Faith & Community Organizations
The Repair Sabbath program invites faith congregations, civic organizations, and community groups to declare one day of communal repair work — and join a movement that belongs to everyone.
Six Wisdom Traditions
Shabbat HaTikkun
Timing
Friday evening service
Repair Act
Community garden or neighborhood cleanup
Repair Sunday
Timing
Sunday service integration
Repair Act
Home repair for elderly or disabled neighbors
Jumu'ah Al-Islah
Timing
Friday Jumu'ah + afternoon
Repair Act
Food security or infrastructure work
Seva Diwas
Timing
Weekend seva day
Repair Act
Environmental restoration or elder care
Karuna Day
Timing
Saturday or Sunday
Repair Act
Mental health support or community listening
Land Repair Day
Timing
Seasonally appropriate
Repair Act
Land stewardship and cultural preservation
The $500 Kit
48-page guide with sermon outlines, discussion questions, and repair project templates for each faith tradition.
50 physical Karma Cash cards pre-loaded with 5 KC each. Distributed to congregation members who complete repair hours.
4×8 ft printed banner in your tradition's colors with the universal repair symbol and your congregation's name.
Tradition-specific liturgy inserts for your service — prayers, readings, and responsive litanies centered on repair.
Curated list of 10 verified repair projects within 5 miles of your congregation, pre-approved for Karma Cash hours.
5 complimentary Tier 1 festival tickets for congregation members who complete 25+ hours before the festival.
Total Kit Value: $850+
Your congregation's investment: $500
Program Timeline
Receive kit and schedule Repair Sabbath date
Facilitator training call with Regenerate Your State team (60 min)
Announce Repair Sabbath to congregation
Repair Sabbath weekend — service + community action
Submit verified hours to Repair Ledger
Karma Cash distributed to participating members
Congregation delegation attends as honored guests
On the Friday evening before the festival, all participating communities gather at the festival site for a joint Repair Vigil. Faith communities, wisdom traditions, civic organizations, and secular groups stand together — not to share a theology, but to honor a shared commitment: the world is broken, and our hands are part of how it heals.
"We did not break it. But we will fix it. Together."