Patricia S. Hurley has written: 'Religion & medicine' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Indexes, Medicine, Religion and Medicine, Religious aspects of Medicine
Medicine
This is from the Yoruba Religion (Santería in spanish) the word oinle is in a type of canticle for Ozain (Plant Spirit, God of medicine)...don't really understand this religion very much. Hope it help a little.
Religion is a set of beliefs and practices supposed to connect people to God or Gods, ensure they live a moral, happy life, and, in most religions, are able to have life beyond physical death. Religion is supposed to have come from God or Gods telling humans how to live. Medicine is something that cures sickness. Usually this means physical illness, and medicine usually means something you put in your body, like pills or a shot. But medicine can also refer to cures for mental or spiritual ailments, and some time medicine can refer to gifts or talents people have that help others, or themselves, heal, such as singing hymns, listening well, hugging, etc. Sometimes religion can be medicine, if it helps people heal from their inner pain. Sometimes medicine is part of religion, usually in traditional cultures.
Christian Science
The connection of medicine to the Islamic religion is that the Third Pillar talked about charity and helping others, and medical scientists all over the world feel the same way, thus inventing new types of medicine every year.
Missionaries are the people who help spread a religion.
Joseph Ziegler has written: 'Medicine and religion, c. 1300' -- subject(s): Christianity, History, Medicine, Medicine, Medieval, Medieval Medicine, Religious aspects, Religious aspects of Medicine
If you have an illness medicine can help cure it
Edward A. Stopford has written: 'The work and the counterwork' -- subject(s): Medicine and religion, Psychophysiology, Religion
The doctor who prescribed the medicine to you will be able to help
They give you medicine.