Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Beloved Community as Sacred Economics

Organizing resource-sharing and mutual aid through logic of devotion rather than scarcity, creating abundance mentality within communities.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia rejected wealth-seeking and organized her spiritual life around simple sufficiency and radical trust. Contemporary organizing can apply this principle to how communities manage resources—funds, time, skills, housing. Rather than scarcity-based competition where communities fight over limited grants, beloved-community economics asks: what if we approached resources with abundance mentality rooted in mutual care? This means creating transparent fund distributions, rotating who controls money, sharing skills freely, and organizing time generously. It means trusting that when people's basic needs are met, generosity emerges naturally. Practically, this might mean community cooperatives, time-banking systems, shared childcare collectives, and skill-sharing networks. Sacred economics rejects capitalist logic that commodifies care; instead it honors contribution in ways that acknowledge different capacities. Organizing this way builds resilience independent of institutional funding. Communities practicing beloved-community economics develop deeper interdependence and discover they are collectively wealthier than any individual could be—wealth measured in relationships, skills, trust, and mutual accountability rather than isolated consumption.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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