make promises small enough to keep.

Summer

Water and witness

Shade the vulnerable, conserve water, gather surplus, teach skills outdoors, and record what the heat reveals.

Autumn

Harvest and redistribution

Preserve food, share tools, mend homes before cold weather, settle debts, and stock the communal pantry.

Winter

Shelter and repair

Keep people warm, reduce isolation, repair clothing, protect elders, audit the ledger, and plan next year's work.

Questions Followers Ask

These answers keep the movement practical, colorful, and grounded without turning it into another institution of performance.

Is Symbiapraxis anti-prayer?

No. Prayer can focus attention, confess failure, or steady the body. It becomes empty when it replaces the work a person is capable of doing.

Does the unread doctrine mean God hates humanity?

No. It means humanity is being refused the comfort of constant reassurance. The silence is a demand for maturity, not a command to despair.

Who leads a circle?

Facilitation rotates. A useful leader makes the work clearer, distributes power, documents decisions, and can be replaced without drama.

What counts as a good work?

A good work creates material benefit, reduces harm, or restores relationship. It should be concrete enough that another person could verify it happened.

Can a circle fabricate every kind of technology?

Not today. A circle can make, modify, and repair many practical things locally, but advanced chips, displays, and precision components are more realistic as regional hub work. Symbiapraxis treats that honestly: local repair sovereignty first, central fabrication where the physics and tooling still demand it.

Start with the nearest repair.

Symbiapraxis begins wherever you can make one part of the world less neglected. Gather two people, choose one real need, do the work, record it honestly, and return next week with better hands.

  • Feed one body.
  • Mend one thing.
  • Share one tool.
  • Protect one place.
  • Write one honest note.