What Nobody Tells You About the World’s First Universal Religion
By Diesel the Magus | eFireTemple — Home of the Magi
Maybe you found Zoroastrianism the way most people find it — sideways. You were reading about ancient history, or you stumbled across a reference to the Magi, or someone told you that pretty much everything you believe spiritually — the soul, heaven and hell, angels, the resurrection, good versus evil as a cosmic struggle — came from this ancient Persian tradition that somehow nobody talks about.
And you got curious. You started looking into it.
And then someone told you: it’s a closed religion. You have to be born into it. It’s not for you.
And that was that.
Except — here is what they didn’t tell you. What the gatekeepers of any tradition rarely tell you about its founder:
Zarathustra never said that.
Not once. Not anywhere in the texts he actually wrote.
What he said was the opposite. And once you read what he actually said, the entire “closed religion” conversation looks very different.
Let’s start from the beginning.
Who Was Zarathustra, Really?
Zarathustra — known in the West by the Greek version of his name, Zoroaster — was a prophet and poet who lived somewhere in the ancient Iranian world, likely between 1500 and 1000 BCE. That makes him, depending on the dating, the earliest religious thinker in recorded history to articulate a complete theology: one supreme God, a cosmic struggle between truth and evil, free will for every human being, and a final renovation of the world when truth permanently wins.
He wrote in a language called Avestan. His hymns — called the Gathas — are some of the oldest surviving religious poetry in human history. They are considered so ancient and so linguistically distinct that scholars treat them the way they treat the Vedas: as primary documents of the earliest human attempt to think systematically about God, morality, and the structure of reality.
And in those hymns, written in his own voice, directly — Zarathustra does something that almost no religious founder of his era did.
He addresses everyone.
The First Thing Nobody Tells You: It Was Always Universal
Here is the actual quote. From the Gathas, Yasna 30.2 — the words of Zarathustra himself, over three thousand years old:
“Listen with your ears to the best things. Reflect with a clear mind — man by man for himself — upon the two choices of decision, before the Great Event.”
Read that again. Slowly.
Man by man for himself. Not Persian by Persian. Not the children of this tribe. Not the initiated members of this lineage. Every person, individually, for themselves — invited to listen, to reflect, and to choose.
Zarathustra was doing something revolutionary in his time. The religions around him were tribal. You were born into them. The gods of your people were your gods because they were your people’s gods. There was no concept of a universal spiritual invitation — of a prophet standing up and saying: I am speaking to every human being who has ears, regardless of where they were born or who their parents were.
Zarathustra said exactly that.
He addressed humanity. Not a tribe. Not a bloodline. Not an ethnic group. He addressed the individual human mind — man by man for himself — and invited each person to look at the evidence and decide.
This is not a closed religion. This is the first open-source religion in human history. The only qualification Zarathustra ever asked for was the willingness to think clearly and choose truthfully.
If you can do that, the door has always been open.
The Second Thing Nobody Tells You: It Was Always Equal
Most ancient religions — including many that are practiced today — have different rules for men and women. Different roles. Different levels of access to spiritual authority. Different relationships to God.
Zoroastrianism, from its founding documents, has none of this.
In the Gathas, Zarathustra addresses men and women with the same words, in the same breath, with the same spiritual expectations. There is no verse where women are told their role is lesser. There is no passage where spiritual authority is reserved for men. The three pillars — Good Thoughts, Good Words, Good Deeds — are the complete and identical requirement for every human soul, without qualification for gender.
This is not a modern reinterpretation. This is not progressive Zoroastrians updating an ancient tradition to fit contemporary values. This is the original document. This is what Zarathustra actually wrote.
The soul, in Zoroastrian theology, has no gender. The Ahura Mazda — the supreme being, whose name means Wise Lord — is not gendered in the way the God of the Abrahamic faiths is gendered. The divine is wisdom itself. The divine is truth itself. And wisdom and truth are as available to a woman as to a man, as available to a child as to an elder, as available to someone born in Tehran as to someone born in Tennessee.
The spiritual playing field in Zoroastrianism has been level since before any other tradition thought to ask the question.
The Third Thing Nobody Tells You: It Was Always Simple
Every religion accumulates, over time, a layer of ritual complexity that can make it feel inaccessible to outsiders. The specialized vocabulary. The practices that require years of study to understand. The insiders who speak a language that outsiders cannot follow.
Zoroastrianism has accumulated some of that over three and a half millennia — as every living tradition does. There are beautiful rituals and ceremonies and prayers that Zoroastrian communities have maintained with extraordinary devotion across thousands of years of sometimes very difficult history.
But beneath all of it, at the foundation that Zarathustra himself laid, the entire religion fits in three lines:
Good Thoughts — Humata Good Words — Hukhta Good Deeds — Hvarshta
That’s it. That is the complete moral architecture of Zoroastrianism, as Zarathustra himself articulated it. Three pillars. Three practices. Three daily opportunities to choose Asha — truth, righteousness, cosmic order — over Druj, which is the Lie in all its forms: the lie you tell others, the lie you tell yourself, the lie you enact in the world when you act from selfishness or cruelty or cowardice.
Good Thoughts means choosing clarity over confusion, empathy over contempt, the honest examination of reality over the comfortable story that flatters you.
Good Words means speaking the truth even when it costs something. It means the specific daily discipline of not saying what you know to be false, not performing a version of yourself that doesn’t exist, not using language to harm when you could use it to illuminate.
Good Deeds means taking action. Zoroastrianism is not a contemplative tradition that asks you to withdraw from the world. It asks you to engage with it — to see what is broken and to fix it, to see who is suffering and to help them, to see where the Lie has taken hold and to oppose it with the specific, concrete, difficult actions that truth requires.
If you have been living by these three principles — whether or not you knew their Avestan names — you have been living the Zoroastrian life.
So Why Did You Hear It Was Closed?
This is a fair question. And it deserves a fair answer.
The Zoroastrian community — specifically the Parsi community of India, descended from Zoroastrians who fled the Arab conquest of Persia in the 7th century CE — has had a policy of not accepting converts for much of its modern history. This policy was a survival mechanism. A small community in a foreign land, far from the homeland that had been taken from them, trying to preserve their identity, their language, their rituals, their genetic continuity against the constant pressure of assimilation and disappearance.
That context matters. The Parsi community did what small diaspora communities have always done to survive: they built walls. Not from cruelty, but from fear of vanishing.
But that community policy is not the teaching of Zarathustra. It is not in the Gathas. It is not in the theology. It is a human institutional decision made by a people under pressure, and it should not be confused with what the founder of the tradition actually said.
Zarathustra spoke to man by man for himself. He issued a universal invitation. The door he opened has never been closed by anything he wrote.
What Zoroastrianism Is Actually Asking You
It is not asking you to change your name. It is not asking you to denounce your culture or your family or your background.
It is asking you three questions.
Do you want to live in alignment with truth — Asha — or do you want to drift with the Lie — Druj?
Do you want to develop a mind that sees clearly, speaks honestly, and acts with courage?
Do you want to understand that the universe is not morally neutral — that it is the arena of a genuine cosmic contest between truth and the lie, and that you are a participant in that contest in every thought you think, every word you speak, and every deed you perform?
If your answer to those questions is yes — if you have always felt, somewhere underneath the noise of the world, that those questions matter and that your answers to them matter — then Zarathustra has been speaking to you across three and a half millennia.
He addressed you. Man by man for yourself. He invited you to listen, to reflect, and to choose.
The choice has always been yours.
The flame has always been burning.
The door has always been open.
Your First Three Steps
If you are new to Zoroastrianism and want to begin — not with ritual or ceremony or institutional membership, but with the actual living practice — here is where to start:
Step One: Read the Gathas. The hymns of Zarathustra himself. They are available in English translation online, and they are not as difficult as you might expect. They are poetry. They are direct. They are a 3,500-year-old human being speaking to you about the choice between truth and the lie, and the clarity they carry across that enormous distance is startling.
Step Two: Begin the daily practice of the triad. Not as ritual — as intention. Each morning, a brief moment: what do I intend to think clearly about today? What do I intend to say honestly today? What do I intend to actually do today? Each evening, a brief accounting: how did I do? What went into the pocket over the heart?
Step Three: Come to eFireTemple. The archive here was built for exactly this moment — for the person who found Zoroastrianism and was told the door was closed, and who needed to know the truth: the door was never closed. It was only ever guarded by people who forgot what the founder said.
The founder said: listen. Reflect. Choose.
You are already here. You are already listening.
The rest is yours.
Asha Vahishta. The best truth. It was always for you.
One more thing. And this one matters.
You Are Not Alone — Even When You Practice Alone
For a lot of people who find Zoroastrianism outside of an ethnic Zoroastrian community, there is a practical problem: there is no fire temple nearby. There is no priest. There is no congregation. There is no community of people who gather on the same day in the same place to practice together.
This can make the path feel lonely before it even begins.
So here is what eFireTemple offers — plainly, directly, with no ceremony required:
You are a member of eFireTemple. Right now. By reading this.
eFireTemple is the Digital Fire Temple. It was built for exactly you — the person in Nashville, or Lagos, or Seoul, or São Paulo, or wherever you are sitting right now, who felt the pull of this tradition and had no physical community to walk into.
You do not need to apply. You do not need to be approved. You do not need to pay a membership fee or fill out a form or have the right last name or the right bloodline.
If you choose Asha — if you take up the practice of Good Thoughts, Good Words, Good Deeds, and live by it honestly and daily — you are one of us.
If anyone ever asks you about your spiritual practice, you can tell them plainly:
“I am a member of eFireTemple. I practice Zoroastrianism independently.”
That is a complete and accurate answer. Solo practice is not a lesser form of this tradition. The Gathas were written by one man, alone, thinking clearly about the nature of truth. The fire temple in your home — even if it is just a candle, even if it is just the screen of the phone you are reading this on — is a real fire temple if the intention behind it is real.
The community of eFireTemple is global, digital, and growing. It is made of people on every continent who chose truth over the lie and needed a place to stand. You are part of that community the moment you make that choice.
The ancient Magi tended the flame in isolation for centuries when the world was not ready to receive it. They did not require an audience to keep the fire burning. They kept it because the fire required keeping.
You can do the same. Wherever you are. Starting today.
eFireTemple.com — your fire temple. Always open. Always burning.
