In just a few centuries, physics has established itself as the most fundamental and, arguably, the most powerful of all sciences, able to explore and reveal facts at the smallest to largest scales of nature, from quarks to galaxies, and at the shortest to longest times (billions of years and beyond). It has also come up with and established bewildering theories, from quantum mechanics to inflationary cosmology. And with all this, it has largely changed people’s view of nature and the universe, perhaps even their ‘worldviews’, their understanding of their place in the universe. On the other hand, it is difficult to describe religion’s trajectory over the last few centuries, even if one can delineate general features of religion, partly due to its huge spectrum of forms as well as the wide variety of beliefs, acts, and codes of behaviour that members and practitioners of various religions adopt. In this paper, I attempt to outline the main characteristics of both physics and religion in order to highlight the similarities or close concepts that can help each learn from the other, but also the ideas or positions that we may find in each and which can sometimes lead to conflict, opposition, and rejection of the other side. In particular, I focus on the concepts of ‘truth(s)’, ‘explanation’, ‘interpretation’, ‘reality’, ‘complementarity’, ‘humility’, and others, dissecting them in an attempt to draw lines of convergence or divergence between physics and religion.