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I believe the trope is referring to powers being an upper member of a religion is supposed to or once believed to give when reffering to real life examples, and when dealing with fiction what powers it actually does give. For example, in the Dragon Quest games preists have healing powers. This isn\'t a rumour or a superstition, it is a fact of these games. Real life priests are supposedly able to excorcise spirits. This isn\'t considered fact, just a \
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I believe the trope is referring to powers that being an upper member of a religion is supposed to or once believed to give, when refering to real life examples, and when dealing with fiction what powers it actually does give. For example, in the Dragon Quest games preists have healing powers. This isn\\\'t a rumour or a superstition, it is a fact of these games. Real life priests are supposedly able to excorcise spirits. This isn\\\'t considered fact, just a \\\"magical\\\" attribute assigned to them. The trope applies differently to real life than it does to fiction, so confusion is understandable.
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