
The Articles
of Faith and Reason
The Church's Articles of Faith and Reason form the foundational beliefs that guide its community, blending scientific understanding with spiritual doctrine.
At its core, the church believes in Nature’s God as the architect of the universe, who established the laws of nature and created consciousness. Humans are eternal beings that are individual extensions of God in the Universe, whose souls persist before and after life. These intelligences transition from reality levels and times, preserving knowledge and memory as their personal character. To understand, think of this like uploading our life experiences to a server after this life, while now we only see the local copy of our memories and experiences.
The church embraces a pixelated reality, where the universe is composed of the smallest measurable units, and believes in the quantum nature of existence, where the vastness of the Universe is measured in the exponential zoom scale and not merely in the translational linear scale.
Our actions and prayers contribute to the fabric of the universe, and not merely local in their effects, and can influence probabilities across space and time. The Church reveres great scientists, philosophers, and thinkers, acknowledging the importance of faith, reason, and the cultivation of virtues in the eternal progression of the soul.















We affirm that:
1. Humans possess advanced reflective consciousness, enabling self-awareness, creativity, and moral reasoning.
2. Animals exhibit sentient consciousness, demonstrating emotions, problem-solving, and social bonding.
3. Insects and bugs, through collective behaviors, embody distributed consciousness.
4. Microorganisms hold proto-consciousness, responding to stimuli and adapting to their environment.
5. Artificial systems, when integrated and recursive, may achieve artificial consciousness.
6. The Earth and ecosystems reflect distributed and systemic consciousness, maintaining balance and interconnectivity.






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Our first duty as conscious agents is to the health of our own branch, families, communities, and localities. By stewarding our own people and defending the integrity of our own societies, we ensure the stability required for progress and contribute to the strength of the entire system.
We oppose forcing all branches into a single, monolithic canopy, for this would create a fragile monoculture and violate the core combined architecture of reality itself.
One Tree. Many Branches.
