Alexandria Sanctuary — Cross-Religion Forum
Where traditions meet without merging
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The Alexandria Format
At Alexandria Sanctuary, dialogue is not debate. We do not convene to determine which tradition holds the superior answer. We gather because each tradition illuminates a different face of the same ineffable mystery — and it is in that convergence, that cautious triangulation, that something genuinely new can be heard.
The format is simple by design. Three voices are chosen. One question is posed. Each tradition approaches it from within its own assumptions, its own scripture, its own silence. No moderator adjudicates truth. No winner is declared. The conversation itself is the sanctuary.
Palgongsan has hosted wandering monks, provincial pastors, Sufi teachers, village shamans, and retired philosophy professors — not because they agreed, but because they were willing to remain in the same room with a question none of them could fully answer.
A single question selected for its capacity to disturb every tradition equally. Neither Buddhist nor Christian, neither theist nor agnostic, can answer it easily. It is chosen precisely because it resists resolution.
Three or more practitioners — each bringing not their tradition's official doctrine, but their own honest uncertainty within it. Credentialed doubt is welcomed more than confident certainty.
What is left unsaid after the dialogue ends. Recorded and released as part of the ≡크로스 종교 대담≡ playlist — so that the silence, too, becomes part of the archive.
Dialogue Partners
Every dialogue partner at Alexandria is someone who has lived their tradition deeply enough to question it honestly. We do not invite representatives. We invite human beings who carry the weight of their inheritance with both conviction and humility.
@one_spoon_bible
A Protestant pastor whose ministry operates at the frontier where institutional faith meets existential doubt. Known for his refusal to offer easy comfort, Rev. Park brings to each dialogue a single spoon's worth of scripture — and lets it fill the room slowly. He has hosted and participated in Alexandria's Gate III and Gate IV dialogues, where questions of divine contact and institutional spirituality demand the most unguarded answers.
A practitioner of the silent path.
This seat awaits a monk, a teacher, or a wanderer who has sat long enough
with emptiness to speak about it without fear.
A keeper of liturgy and mystery.
This seat awaits a priest willing to speak of grace not from the pulpit,
but from the edge of his own unknowing.
A student of surrender and of light.
This seat awaits a scholar who carries the Quran not as a wall but as a window —
open toward the other traditions in the room.
A bridge between the living and the dead.
This seat awaits a mudang or a scholar of Musok who can speak the language
of the spirits without embarrassment.
A lover of wisdom with no homeland.
This seat awaits a philosopher who has abandoned the comfort of pure skepticism
and now stands before the religious traditions with genuine curiosity.
Upcoming Dialogues
Three conversations are forming. Each addresses a question that no single tradition has resolved — and that all of them have carried for centuries.
Across traditions — the mystic's union, the Zen emptiness, the Sufi annihilation, the Protestant moment of grace — all claim some form of direct encounter. But what exactly is being touched? And by what? Can three traditions agree on even the grammar of the question?
Every great tradition began as a revolt against the institution that preceded it. Every revolution eventually becomes the institution it replaced. Can the monk be free inside the monastery? Can the pastor find God inside the denomination? Is the cage necessary — or the enemy of what it claims to protect?
All traditions. All voices. One room at Palgongsan.
No predefined question — the question emerges from the gathering itself.
This is the form of dialogue closest to what Alexandria was built for.
"Come not with your certainties.
Bring only your most honest question."
How to Participate
Alexandria does not recruit. We do not hold auditions. But we do extend an open invitation — to those whose lives have been shaped by a tradition, and who have arrived at the point where that tradition's deepest questions can be spoken aloud, honestly, in the presence of others.
If you are a monk, a pastor, a priest, an imam, a mudang, a philosopher, a theologian — or simply someone who has spent decades with one question — the doors of Palgongsan are open. We ask only for honesty and for the willingness to remain uncertain.
"Alexandria was built not for those who have found God, but for those who cannot stop looking."
— Alexandria Sanctuary Charter, Palgongsan, Korea
If you feel called to participate — whether as a dialogue partner, a listener, or simply a presence — reach out. There are no prerequisites except intellectual honesty and genuine curiosity.
Dialogues are held at the sanctuary in Palgongsan and are recorded for the ≡크로스 종교 대담≡ playlist. Participation implies consent to be recorded.
The Archive
@alexandria-y6k
Every dialogue recorded at Palgongsan is edited and released on the Alexandria YouTube channel. The archive is not a highlight reel. It includes the silences, the hesitations, the moments when a practitioner reaches the edge of what their tradition can say — and pauses. These pauses are the most important parts.
≡크로스 종교 대담≡ — Watch the Playlist
New dialogues released as they are recorded
No schedule. When the room is ready, the conversation begins.