The Encyclopedia Of Religion Volume 4 Page 165 -

He stood in a desert at dusk. Before him, a woman in the gray robes of a Buddhist nun knelt opposite a man in the tattered cassock of a Coptic priest. Between them hovered a small, golden flame. Neither spoke. Their eyes were closed, their faces tight with decades of unspoken grief.

“Take their place. One of them must step away so that a new voice may kneel. But once you kneel, you cannot rise until another comes to read page 165.”

Here is a story based on the archetype of the “guardian of the threshold,” a common religious and mythological motif: the encyclopedia of religion volume 4 page 165

The footnote read: When religions forget they are siblings, the keeper must remind them. To read this is to become the reminder.

“What must I do?” Matteo whispered.

Father Matteo had spent forty years in the Vatican’s Archivio Segreto , but he had never seen a volume like this. Bound in leather that felt like cool skin, The Encyclopedia of Religion sat on a locked lectern in a room no map showed. Volume 4 fell open to page 165 as if it had been waiting.

“Until another reader opens the book,” said the keeper. “Could be a century. Could be tomorrow. But you will not age. You will only wait, and breathe, and hold the question open.” He stood in a desert at dusk

And so he kneels there still—in a hidden room, on a lost page, between one faith and the next. If you ever find Volume 4, turn to page 165. But do not touch the flame unless you are ready to become the story. Would you like a different story based on a specific religious theme or figure from that volume?