Truth in Religion
TIRmagazine.com
03 Oct 2025 Edition

Weird and Religious

In ancient Greece, people visited healing temples dedicated to Asclepius, where they slept in the temple hoping the god would appear in dreams and prescribe a cure. Priests then interpreted the dreams as medical advice.
Photo of the day
Religious image of the day.

In the name of religion

1683, Vienna. A second Ottoman siege ended in major battle involving Catholic and Muslim armies. Both sides used religious rhetoric, with Christians describing defence of the faith and Muslims invoking jihad and imperial religious duty to justify warfare.

Fact

In Buddhism, mindfulness involves careful awareness of body, feelings, thoughts, and mental states, and Buddhism presents this as a way to understand experience directly.

Certainty over Evidence

Modern culture is saturated with opinions presented as facts and feelings elevated to authority. The speed and volume of information have made it easier than ever to circulate claims without verification. People increasingly accept what aligns with their existing beliefs and reject what challenges them. This tendency did not originate with social media. Religion normalised it centuries earlier. Faith taught people to trust internal certainty over external evidence and to treat doubt as moral failure rather than intellectual caution.

Quote of the day

“When one person suffers from a delusion, it is called insanity. When many people suffer from a delusion it is called religion.” Robert M. Pirsig.

Ask the right question

If religion brings peace, why has it so often been linked to conflict when mixed with power?

Religious Crooks

Hogen Fukunaga led Ho No Hana Sanpogyo in Japan, claiming foot reading spiritual powers, later convicted of fraud after authorities said followers were pressured into paying large sums for supposed spiritual diagnoses. For more information, google the name. Almost all of the crooks appearing in this section have their own wikipedia page.Every country in the world has its fair share of spiritual crooks. Throughout history and still to this day, there has never been a shortage of religious leaders who were not always following their own spiritual advice.

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Truth in Religion is a daily publication edited by JG Estiot. It is provided as an educational tools for those who want to know the truth about religion. [More]