This white paper gathers a sequence of prior life-coherent diagnoses into a positive civilizational proposal: the Life-Coherent Commons. Across contemporary systems, law can drift from justice into order-maintenance; finance can drift from life-service into claim-sovereignty; medicine can drift from healing into pathway management; artificial intelligence can drift from tool into symbolic substitute; religion can drift from embodied love into institutional abstraction; and governance can drift from lived transformation into dashboards, compliance, and control. These drifts are not isolated failures. They are expressions of a deeper inversion in which the instruments of life become sovereign over the life-ground they are meant to serve. The paper argues that the next step is not merely to diagnose these inversions but to articulate the world that becomes possible when institutions are re-nested in life. The Life-Coherent Commons is proposed as a shared architecture of legitimacy, practice, and repair grounded in seven enabling commitments and practices: a grammar of enough, a covenant of repair, a pedagogy of life-value, a commons architecture, a field practice of non-forcing transformation, a spiritual-affective recovery, and a transgenerational covenant. Drawing on life-value ontology, autopoiesis, peace research, commons governance, ecological economics, and emancipatory pedagogy, the paper offers a capstone framework for civilizational repair. Its central claim is that a life-coherent world is brought forth wherever human beings conserve the conditions of continuing, recovering, and flourishing as the first legitimacy of every system.