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-
-
- This is my second attempt to post this, apparently my first
- failed. (So if it turns up in alt.druids don't blame me)
-
- Because I origionally posted to
- soc.religion.christianity.bible-study, I included a disclaimer
- in the header telling the moderator to look it over and
- decide whether it was appropriate.
-
- I didn't expect any trouble with the other groups as it evidently
- has a lot to offer them. I'm pretty sure my posting problems
- were of a technical nature, though
-
- My organization does not support or affiliate with ANY religion.
-
-
- Brian
- ----------------
- The following is the text of a pamphlet entitled "Marijuana and
- The Bible" published by the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church.
-
-
- MARIJUANA AND THE BIBLE
- by
- The Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church
-
-
-
- OFFERINGS OF DEVOTION
-
- With offerings of devotion, ships from the isles will meet to
- pour the wealth of the nations and bring tribute to his feet. The
- Coptic Church believes fully the teachings of the Bible, and as
- such we have our daily obligations, and offer our sacrifices, made
- by fire unto our God with chants and Psalms and spiritual hymns,
- lifting up holy hands and making melody in our hearts.
-
- Herb (marijuana) is a Godly creation from the beginning of
- the world. It is known as the weed of wisdom, angel's food, the
- tree of life and even the "Wicked Old Ganja Tree". Its purpose in
- creation is as a fiery sacrifice to be offered to our Redeemer
- during obligations. The political worldwide organizations have
- framed mischief on it and called it drugs. To show that it is not
- a dangerous drug, let me inform my readers that it is used as food
- for mankind, and as a medicinal cure for diverse diseases. Ganja
- is not for commerce; yet because of the oppression of the people,
- it was raised up as the only liberator of the people, and the only
- peacemaker among the entire generation. Ganja is the sacramental
- rights of every man worldwide and any law against it is only the
- organized conspiracy of the United Nations and the political
- governments who assist in maintaining this conspiracy.
-
- The Coptic Church is not politically originated, and this was
- firmly expressed when we met with the political directorate of the
- land during the period of pre-incorporation. We support no
- political organization, pagan religion, or commercial institution,
- seeing that religion, politics, and commerce are the three unclean
- spirits which separate the people from their God. Because of our
- non-political stand, the church has received tremendous opposition
- from the politicians, who do not want the eyes of the people to be
- opened. Through its agency, the police force, the church has been
- severely harassed, victimized, and discriminated. Our members have
- passed through several acts of police brutality, our legal
- properties maliciously destroyed, members falsely imprisoned,
- divine services broken up and all these atrocities performed upon
- the Church, under the name of political laws and their justice.
-
- Walter Wells -- Elder Priest of the
- Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church of
- Jamaica, West Indies
-
-
-
-
- THE USE OF MARIJUANA IN ANCIENT TIMES
-
- The use of marijuana is as old as the history of man and dates
- to the prehistoric period. Marijuana is closely connected with the
- history and development of some of the oldest nations on earth.
- It has played a significant role in the religions and cultures of
- Africa, the Middle East, India, and China
-
- Richard E. Schultes, a prominent researcher in the field of
- psychoactive plants, said in an article he wrote entitled "Man and
- Marijuana":
-
- "...that early man experimented with all plant materials that
- he could chew and could not have avoided discovering the
- properties of cannabis (marijuana), for in his quest for seeds
- and oil, he certainly ate the sticky tops of the plant. Upon
- eating hemp the euphoric, ecstatic and hallucinatory aspects
- may have introduced man to an other-worldly plane from which
- emerged religious beliefs, perhaps even the concept of deity.
- The plant became accepted as a special gift of the gods, a
- sacred medium for communion with the spiritual world and as
- such it has remained in some cultures to the present."
-
- The effects of marijuana was proof to the ancients that the
- spirit and power of the god(s) existed in this plant and that it
- was literally a messenger (angel) or actually the Flesh and Blood
- and/or Bread of the god(s) and was and continues to be a holy
- sacrament. Considered to be sacred, marijuana has been used in
- religious worship from before recorded history.
-
- According to William A. Embolden in his book Ritual Use of
- Cannabis Sativa L, p. 235:
-
- "Shamanistic traditions of great antiquity in Asia and the
- Near East has as one of their most important elements the
- attempt to find God without a vale of tears; that cannabis
- played a role in this, at least in some areas, is born out in
- the philology surrounding the ritualistic use of the plant.
- Whereas Western religious traditions generally stress sin,
- repentance, and mortification of the flesh, certain older non-
- Western religious cults seem to have employed Cannabis as a
- euphoriant, which allowed the participant a joyous path to the
- Ultimate; hence such appellations as "heavenly guide".
-
- According to "Licit and Illicit Drugs" by the Consumer Union,
- page 397-398:
-
- "Ashurbanipal lived about 650 B.C., but the cuneiform
- descriptions of marijuana in his library "are generally
- regarded as obvious copies of much older texts." Says Dr.
- Robert P. Walton, an American physician and authority on
- marijuana, "This evidence serves to project the origin of
- hashish back to the earliest beginnings of history."
-
-
- THE USE OF MARIJUANA AS INCENSE
-
-
- According to the Encyclopedia Britannica: "Pharmacological
- Cults"
-
- "...the ceremonial use of incense in contemporary ritual is
- most likely a relic of the time when the psychoactive
- properties of incense brought the ancient worshipper in touch
- with supernatural forces."
-
- In the temples of the ancient world, the main sacrifice was
- the inhalation of incense. Incense is defined as the perfume or
- smoke from spices and gums when burned in celebrating religious
- rites or as an offering to a deity. Bronze and gold incense
- burners were cast very early in history and their forms were often
- inspired by cosmological themes representing the harmonious nature
- of the universe.
-
- The following piece was taken from "Licit and Illicit Drugs",
- page 31.
-
- "In the Judaic world, the vapors from burnt spices and
- aromatic gums were considered part of the pleasurable
- act of worship. In proverbs (27:9) it is said that
- 'Ointment and perfumes rejoice the heart.' Perfumes were
- widely used in Egyptian worship. Stone altars have been
- unearthed in Babylon and Palestine, which have been used
- for burning incense made of aromatic wood and spices.
- While the casual readers today may interpret such
- practices as mere satisfaction of the desire for pleasant
- odors, this is almost certainly an error; in many or most
- cases, a psychoactive drug was being inhaled. In the
- islands of the Mediterranean 2,500 years ago and in
- Africa hundreds of years ago, for example leaves and
- flowers of a particular plant were often thrown upon
- bonfires and the smoke inhaled; the plant was marijuana."
- (Edward Preble and Gabriel V. Laurey, Plastic Cement: The
- Ten Cent Hallucinogen, International Journal of the
- Addictions, 2 (Fall 2967): 271-272.
-
- "The earliest civilizations of Mesopotamia brewed
- intoxicating beer of barley more than 5,000 years ago;
- is it too much to assume that even earlier cultures
- experienced euphoria, accidentally or deliberately,
- through inhalation of the resinous smoke of Cannabis?"
- (Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L, p. 216.)
-
- "It is said that the Assyrians used hemp (marijuana) as
- incense in the seventh or eighth century before Christ
- and called it 'Qunubu', a term apparently borrowed from
- an old East Iranian word 'Konaba', the same as the
- Scythian name 'cannabis'." (Plants of the Gods -- Origin
- of Hallucinogenic Use by Richard E. Schultes and Albert
- Hoffman)
-
- "It is recorded that the Chinese Taoist recommended the
- addition of cannabis to their incense burners in the 1st
- century as a means of achieving immortality." (Marijuana,
- the First Twelve Thousand Years by Earnest Abel, page 5)
-
- "There is a classic Greek term, cannabeizein, which means
- to smoke cannabis. Cannabeizein frequently took the form
- of inhaling vapors from an incense burner in which these
- resins were mixed with other resins, such as myrrh,
- balsam, frankincense, and perfumes." (Ritual Use of
- Cannabis Sativa L)
-
- "Herodotus in the fifth century B.C. observed the
- Scythians throwing hemp on heated stone to create smoke
- and observed them inhaling this smoke. Although he does
- not identify them, Herodotus states that when they "have
- parties and sit around a fire, they throw some of it into
- the flames. As it burns, it smokes like incense, and the
- smell of it makes them drunk, just as wine does us. As
- more fruit is thrown on, they get more and more
- intoxicated until finally they jump up and start dancing
- and singing." (Herodotus, Histories 1.202.)
-
-
- EVIDENCE INDICATING THE SEMITIC ORIGIN OF CANNABIS
-
- The name cannabis is generally thought to be of Scythian
- origin. Sula Benet in Cannabis and Culture argues that it has a
- much earlier origin in Semitic languages like Hebrew, occurring
- several times in the Old Testament. He states that in Exodus 30:23
- that God commands Moses to make a holy anointing oil of myrrh,
- sweet cinnamon, kaneh bosm, and kassia. He continues that the word
- kaneh bosm is also rendered in the traditional Hebrew as kannabos
- or kannabus and that the root "kan" in this construction means
- "reed" or "hemp", while "bosm" means "aromatic". He states that
- in the earliest Greek translations of the old testament "kan" was
- rendered as "reed", leading to such erroneous English translations
- as "sweet calamus" (Exodus 30:23), sweet cane (Isaiah 43:24;
- Jeremiah 6:20) and "calamus" (Ezekiel 27:19; Song of Songs 4:14).
- Benet argues from the linguistic evidence that cannabis was known
- in Old Testament times at least for its aromatic properties and
- that the word for it passed from the Semitic language to the
- Scythians, i.e. the Ashkenaz of the Old Testament.
-
- Sara Benetowa of the Institute of Anthropological Sciences in
- Warsaw is quoted in the Book of Grass as saying:
-
- "The astonishing resemblance between the Semitic 'kanbos'
- and the Scythian 'cannabis' leads me to suppose that the
- Scythian word was of Semitic origin. These etymological
- discussions run parallel to arguments drawn from history.
- The Iranian Scythians were probably related to the Medes,
- who were neighbors of the semites and could easily have
- assimilated the word for hemp. The Semites could also
- have spread the word during their migrations through Asia
- Minor.
-
- Taking into account the matriarchal element of Semitic
- culture, one is led to believe that Asia Minor was the
- original point of expansion for both the society based
- on the matriarchal circle and the mass use of hashish."
-
- The Ancient Israelites were a Semitic people. Abraham, the
- father of the Israelite nation, came from Ur, a city of Babylonia
- located in mesopotamia. The Israelites migrated throughout Asia
- Minor and could easily have spread the religious use of marijuana.
-
-
- THE ISRAELITE USE OF INCENSE
-
- It was said that Moses, at the direction of Almighty God,
- first brought in the use of incense in public worship, and that
- the other nations of antiquity copied the practice from him. It
- was however a practice that began with Adam. The "Book of
- Jubilees", an Apocryphal book, (the Apocrypha was considered
- canonical by the early church and is to this day by the Ethiopian
- Zion Coptic Church) states that "on the day when Adam went forth
- from the Garden of Eden, he offered as a sweet savour an offering
- of frankincense, galbanum, and stacte, and spices, in the morning
- with the rising of the sun, from the day when he covered his
- shame." And of Enoch we read that "he burnt the incense of the
- sanctuary, even sweet spices, acceptable before the Lord, on the
- Mount."
-
- Incense was assigned miraculous powers by the Israelites. It
- was burned in golden bowls or cauldrons placed on or beside the
- altar. It was also burned in hand-held censers. In the Blessing
- of Moses, a poem belonging to the Northern Kingdom of Israel, and
- written about 760 B.C., the sacrificial smoke is offered to the God
- of Israel.
-
- Let them teach Jacob thy judgments, and Israel thy law;
- Let them offer sacrificial smoke to thy nostrils, and
- whole burnt sacrifice upon thy altar.
-
- Throughout the Bible the ancient patriarchs were brought into
- communion with God through smoking incense and at Mt. Sinai God
- talked to Moses out of a bush that burned with fire (Exodus 3:1-
- 12). After Moses brought the Israelite people out of Egypt he
- returned to Mt. Sinai at which time God made a covenant with Moses
- in which the Ten Commandments were revealed. Exodus 19:8 describes
- the conditions at the time of this covenant.
-
- Exodus 19:8 "And Mount Sinai was altogether on smoke,
- because the Lord descended upon it in fire: and the smoke
- thereof ascended as smoke of a furnace, and the whole
- mount quaked greatly.
-
- The Mysterious smoke mentioned in the covenant on Mt. Sinai
- is also referred to as a cloud.
-
- Exodus 24:15 "And Moses went up into the mount, and a
- cloud covered the mount. 16 And the glory of the Lord
- abode upon Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it six
- days: and the seventh day he called unto Moses out of
- the midst of the cloud.
-
- Scriptures make it abundantly clear that the clouds and the
- smoke are related to the burning of incense. Exodus 40:26
- describes Moses burning incense, a cloud covering the tent of the
- congregation and the glory of the Lord filling the tabernacle.
- Leviticus 16:2-13 describes how God appeared in a cloud and refers
- to it as the clouds of incense. Numbers 16:17-19 describes how
- every man of the congregation had a censer full of burning incense
- and that the glory of the Lord appeared unto all the congregation.
- Isaiah 6:4 describes how Ezekial saw God in a smoke-filled inner
- court. Numbers 11:25 describes how God was revealed to moses and
- the seventy elders in a cloud; that the spirit rested upon them and
- that they prophesied and ceased not.
-
- The Book of Grass by Andrew and Vinkenoog includes a section
- on Ancient Scythia and Iran by Mircea Eliade, one of the foremost
- experts on the history of religions. On pages 11 and 12 is the
- following:
-
- "On one document appears to indicate the existence of a
- Getic shamanism: It is Straho's account of the Myssian
- KAPNOBATAI, a name that has been translated, by analogy
- with Aristophanes' AEROBATES, as 'those who walk in
- clouds'; but it should be translated as 'those who walk
- in smoke'! Presumably the smoke is hemp smoke, a
- rudimentary means of ecstasy known to both the Tracians
- and the Scythians..."
-
- This passage should be carefully noted. Biblical passages
- make it abundantly clear that the ancient Isrealites also walked
- in clouds and in smoke. In fact it was in the clouds of smoke that
- God was revealed to the ancient Isrealites. The words "smoke" and
- "smoking" appear fifty times in the King James Version of the Bible
- and two separate times the Bible says of the Lord, "There went up
- a smoke out of his nostrils." II Samuel 22:9, Psalms 18:8.
-
- There are numerous other places in the Bible that mention the
- burning of incense, the mysterious cloud, and smoke. This common
- thread is found throughout the Bible, including the New Testament.
-
- St. Matthew 24:30 "And then shall appear the sign of the
- Son of Man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of
- the Earth morn, and they shall see the Son of Man coming
- in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory."
-
- Revelations 1:7 "Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every
- eye shall see him, and they also which pierced him: and
- all the kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him.
- Even so, Amen."
-
- Revelations 8:3 "And another angel came and stood at the
- altar, having a golden censer: and there was given unto
- him much incense, that he should offer it with the
- prayers of all saints upon the golden altar which was
- before the throne. 4 And the smoke of the incense, which
- came with the prayers of the saints, ascended up before
- God out of the Angel's hand."
-
- Revelations 15:8 "And the temple was filled with smoke
- from the glory of God, and from his power."
-
-
-
- THE SYMBOLISM OF FIRE IN THE ANCIENT WORLD
-
- The word "fire" is mentioned several hundred times in the King
- James version of the Bible. The sacrifice of the Lord is made by
- fire (Exodus 29:18, 25; Leviticus 2:10-11; Leviticus 6:13; Numbers
- 28:6; Deuteronomy 4:33; Joshua 13:14; I Samuel 2:28; II Chronicles
- 2:4; Isaiah 24:15; Matthew 3:11; Luke 1:9; Revelations 8:4-5)
-
- Abraham, the father of the Israelite nation, came from Ur
- which was a city of Ancient Sumer in South Babylonia. For the
- Babylonians, fire was essential to sacrifice and all oblations were
- conveyed to the gods by the fire god Girru-Nusku, whose presence
- as an intermediary between the gods and man was indispensable.
- Girru-Nusku, as the messenger of the gods, bore the essence of the
- offerings upward to them in the smoke of sacrificial fire.
-
- At Babylon: "The glorious gods smell the incense, noble
- food of heaven; pure wine which no hand has touched do
- they enjoy." (L. Jeremias, in Encyclopedia Biblica, i.v.
- 4119, quoting Rawlinson, Cuneif. Inscrip. IV, 19 (59).)
-
- The most important of the ancient Indian gods was Agni, the
- god of fire, who like the Babylonian god Girru-Nusku acted as a
- messenger between men and the gods. The fire (Agni) upon the altar
- was regarded as a messenger, their invoker.
-
- "...For thou, O sage, goest wisely between these two
- creations like a friendly messenger between two hamlets."
-
- According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, the section on
- "mysticism":
-
- "The Vedas (Hindu sacred writings) are hymns to the
- mystic fire and the inner sense of sacrifice, burning
- forever on the 'altar Mind'. Hence the abundance of
- solar and fire images: birds of fire, the fire of the
- sun, and the isles of fire. The symbol system of the
- world's religions and mysticisms are profound
- illuminations of the human-divine mystery. Be it the
- cave of the heart or the lotus of the heart, 'the
- dwelling place of that which is the Essence of the
- Universe, "the third eye", or the eye of wisdom' -- the
- symbols all refer back to wisdom entering the aspiring
- soul on its way to progressive self-understanding. 'I
- saw the Lord with the Eye of the Heart. I said, "Who
- art thou?" and he answered, "Thou"'."
-
- The ancient Indian mystics said,
-
- "...that in the ecstasy of bhang (marijuana) the spark
- of the Eternal in man turns into light the murkiness of
- matter or illusion and the self is lost in the central
- soul fire. Raising man out of himself and above mean
- individual worries, bhang makes him one with the divine
- force of nature and the mystery 'I am he' grew plain.
- (Taken from the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report which
- was written at the turn of the twentieth century.)
-
- The concept of spiritual or inner light was found throughout
- the ancient world. As we shall see that spiritual light was
- directly related to the burning of incense. According to Lucie
- Lamy in "Egyptian Mysteries", page 24:
-
- "The Pharaonic word for light is akh. This word, often
- translated as 'transfigured', designated transcendental
- light as well as all aspects of physical light; and in
- the funerary text it denotes the state of ultimate
- sublimation.
-
- "The word akh, first of all, is written with a glyph
- showing a crested ibis, ibis comata. This bird -- the
- name of which was also akh -- lived in the southern part
- of the Arabian side of the Red Sea (near Al Qunfidhah)
- and migrated to Abyssinia (Ethiopia) during the winter.
- Both these places are near the regions from which sacred
- incense came, and were called the "Divine Land". The
- bird's crest, together with its dark green plumage shot
- with glittering metallic specks justifies the meanings
- 'to shine', 'to be resplendent', 'to irradiate'; of the
- root akh in the hieroglyphic writing.
-
- "Akh indeed expresses all notions of light, both
- literally and figuratively, from the Light which comes
- forth from Darkness to the transcendental light of
- transfiguration. It is also used to designate the 'third
- eye', the ureaeus, related in old tradition to the pineal
- body and to the spirit."
-
- In the next chapter we will see that the sacred cloud of
- incense was instrumental in the transfiguration of Christ.
-
- Note that Ethiopia was referred to as the "Divine Land" and
- that it was the source for the sacred incense. The ancients also
- referred to Ethiopia as the "Land of God".
-
- The ancient Egyptians believed that they had received their
- divinities from Ethiopia and have always held to the ancient and
- honored tradition of their southern origin. Ethiopia is so
- important in ancient history that it is mentioned as being in the
- Garden of Eden (Genesis 2:12).
-
- The ancient Greek historian Diodorus Siculus wrote:
-
- "The Ethiopians conceived themselves to be of greater
- antiquity than any other nation; and it is probable that,
- born under the sun's path, its warmth may have ripened
- them earlier than other men. They supposed themselves
- to be the inventors of worship, of festivals, of solemn
- assemblies, of sacrifice, and every religious practice."
-
-
- MARIJUANA AS THE CHRISTIAN SACRAMENT
-
- According to Jack Herer in The Emperor Wears No Clothes or
- Everything You Wanted to Know About Marijuana But Were Not Taught
- in School, "The Essenes, a kabalistic priest/prophet/healer sect
- of Judaism dating back to the era of the Dead Sea Scrolls, used
- hemp, as did the Theraputea of Egypt, from where we get the term
- 'therapeutic'."
-
- The Theraputea of Egypt were Jewish ascetics that dwelt near
- Alexandria and described by Philo (1st century B.C.) as devoted to
- contemplation and meditation. Alexandria is where St. Mark is
- traditionally held to have established the Coptic Church in 45 A.D.
-
- The Coptic Church has been neglected by Western scholars
- despite its historical significance. This has been due to the
- various biases and interest of the Catholic Church which claimed
- Christianity for its own. The result is that for the Coptic Church
- there is very little history. It is however assumed that the
- Coptic religious services have their roots in the earliest layers
- of Christian ritual in Jerusalem and it is known that the Coptic
- church is of ancient origin going back to the time of the first
- Christian communities and even before.
-
- Tradition states that "Coptic" was derived from "Kuftaim",
- son of Mizraim, a grandchild of Noah who first settled in the Nile
- valley, i the neighborhood of Thebes, the ancient capital of Egypt.
- At one time Thebes was the greatest city in the world and history
- records that by 2200 B.C. the whole of Egypt was united under a
- Theban prince. The splendor of Thebes was known to Homer, who
- called it "the city with a hundred gates". (Richard Schultes
- states that in ancient Thebes marijuana was made into a drink.)
-
- According to E.A. Wallis Budge in The Divine Origin of the
- Herbalist, page 79, "The Copts, that is to say the Egyptians who
- accepted the teachings of St. Mark in the first century of our era,
- and embraced Christianity, seem to have eschewed medical science
- as taught by the physicians of the famous School of Medicine of
- Alexandria, and to have been content with the methods of healing
- employed by their ancestors."
-
- The Essenes were an ascetic sect closely related to the
- Theraputea that had established a monastic order in the desert
- outside of Palestine and were known as spiritual healers. It has
- been suggested that both John the Baptist and Jesus may have been
- of the Essene sect as they were both heavily dependent on Essene
- teachings. The scripture makes no mention of the life of Jesus
- from the age of 13 to 30. Certain theologians speculate that Jesus
- was being initiated by the Essenes, the last fraternity to keep
- alive the ancient traditions of the prophets.
-
- Every prophet, however great, must be initiated. His higher
- self must be awakened and made conscious so that his mission can
- be fulfilled. Amongst the Essenes' ritual lustrations preceded
- most liturgical rites, the most important one of which was
- participation in a sacred meal -- an anticipation of the Messianic
- banquet.
-
- Throughout the ancient world sacrifice was a sacramental
- communal meal involving the idea of the god as a participant in
- the meal or as identical with the food consumed. The communion
- sacrifice was one in which the deity indwells the oblation so that
- the worshippers actually consume the divine. The original motive
- of sacrifice was an effort toward communion among the members of
- a group, on one hand, and between them and their god, on the other.
- At its best, sacrifice was a "sacrament" and in one form or another
- life itself.
-
- The central focus of the early Christian church was the
- Eucharist or the "body and blood" of the Lord. This was
- interpreted as a fellowship meal with the resurrected Christ. In
- meeting the Resurrected One in the Eucharist meal the Christian
- community had the expectation of the Kingdom of God and salvation.
-
- Christ communicated life to his disciples through the
- Eucharist or Christian sacrament. Christ said in describing the
- sacrament, "Take, eat, this is my body, this is my blood. Do this
- as often as you will in remembrance of me." (I Corinthians 11:24-
- 25)
-
- Baptism is defined as the Christian sacrament used in
- purification and the spiritual rebirth of the individual. I
- Corinthians 10:1 makes it clear that the smoking cloud of incense
- was directly related to baptism.
-
- I Corinthians 10:1 "Moreover, brethren, I would not that
- ye should be ignorant, how that our fathers were under
- the cloud, and all passed through the sea; 2 And were all
- baptized unto Moses in the Cloud and in the sea; 3 And
- did all eat the same spiritual meat: for they drank of
- that Spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was
- Christ.
-
-
- In the Biblical story of Creation, God said, "Behold, I have
- given you every herb bearing seed and to you it will be for meat."
- (Genesis 1:29) Marijuana is technically an herb and was considered
- a spiritual meat in the ancient world.
-
- From this passage in Corinthians we see that the spiritual
- cloud resulting from the burning of incense was instrumental in
- the baptism of the Israelites. This baptism is also compared to
- the "eating and drinking" of the spirit of Christ.
-
- Spirit is defined as the active essence of the Deity serving
- as an invisible and life-giving or inspiring power in motion.
- Scripture makes it abundantly clear that the sacrificial cloud or
- smoke contained the Spirit of God (Christ) and was instrumental in
- inspiring, sanctifying, and purifying the patriarchs.
-
- In Numbers 11:25 the cloud results in the Spirit resting upon
- Moses and the seventy elders. This passage indicates that they
- prophesied ecstatically. "Prophesy" is defined as follows: to
- utter or announce by or as if by divine inspiration; to speak for
- God or a deity; to give instruction in religious matters.
- Throughout the Holy Bible prophets of God spake as they were moved
- by the Holy Spirit. The smoking burning cloud of incense contained
- the spirit and was instrumental in bringing about the spiritual
- revelations of the prophets. In the ancient world marijuana was
- used to reveal the future. The virtues of marijuana include
- speech-giving and inspiration of mental powers.
-
- "Psychoactive" is defined as effecting the mind or behavior.
- When we of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church think of mind or
- behavior we think of that inward essence or element that makes up
- the individual. This is the person's spirit. We are all spiritual
- beings. It is just as important to keep the spiritual part of a
- person healthy as it is to keep the physical body healthy and in
- fact they are related. Hence marijuana and its relationship to
- spiritual food.
-
- In the Apocrypha (Book of Jubilees), Chapter 10, God tells an
- angel to teach Noah the medicines which heal and protect from evil
- spirits. Surely God taught Noah about marijuana. In the ancient
- world marijuana played an important role in purification and
- protecting from evil influences.
-
- Note the following concerning the transfiguration of Christ:
-
- St. Matthew 17:1 "And after six days Jesus taketh Peter,
- James, and John his brother, and bringeth them up into
- a high mountain apart. 2 And he was transfigured before
- them: and his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment
- was white as light. 3 And, behold, there appeared unto
- them Moses and Elias talking with him. 4 Then answered
- Peter, and said unto Jesus, Lord, it is good for us to
- be here: if thou wilt, let us make here three
- tabernacles; one for thee, one for Moses, and one for
- Elias. 5 When yet he spake, behold a bright cloud
- overshadowed them; and behold a voice out of the cloud,
- which said, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
- pleased; hear ye him."
-
- The Bible Dictionary by John McKenzie, page 898, says
- concerning the transfiguration that the cloud and the formula of
- the utterance of the Father are derived from the baptism of Jesus.
- He says that the change described in the appearance of Jesus
- suggests the change which is implied in the resurrection
- narratives.
-
- Some of the synonyms for transfiguration are transformation,
- metamorphosis, transubstantiation, and avatar. These terms imply
- the change that accompanies resurrection or deification. Across
- the world, legends of godlike men who manage to rise, in a state
- of perfection go back to an era before human beings had cast away
- from the divine source. Hence the gods were beings which once were
- men, and the actual race of men will in time become gods. Christ
- revealed this to the people of his day when he told them to whom
- the word of God came, "Ye are gods." (St. John 10:34)
-
- St. Matthew 17:2 says that during the transfiguration of
- Christ that his face did shine as the sun. The face of Moses also
- shone when he returned from the cloud on Mt. Sinai (Exodus 30:34).
- The shining countenances are the result of their resurrections, of
- their being spiritually illumined in the cloud of smoking incense.
-
- Most people are under the impression that Christ baptized with
- water. As you can see from the following account of John the
- Baptist this isn't so. John the Baptist baptized with water and
- Christ baptized with fire.
-
- St. Matthew 3:11 "I indeed baptize you with water into
- repentance: but he that cometh after me is mightier than
- I, whose shoes I am not worthy to bear; he shall baptize
- you with the Holy Spirit and with fire."
-
- It is only logical that this baptism with the Holy Spirit and
- with fire is related to the baptism of Christ in the burning,
- smoking cloud of incense and to the baptism of the patriarchs in
- which the patriarchs did all eat of the same spiritual meal
- (incense). In the section dealing with the "Holy Spirit" the
- Encyclopedia Britannica states that Christian writers have seen in
- various references to the Spirit of Yahweh in the Old Testament an
- anticipation of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. It also says that
- the Holy Spirit is viewed as the main agent of man's restoration
- to his original natural state through communion in Christ's body
- and, thus, as the principle of life in the Christian community.
-
- The patriarchs were recipients of a revelation coming directly
- from the Spirit (incense) and this was expressed in the heightening
- and enlargement of their consciousness. It is clear from Scripture
- that this spiritual dimension was also evident in the life of
- Jesus, in whom the experience of the Hebrew prophets was renewed.
- Through the Eucharist Christ passed this spiritual dimension on to
- his apostles. One of the apostles even makes mention in
- Philippians 4:18 of a sweet smelling sacrifice that is well
- pleasing to God.
-
- Christ compares this baptism to the drinking of a cup.
-
- St. Mark 10:38 "But Jesus said unto them, Ye know not
- what ye ask: can ye drink of the cup that I drink of?
- and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized
- with?"
-
- This cup is referred to as the cup of salvation in Psalms
- 116:12.
-
- Psalms 116:12 "What shall I render unto the Lord for all
- his benefits toward me? I will take the cup of salvation
- and call upon the name of the Lord.
-
-
- It is called the cup of blessing in connection in connection
- with the eucharist.
-
- 1 Corinthians 10:16 "The cup of blessing which we bless,
- is it not the communion of the blood and the body of
- Christ? 17 For we being many are one bread, and one body;
- for we are all partakers of one bread.
-
- Here we see a connection between the cup of blessing and the
- communion of the blood of Christ. Blood is the life-giving
- substance of the living being. Christ communicated life to his
- disciples through the Eucharist or Christian sacrament.
-
- In I Corinthians 10:16 we note the mention of bread as the
- communion of the body of Christ and that we are all partakers of
- one bread. This is the spiritual bread or food used by Christ and
- his disciples. (A synonym for the Eucharist or the Body and Blood
- of the Lord is the bread of life.) It is interesting to note that
- the finest marijuana in Jamaica is called Lamb's bread.
-
- 1 Corinthians 12:13 "For by one Spirit are we all
- baptized into one body, whether we be Jew or Gentiles,
- whether we be bond or free; and have all been made to
- drink into one Spirit.
-
- 1 Corinthians 11:25 "After the same manner also he took
- the cup, when he had supped, saying, This cup is the New
- Testament in my blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it,
- in remembrance of me. 26 For as often as ye eat this
- bread and drink this cup, ye do shew the Lord's death
- till he come.
-
- If these passages are compared to 1 Corinthians 10:1-4, it is
- plain that the "eating of one bread" is the same as the patriarchs
- "eating the same spiritual meat" and the "drinking of one Spirit"
- (the cup) is the same as the patriarchs "drinking of the Spiritual
- Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ." By making this
- comparison we see that the terminology of the Eucharist is directly
- related to the smoking cloud of incense used in the baptism of
- Christ and the patriarchs.
-
- It is interesting to note that smoking was referred to as
- "eating" or "drinking" by the early American Indians. Peter J.
- Furst in Hallucinogen and Culture states the following:
-
- "Considering its enormous geographic spread in the
- Americas at the time of European discovery, as well as
- the probable age of stone tobacco pipes in California,
- the inhaling (often called "drinking" or "eating") of
- tobacco smoke by the Shaman, as a corollary to
- therapeutic fumigation and the feeding of the gods with
- smoke, must also be of considerable antiquity."
-
- In Licit and Illicit Drugs, page 209, the following is quoted:
-
- "Columbus and other early explorers who followed him were
- amazed to meet Indians who carried rolls of dried leaves
- that they set afire -- and who then "drank the smoke"
- that emerged from the rolls. Other Indians carried pipes
- in which they burned the same leaves, and from which they
- similarly "drank the smoke".
-
- The Encyclopedia Britannica states in the section on
- "Sacrifice" that the interpretation of sacrifice and particularly
- of the Eucharist as sacrifice has varied greatly within the
- different Christian traditions because of the sacrificial
- terminology in which the Eucharist was originally described became
- foreign to Christian thinkers.
-
- We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church declare that the true
- understanding of the Eucharist has been passed down from generation
- to generation so that we are able to give an accurate
- interpretation of the sacrificial terminology used to describe the
- Eucharist. We have shown, using history and Biblical passages,
- that his terminology is directly related to burning smoking
- incense. We have shown that the "eating" or "drinking" contained
- in the terminology concerning the Eucharist is associated with the
- inhalation of smoke. We have shown that marijuana was used as
- incense and that it was the number one spiritual plant of the
- ancient world.
-
- We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church declare that the cup
- that Christ baptized his disciples with in the baptism of the Holy
- Spirit and fire was in fact a pipe or chillum in which marijuana
- was smoked. This is a bottomless cup and soon as it is emptied,
- it is filled again and passed in a circle. There is a picture of
- this cup or pipe below, as well as on the cover. Like the pipe of
- the ancient North American Indians, this cup was a portable altar.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Christ was the Father of the doctrine of the Eucharist which
- is the communion that Jesus gave his brethren. Jesus taught that
- the communion is his body and blood. Jesus was not speaking of His
- physical body and blood. He was speaking of His spiritual body and
- spiritual blood that was the communion of his holy church. The
- supper that Jesus celebrated with his disciples "on the night that
- he was betrayed" (1 Corinthians 11:23) inaugurated the heavenly
- meal that was to be continued.
-
- 1 Corinthians 11:23 "For I have received of the Lord that
- which also I delivered unto you, that the Lord Jesus the same night
- in which he was betrayed took bread: 24 And when he had given
- thanks, he brake it and said, Take, eat, this is my body, which is
- broken for you; this do in remembrance of me. 25 After the same
- manner also he took the cup, which he had supped, saying, This cup
- is the new testament in my blood; this do ye, as oft as ye drink
- it, in remembrance of me. 26 For as often as ye eat this bread, and
- drink of this cup, ye do shew the Lord's death till he come. 27
- Wherefore whosoever shall eat of this bread, and drink of this cup
- of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of
- the Lord. 28 But let a man examine himself, and let him eat of the
- bread, and drink of that cup. 29 For he that eateth and drinketh
- unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself, not
- discerning the Lord's body.
-
- Christ said, "Do this in remembrance of me." Here the
- original unity of man with God is restored. In general the
- reception of the Holy Spirit is connected with the actual
- realization, the inward experiencing of God.
-
- Marijuana has been referred to as a mild euphoric (the
- producer of a feeling of well-being) that produces a profound
- religious experience of a mystical and transcendental nature. This
- religious experience is said to be brought about by the stirring
- of deeply buried, unconscious sensitivities so that one experiences
- ultimate reality or the divine and confirms the feeling of the
- worshipper that he has been in the presence of God and has
- assimilated some of His powers.
-
- To be lifted above sense to behold the beatific vision and
- become "incorporate" in God is the end sought in ecstasy. The
- priest or mystic in enthusiasm or ecstasy enjoys the beatific
- vision by entering into communion with God and by undergoing
- deification. The experience of ecstasy, states Mircea Eliade, one
- of the foremost authorities on religion, is a timeless primary
- phenomenon. Psychological experience of rapture, he continues, are
- fundamental to the human condition and hence known to the whole of
- archaic humanity. (Some of the synonyms of rapture are bliss,
- beatitude, transport, exaltation.)
-
- Baudelaire, a member of the Club Des Hashichins (Hashish Club)
- founded in Paris around 1835 and writer of Artificial Paradises
- states the following about hashish: Hashish is the unadulterated
- resin from the flowering tops of the female hemp plant.
-
- "One will find in hashish nothing miraculous, absolutely
- nothing but an exaggeration of the natural. The brain
- and organisms on which hashish operates will produce only
- the normal phenomena peculiar to that individual --
- increased, admittedly, in number and force, but always
- faithful to the original. A man will never escape from
- his destined physical and moral temperament: hashish will
- be a mirror of his impression and private thoughts -- a
- magnifying mirror, it is true, but only a mirror.
-
- He cautions that the user must be in the right frame of mind
- to take hashish, for just as it exaggerates the natural behavior
- of the individual, so too does hashish intensify the user's
- immediate feelings. Baudelaire describes three successive phases
- a hashish user will pass through. He says the final stage is
- marked by a feeling of calmness, in which time and space have no
- meaning, and there is a sense that one has transcended matter. He
- says that in this state, one final supreme thought breaks into
- consciousness. "I have become God."
-
- Realization of one's union with God is necessary in
- understanding the true Christian sacrament. The understanding of
- man's relationship to God and God's relationship to man (God in
- Man and Man in God) was quite prevalent in the ancient world,
- particularly among the religions that utilized marijuana as part
- of their religious practice.
-
- Said the great Hindu sage, Manu, "He who in his own soul
- perceives the Supreme Soul in all beings and acquires equanimity
- toward them all, attains the highest bliss." To recognize oneness
- of self with God was contained in all the teachings of Gautama
- Buddha. In the Liturgy of Mithra (the Persian god of light and
- truth) the suppliant prays "abide with me in my soul; leave me
- not," and "that I may be initiated and the Holy Spirit may breathe
- within me." The communion became so intimate as to pass into
- identity: "I am thou and thou art I." Athanasius, a theologian,
- ecclesiastical statesman, and Egyptian national leader who was
- closely tied to the Coptic Church in Egypt said, "Even we may
- become gods walking in the flesh," and "God became man that man
- might become God."
-
- Western theology (Catholic and Protestant) teaches that the
- spirit created matter but remained aloof of it. In Hinduism and
- other Eastern religions, the spirit is the inside, the matter is
- the outside; the two are inseparable. Eastern theologians hive
- rightly perceived that the God one worships must posses all the
- aspects of his worshippers' nature as well as his own divine
- nature. Otherwise, how can he create beings whose nature is
- entirely foreign to his own? What, then, would be the meaning of
- the Biblical phrase: "God made man in his own image"?
-
- The fact that modern Christendom has no sense of union with
- God has led to numerous churches without the understanding for
- building a Christian culture and kingdom to replace the confusion
- of modern politics. This lack of understanding was not lacking in
- the ancient church and was a major source of enthusiasm for the
- prophets of old. In fact, the power of the early church was
- manifested due to this understanding of the spirit of God dwelling
- in man, the temple of God. To the ancient prophets it was not a
- God above, nor a God over yonder, but a God within. "Be still and
- know that I am God" -- for the visionaries and mystics of every
- time and place, this has been the first and greatest of the
- commandments.
-
- In 1 Corinthians 11:28 Christ said, "Let a man examine
- himself, and so let him eat of the bread, and drink of the cup."
- Probably the most relevant study to date about what might be
- considered typical marijuana experience concludes that marijuana
- gives spontaneous insights into self (Dr. Charles Tart, "On Being
- Stoned: A Psychological Study of Marijuana Intoxication", Science
- and Behavior, 1971).
-
- The sacramentality of marijuana is declared by Christ himself
- and can be understood only when a person partakes of the natural
- divine herb. The fact is communion of Jesus cannot be disputed or
- be destroyed. Marijuana is the new wine divine and cannot be
- compared to the old wine, which is alcohol. Jesus rejected the old
- wine and glorified the "new wine" at the wedding feast of Cana.
- Cana is a linguistic derivation of the present day cannabis and so
- it is. (Some Biblical scholars -- and there is a certain amount
- of support in early tradition of the view -- have looked upon the
- miracle of Cana as a sign of the Eucharist.)
-
- Note the references to new wine in the Bible:
-
- Isaiah 65:8 "Thus saith the Lord, As the new wine is
- found in the cluster, and one saith, Destroy it not; for
- a blessing is in it; so will I do for my servant's sake"
-
- Acts 2:13 "Others mocking said, "These men are full of new
- wine."
-
- Isaiah 65:8 declares that the new wine is found in the cluster
- and that a blessing is in it. When one mentions clusters, one
- thinks of clusters of grapes. Webster's New Riverside Dictionary,
- Office Edition, defines marijuana: 1. Hemp 2. The dried flower
- clusters and leaves of the hemp plant, esp. when taken to induce
- euphoria.
-
- The Encyclopedia Britannica says the following about hemp:
- Seed producing flowers form elongate, spike like clusters growing
- on the pistillate, or female plants; pollen producing flowers form
- many branched clusters or staminate, on male plants. Here and in
- Webster's, marijuana fits the description of the new wine and as
- history has shown a blessing is in it.
-
- Baudelaire said the following about the effects of hashish:
-
- "This marvelous experience often occurs as if it were
- the effect of superior and invisible power acting on the
- person from without...This delightful and singular
- state...gives no advance warning. It is as unexpected
- as a ghost, an intermittent haunting from which we must
- draw, if we are wise, the certainty of a better
- existence. This acuteness of thought, this enthusiasm
- of the senses and the spirit must have appeared to man
- through the ages as the first blessing."
-
- In the books of Acts the apostles were accused of being full
- of new wine. Acts 2:13 was the time of pentecost when the Holy
- Spirit descended upon the apostles. Numerous outpourings of the
- Spirit are mentioned in the Acts of the apostles in which healing,
- prophesy, and the expelling of demons are particularly associated
- with the activity of the Spirit. Incense (marijuana) was used by
- the ancients for healing, prophesy, and the expelling of demons.
-
- When Christ ascended into heaven in the cloud (Acts 1:9-11)
- he sent his disciples the Holy Spirit with the "gift of tongues"
- (Acts 2:3) and there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as a
- fire, and it sat upon each of them, and they were filled with the
- Holy Spirit and were given the power to prophesy or witness.
- (Marijuana has been credited with speech giving and inspiration of
- mental powers.)
-
- The first two gifts of the Holy Spirit are traditionally said
- to be wisdom and understanding, which no doubt are the two things
- most needed by the human race. In Jamaica today marijuana is
- referred to as the "weed of wisdom" and is reputed to be the plant
- that grew on Solomon's grave, a man known for his great wisdom.
- Marijuana expands consciousness and enhances the capacity for
- mystical and creative inspiration.
-
- In Acts 2:3 Fire speaks figuratively of the Holy Spirit. Fire
- was also a means which to transport a saint to heaven.
-
- 2 Kings 2:11 "And it came to pass, as they still went
- on, and talked, that, behold, there appeared a chariot
- of fire, and horses of fire, and parted asunder; and
- Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven."
-
- Recent writers have speculated that this passage was in
- reference to flying saucers. That is because they look at this
- passage physically. This ascension of Elijah like the ascension
- of Christ in the cloud into heaven is the "withdrawal" from the
- external or physical world, to be the inmost reality of all. This
- can be referred to as ecstasy, rapture, or transport and is a
- result of the Holy Spirit. Ecstasy, rapture, or transport therefor
- agree in designating a feeling or state of intense, often extreme
- mental and emotional exaltation. Rapture is defined as ecstatic
- joy or delight; joyful ecstasy. Some of the synonyms of rapture
- are bliss, beatitude, transport, and exultation. The true rapture
- is therefore one in which one is spiritually transported to the
- heavens. Don't expect to float up into the sky.
-
- Marijuana as history has shown is the catalyst used to achieve
- the spiritual journey into the heavens. That is why in India it
- was referred to as the Heavenly-Guide, the Poor Man's Heaven, and
- the Sky-flier. That is why Professor Mircea Eliade, perhaps the
- foremost authority on the history of religion, suggested that
- Zoroaster may have caused hemp to bridge the metaphysical gap
- between heaven and earth.
-
- One dictionary defines marijuana as the leaves and flowering
- tops when taken to induce euphoria. Euphoria is defined by the
- same dictionary as great happiness or bliss. (In India, marijuana
- has been referred to as the joy-giver and the soother of grief.)
- Bliss is defined as the ecstasy of salvation, spiritual joy. Some
- of the synonyms of bliss are beatitude, transport, rapture,
- ecstasy, paradise, heaven.
-
- Throughout the ancient world there is mention of "magical
- flight", "ascent to heaven", and "mystical journey". All these
- mythological and folklore traditions have their point of departure
- in an ideology and technique of ecstasy that imply "journey in
- spirit".
-
- The pilgrimage from earth to heaven is not a journey to some
- other place or some other time, but is a journey within. One must
- realize that "death" through which we must pass before God can be
- seen does not lie ahead of us in time. Rather it is now that we
- have a man of sin within us that must be killed and a new man free
- from sin that must be born. This is actualized in baptism and the
- sacramental life in the church. For as many of you as have been
- baptized into Christ have put on Christ (Galatians 3:27). The
- effect of baptism is spiritual regeneration or rebirth, whereby one
- is "enChristened", involving both union with Christ and remission
- of sins. In Titus 3:5 baptism is the "bath of regeneration"
- accompanying renewal by the Spirit. Some of the synonyms of
- regeneration are beatification, conversion, sanctification,
- salvation, inspiration, bread of life, Body and Blood of Christ.
-
- Sara Benetowa of the Institute of Anthropological Sciences in
- Warsaw is quoted in the Book of Grass as saying:
-
- "By comparing the old Slavic word 'Kepati' and the
- Russian 'Kupati' with the Scythian 'cannabis' Shrader
- developed and justified Meringer's supposition that there
- is a link between the Scythian baths and Russian vapor
- baths.
-
- "In the entire Orient even today to 'go to the bath'
- means not only to accomplish an act of purification and
- enjoy a pleasure, but also to fulfill the divine law.
- Vambery calls 'bath' any club in which the members play
- checkers, drink coffee, and smoke hashish or tobacco."
-
- St. Matthew's account of the institution of the Eucharist
- attaches to the Eucharist cup these words: "Drink of it, all of,
- for this is the blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many
- for the remission of sins (st. Matthew 26:27). Drinking the
- sacramental cup therefor serves like baptism (Acts 2:38) where
- Peter said unto them, "Repent, and be baptized everyone of you in
- the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall
- receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. We of the Ethiopian Zion
- Coptic Church declare a three-part doctrine of the Holy Herb, the
- Holy Word, and the Holy Man (Woman).
-
- The present and future benefits to the individual communicant
- have their importance given them by Jesus, who said, "He who eats
- my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise
- them up at the last day." (John 6:54) As such we must see that the
- divine person who is active in creation, in renewal, and in human
- rebirth and resurrection, is also active in the Eucharist.
-
- There was a profound change in America when marijuana smoking
- started on a large scale in the late 1960's. A large number of
- people resisted the draft, resisted the war ... started letting
- their hair and beards grow ... became interested in natural
- foods... the ecology and the environment. What we really saw was
- the awakening of our generation to the beginning of Christian
- mentality through marijuana smoking. The earmarks of this
- mentality are: I don't want to go to war; I really don't want to
- be part of the political-military-economic fiasco you call society.
-
- Like the Indians Hemp Drug Commission three quarters of a
- century earlier, the Canadian Le Dain Commission conducted an
- inquiry into the use of marijuana. On page 156 of the report is
- the following:
-
- "In the case of cannabis, the positive points which are
- claimed for it include the following: It is a relaxant;
- it is disinhibiting; it increases self-confidence and
- the feeling of creativity (whether justified by creative
- results or not); it increases sensual awareness and
- appreciation; it facilitates self acceptance and in this
- way makes it easier to accept others; it serves a
- sacramental function in promoting a sense of spiritual
- community among users; it is a shared pleasure; because
- it is illicit and the object of strong disapproval from
- those who are, by and large, opposed to social change,
- it is a symbol of protest and a means of strengthening
- the sense of identity among those who are strongly
- critical of certain aspects of our society and value
- structure today."
-
- On page 144 of the Report, marijuana is associated with peace.
-
- "In our conversation with (students and young people)
- they have frequently contrasted marijuana and alcohol
- effects to describe the former as a drug of peace, a drug
- that reduces tendencies to aggression while suggesting
- that the latter drug produces hostile, aggressive
- behavior. Thus marijuana is seen as particularly
- appropriate to a generation that emphasizes peace and is,
- in many ways, anticompetitive."
-
- In a magazine article by G. S. Chopra entitled "Man and
- Marijuana" on page 235 is a section dealing with Human Experiments.
- One hundred persons with an established marijuana smoking habit
- smoked marijuana. They described the symptoms as follows: "I have
- done things today which I usually dislike but which I rather
- enjoyed doing today." "Nothing seemed impossible to accomplish."
- "I assumed a cool and composed attitude and forgot all mental
- worries." "I behaved in a childish and foolish manner." "It
- relieves sense of fatigue and gives rise to feelings of happiness."
- "I feel like laughing." "My head is dizzy." "I feel like taking
- more food." "The world is gay around me." "I feel inclined to
- work." "I am a friend to all and have no enemy in the world."
-
- According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, in the section on
- "Roman Catholicism":
-
- "To understand the meaning and use of the Eucharist we
- must see it as an act of universal worship, of
- cooperation, of association else it loses the greater
- part of its significance. Neither in Roman Catholic nor
- in Protestant Eucharistic practice does the sacrament
- retain much of the symbolism of Christian unity, which
- clearly it has. Originally, the symbolism was that of
- a community meal, an accepted social symbol of community
- throughout the whole of human culture."
-
- Marijuana has been used as sacrifice, a sacrament, a ritual
- fumigant (incense), a good-will offering, and as a means of
- communing with the divine spirit. It has been used to seal
- treaties, friendships, solemn binding agreements and to legitimize
- covenants. It has been used as a traditional defense against evil
- and in purification. It has been used in divinations (1. the art
- or practice that seeks to foresee or foretell future events or
- discover hidden knowledge; 2. unusual insight; intuitive
- perception.) It has been used in remembrance of the dead and
- praised for its medicinal properties.
-
- Most Christians agree that participation in the Eucharist is
- supposed to enhance and deepen communion of believers not only with
- Christ but also with one another. We must therefor ask the
- question, "What substance did the ancients use as a community meal
- to facilitate communion with the Lord?" The answer to that
- question is marijuana. Hemp as originally used in religious
- ritual, temple activities, and tribal rites, involved groups of
- worshippers rather than the solitary individual. The pleasurable
- psychoactive effects were then, as now, communal experiences.
-
- Practically every major religion and culture of the ancient
- world utilized marijuana as part of their religious observance.
- Marijuana was the ambrosia of the ancient world. It was the food,
- drink, and perfume of the gods. It was used by the Africans, the
- Egyptians, the Assyrians, the Asians, the Europeans, and possibly
- the Indians of the Americas. Would it be too much to suggest that
- the ancient Israelites also utilized marijuana?
-
- The following information was taken from the most
- authoritative books dealing with the history of marijuana. They
- are mentioned at the end of this work.
-
- MARIJUANA IN INDIA
-
- In Indian tradition marijuana is associated with immortality.
- There is a complex myth of the churning of the Ocean of Milk by the
- gods, their joint act of creation. They were in search of Amrita,
- the elixir of eternal life. When the gods, helped by demons,
- churned the ocean to obtain Amrita, one of the resulting nectars
- was cannabis. After churning the ocean, the demons attempted to
- gain control of Amrita (marijuana), but the gods were able to
- prevent this seizure, giving cannabis the name Vijaya ("victory")
- to commemorate their success.
-
- Other ancient Indian names for marijuana were "sacred grass",
- "hero leaved", "joy", "rejoicer", "desired in the three worlds"'
- "gods' food", "fountain of pleasures"' and "Shiva's plant".
-
- Early Indian legends maintained that the angel of mankind
- lived in the leaves of the marijuana plant. It was so sacred that
- it was reputed to deter evil and cleanse its user of sin. In Hindu
- mythology hemp is a holy plant given to man for the "welfare of
- mankind" and is considered to be one of the divine nectars able to
- give man anything from good health, to long life, to visions of the
- gods. Nectar is defined as the fabled drink of the gods.
-
- Tradition maintains that when nectar or Amrita dropped from
- heaven, that cannabis sprouted from it. In Hindu mythology Amrita
- means immortality; also, the ambrosial drink which produced it.
- In India hemp is made into a drink and is reputed to be the
- favorite drink of Indra (the King of Indian gods.) Tradition
- maintains that the god Indra gave marijuana to the people so that
- they might attain elevated states of consciousness, delight in
- worldly joy, and freedom from fear.
-
- According to Hindu legends, Siva, the Supreme God of many
- Hindu sects, had some family squabble and went off to the fields.
- He sat under a hemp plant so as to be sheltered from the heat of
- the sun and happened to eat some of its leaves. He felt so
- refreshed from the hemp plant that it became his favorite food,
- and that is how he got his title, the Lord of Bhang.
-
- Cannabis is mentioned as a medicinal and magical plant as well
- as a "sacred grass" in the Atharva Veda (dated 2000 - 1400 B.C.)
- It also calls hemp one of the five kingdoms of herbs...which
- releases us from anxiety and refers to hemp as a "source of
- happiness", "joy-giver" and "liberator". Although the holy books,
- the Shastras, forbid the worship of the plant, it has been
- venerated and used as a sacrifice to the deities.
-
- Indian Tradition, writing, and belief is that the "Siddhartha"
- (the Buddha), used and ate nothing but hemp and its seeds for six
- years prior to announcing (discovering) his truths and becoming the
- Buddha.
-
- Cannabis held a preeminent place in the Tantric religion which
- evolved in Tibet in the seventh century A.D. Tantrism was a
- religion based on fear of demons. To combat the demonic threat to
- the world, the people sought protection in plants such as cannabis
- which were set afire to overcome evil forces.
-
- In the tenth century A.D. hemp was extolled as indracanna,
- the "food of the gods". A fifteenth-century document refers to
- cannabis as "light-hearted", "joy-full" and "rejoices", and claimed
- that among its virtues are "astringency", "heat", "speech-giving",
- "inspiration of mental powers", "excitability" and the capacity to
- "remove wind and phlegm".
-
- Today in the Tantric Buddhism of the Himalayas of Tibet,
- cannabis plays a very significant role in the meditative ritual to
- facilitate deep meditation and heighten awareness. In modern India
- it is taken at Hindu and Sikh temples and Mohammedan shrines.
- Among fakirs (Hindu ascetics) bhang is viewed as the giver of long
- life and a means of communion with the divine spirit. Like his
- Hindu brother, the Musalman fakir reveres bhang as the lengthener
- of life and the freer from the bonds of self.
-
- At the turn of the twentieth century, the Indian Hemp Drugs
- Commission set up to study the use of hemp in India contains the
- following report:
-
- "...It is inevitable that temperaments would be found to
- whom the quickening spirit of bhang is the spirit of
- freedom and knowledge. In the ecstasy of bhang the spark
- of the Eternal in man turns into the light the murkiness
- of matter.
-
- "...Bhang is the Joy-giver, the Sky-filler, the Heavenly-
- Guide, the Poor Man's Heaven, the Soother of Grief...No
- god or man is as good as the religious drinker of
- bhang...The supporting power of bhang has brought many
- a Hindu family safe through the miseries of famine. To
- forbid or even seriously restrict the use of so gracious
- an herb as the hemp would cause widespread suffering and
- annoyance and to large bands of worshipped ascetics,
- deep-seated anger. It would rob the people of a solace
- on discomfort, of a cure in sickness, of a guardian whose
- gracious protection saves them from the attacks of evil
- influences...
-
- MARIJUANA IN CHINA
-
- Hemp was so highly regarded in ancient China that the Chinese
- called their country "the land of mulberry and hemp". Hemp was a
- symbol of power over evil and in emperor Shen Nung's pharmacopoeia
- was known as the "liberator of sin". The Chinese believed that the
- legendary Shen Nung first taught the cultivation of hemp in the
- 28th century B.C. Shen Nung is credited with developing the
- sciences of medicine from the curative power of plants. So highly
- regarded was Shen Nung that he was deified and today he is regarded
- as the Father of Chinese medicine. Shen Nung was also regarded as
- the Lord of fire. He sacrificed on T'ai Shan, a mountain of hoary
- antiquity.
-
- A statement in the Pen-ts'ao Ching of some significance is
- that Cannabis "grows along rivers and valleys at T'ai-shan, but it
- is now common everywhere." Mount T'ai is in Shangtung Privince,
- where the cultivation of the hemp plant is still intensive to this
- day. Whether or not this early attribution indicates the actual
- geographic origin of the cultivation of the Cannabis plant remains
- to be seen. (An Archeological and Historical Account of Cannabis
- in China by Hui-Lin Li)
-
- A chines Taoist priest wrote in the fifth century B.C. that
- cannabis was used in combination with Ginseng to set forward time
- in order to reveal future events. It is recorded that the Taoist
- recommended the addition of cannabis to their incense burners in
- the 1st century A.D. and that the effects thus produced were highly
- regarded as a means of achieving immortality. In the early Chinese
- Taoist ritual the fumes and odors of incense burners were said to
- have produced a mystic exaltation and contribution to well-being.
-
- Webster's New Riverside Dictionary defines marijuana: 1. Hemp
- 2. The dried flower clusters and leaves of the hemp plant, esp.
- when taken to induce euphoria. Euphoria is defined as a strong
- feeling of elation or well-being.
-
- Like the practice of medicine around the world, early Chinese
- doctoring was based on the concept of demons. The only way to cure
- the sick was to drive out the demons. The early priest doctors
- used marijuana stalks into which snake-like figures were carved.
- Standing over the body of the stricken patient, his cannabis stalk
- poised to strike, the priest pounded the bed and commanded the
- demon to be gone. The cannabis stalk with the snake carved on it
- was the forerunner to the sign of modern medicine (the staff with
- the entwined serpents.)
-
- MARIJUANA IN JAPAN
-
- Hemp was used in Ancient Japan in ceremonial purification
- rites and for driving away evil spirits. In Japan, Shinto priests
- used a gohei, a short stick with undyed hemp fibers (for purity)
- attached to one end. According to Shinto beliefs, evil and purity
- cannot exist alongside one another, and so by waving the gohei
- (purity) above someone's head the evil spirit inside him would be
- driven away. Clothes made of hemp were especially worn during
- formal and religious ceremonies because of hemp's traditional
- association with purity.
-
- MARIJUANA IN ANCIENT IRAN
-
- Ancient Iran was the source for the great Persian empire,
- Iran is located slightly to the northeast of the ancient kingdoms
- of Sumeria, Babylonia, and Assyria. According to Mircea Eliade,
- "Shamanistic ecstasy induced by hemp smoke was known in ancient
- Iran." Professor Eliade has suggested that Zoroaster, the Persian
- prophet, said to have written the Zend-Avesta, was a user of hemp.
- In the Zend-Avesta hemp occupies the first place in a list of
- 10,000 medicinal plants.
-
- One of the few surviving books of the Zend-Avesta, called the
- Venidad, "The Law Against Demons", calls bhanga (marijuana)
- Zoroaster's "good narcotic", and tells of two mortals who were
- transported in soul to the heavens where, upon drinking from a cup
- of bhang, they had the highest mysteries revealed to them.
- Professor Eliade has theorized that Zoroaster may have used hemp
- to bridge the metaphysical gap between heaven and earth.
-
- MARIJUANA IN ANCIENT EGYPT
-
- In the book, Plants of the Gods: Origin of Hallucinogenic Use
- by Richard E. Schultes and Albert Hofman, page 72, it is stated
- that the specimens of marijuana nearly 4,000 years old have turned
- up in an Egyptian site and that in ancient Thebes the plant was
- made into a drink.
-
- MARIJUANA IN EUROPE
-
- According to Nikolaas j. van der Merwe (Department of
- Archaeology, University of Cape Town, South Africa) the peasants
- of Europe have been using cannabis as medicine, ritual material,
- and to smoke or chew as far back as oral traditions go.
-
- Marijuana was an integral part of the Scythian cult of the
- dead wherein homage was paid to the memory of their departed
- leaders. This use of cannabis was found in frozen Scythian tombs
- dated from 500 to 300 B.C. Along with the cannabis a miniature
- tripod-like tent over a copper censer was found in which the sacred
- plant was burned.
-
- It is interesting to note that two extraordinary rugs were
- also found in the frozen Scythian tombs. One rug had a border
- frieze with a repeated composition of a horseman approaching the
- Great Goddess who holds the "Tree of Life" in one hand and raises
- the other hand in welcome.
-
-
- MARIJUANA IN AFRICA
-
- The African continent is probably the zone showing the widest
- prevalence of the hemp drug habit. When white men first went to
- Africa, marijuana was part of the native way of life. Africa was
- a continent of marijuana cultures where marijuana was an integral
- part of religious ceremony. The Africans were observed inhaling
- the smoke from piles of smoldering hemp. Some of these piles had
- been placed upon altars. The Africans also utilized pipes. The
- African Dagga (marijuana) cults believed that Holy Cannabis was
- brought to earth by the gods. (Throughout the ancient world
- Ethiopia was considered the home of the gods.)
-
- In south central Africa, marijuana is held to be sacred and
- is connected with many religious and social customs. Marijuana is
- regarded by some sects as a magic plant possessing universal
- protection against all injury to life, and is symbolic of peace
- and friendship. Certain tribes consider hemp use a duty.
-
- The earliest evidence for cannabis smoking in Africa outside
- of Egypt comes from fourteenth century Ethiopia, where two ceramic
- smoking-pipe bowls containing traces of excavation. In many parts
- of East Africa, especially near Lake Victoria (the source for the
- Nile), hemp smoking and hashish snuffing cults still exist.
-
- MARIJUANA IN THE NEW WORLD
-
- According to Richard L. Lingeman in his book Drugs from A to
- Z, page 146, "Marijuana smoking was known by the Indians before
- Columbus." After the Spanish conquest in 1521 the Spaniards
- recorded that the Aztecs (Mayans) used marijuana.
-
- The present day Cuna Indians of Panama use marijuana as a
- sacred herb and the Cora Indians of the Sierra Madre Occidental of
- Mexico smoke marijuana in this course of their sacred ceremonies.
-
- In the Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L by William A Emboden,
- Jr., pages 229 and 231, is the following:
-
- "A particularly interesting account of a Tepehua (no
- relationship to "Tepecana") Indian ceremony with cannabis
- was published in 1963 by the Mexican ethnologist Roberto
- William Garcia of the University of Veracruz,
- northernmost branch of the Maya language family.
-
- "In his account of Teehua religion and ritual, Willianm
- Garcia (1963:215-21) describes in some detail a communal
- curing ceremony focused on a plant called santa rose,
- "The Herb Which Makes One Speak", which he identified
- botanically as Cannabis Sativa: According to Garcia it
- is worshipped as an earth deity and is thought to be
- alive and comparable to a piece of the heart of God."
-
-
-
- MARIJUANA USE BY THE MOSLEMS
-
- It is interesting to note that the use of hemp was not
- prohibited by Mohammed (570-632 A.D.) while the use of alcohol was.
- Moslems considered hemp as a "Holy Plant" and medieval Arab doctors
- considered hemp as a sacred medicine which they called among other
- names kannab. The Sufis (a Moslem sect) originating in 8th century
- Persia used hashish as a means of stimulating mystical
- consciousness and appreciation of the nature of Allah. Eating
- hashish to the Sufis was "an act of worship". They maintained that
- hashish gave them otherwise unattainable insights into themselves,
- deeper understanding and that it made them feel witty. They also
- claimed that it gave happiness, reduced anxiety, reduced worry, and
- increased music appreciation.
-
- According to one Arab legend Haydar, the Persian founder of
- the religious order of Sufi came across the cannabis plant while
- wandering in the Persian mountains. Usually a reserved and silent
- man, when he returned to his monastery after eating some cannabis
- leaves, his disciples were amazed at how talkative and animated
- (full of spirit) he seemed. After cajoling Haydar into telling
- them what he had done to make him feel so happy, his disciples went
- out into the mountains and tried the cannabis themselves. So it
- was, according to the legend, that the Sufis came to know the
- pleasures of hashish. (Taken from the Introduction to A
- Comprehensive Guide to Cannabis Literature by Earnest Abel.)
-
- SUMMARY
-
- Due to the prosecution of God's church from the beginning of
- the Christian era and due to the persecution against marijuana the
- true understanding of the Eucharist has remained hidden from
- Christendom and the world, only to be revealed in these times, the
- culmination of all human history.
-
- We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church declare marijuana for
- the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, and for the
- resurrection of mankind. The fruits of the mystery are remembrance
- of the passions and death of Christ, propitiation for sins, defense
- against temptation, and the indwelling of Christ in the faithful.
-
- Preparations for communion consist of confession of sins,
- fasting from sin, and reconciliation with all mankind. As such
- the participant in the Eucharist will be in a condition in which
- prayer and meditation are easy and fruitful. He will find his
- emotion purified and stimulated, his spirituality quickened and
- his heart filled with love.
-
-
-
- SOURCES
-
- Richard E. Schultes, article: "Man and Marijuana"
-
- Richard E. Schultes and Albert Hofman, Plants of the Gods -- Origin
- of Hallucinogenic Use (McGraw-Hill Book Co. [U.K.] Limited,
- Maidenhead, England [1979]).
-
- G.S. Chopra, article: "Man and Marijuana", International Journal
- of the Addict,1969, 4, 215-247.
-
- Earnest L. Abel, Marijuana, the First Twelve Thousand Years (Phenum
- Press, New York, 1980)
-
- Earnest L. Abel, A Comprehensive Guide to Cannabis Literature
-
- Earnest L. Abel, Marijuana Dictionary: Words, Terms, Events and
- Persons Relating to Cannabis(Greenwood Press, Westpoint,
- Connecticut [1982])
-
- Edward M. Breecher and the Editors of Consumer Reports, The
- Consumer Union Report, "Licit and Illicit Drugs", (Little, Brown,
- and Co.)
-
- Louis Lewin, Phantastica, Narcotic and Stimulating Drugs: Their Use
- and Abuse, (London: Kegan, Trench, Turbner and Co., Ltd. Translated
- from the second German edition by P.H.A. Wirth, 1931) (N.Y.,
- Dutton, 1964, reprint, 1924, trans. 1931)
-
- Sula Benet, Cannabis and Culture, ed. V. Rubin (The Hague: Moutan,
- 1975)
-
- Richard E. Lingeman, Drugs from A to Z, A Dictionary (McGraw-Hill
- Book Co., 1969, 74)
-
- John R. Glowa, The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Drugs (Chelsea
- House Pub., N.Y., New Haven, Philadelphia, 1986)
-
- George Andrews and Simon Vinkenoog, The Book of Grass: An Anthology
- on Indian Hemp; Chandler and Sharp Series in Cross Cultural Themes
- (N.Y., Grove Press [1967])
-
- Jack Herer, The Emperor Wears No Clothes, 1985, 90, 91, 92.
-
- Peter T. Furst, Hallucinogens and Culture (Chandler and Sharp
- Publishers, Inc., 1976)
-
- Baudelaire, Artificial Paradises
-
- Dr. Charles Tart, "On Being Stoned: A Psychological Study of
- Marijuana Intoxication" (Science and Behavior, 1971)
-
- William A. Emboden, Jr. Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L
-
- S.I. Rudenko, Frozen Tombs of Siberia (Dent., London, 1970)
-
- Edward Atchley, A History of the Use of Incense in Divine Worship
-
- E. A. Wallis Budge, The Divine Origin of the Craft of the Herbalist
-
- Egon C. Corti, A history of Smoking, by Count Corti; Translated by
- Paul England (G.G. Harrap, London, England, 1931)
-
- Francis Robicsek, The Smoking Gods: Tobacco in Mayan Art, History,
- and Religion (University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1978)
-
- Diodurus, Histories 1.97.7
-
- Herman Scneider, History of World Civilization, 2v (New York, 1931)
-
- M.N. Dhalla, Zoroastrian Civilization (Oxford University Press,
- N.Y., 1922)
-
- Sir Charles Eliot, Hinduism and Buddhism 3v. (Routledge & K. Paul,
- London, 1921)
-
- A.A. McDonell, India's Past (The Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1927)
-
- Charles Anthon, A Classical Dictionary (N.Y., Harpers and Brothers,
- 1848)
-
- G. Maspero, The Dawn of Civilization: Egypt and Chaldea (London,
- 1897)
-
- Lucy Lamy, Egyptian Mysteries
-
- Friedrich Ratzel, History of Mankind (N.Y., Gordon Press)
-
- R.H. Charles The Book of Jubilees, cap, iij, (London, 1902)
-
- Alfred Wiedemann, Religion of the Ancient Egyptians (London, 1987)
-
- Geoffrey Wainwright, Eucharist and Eschatology (Epworth Press,
- London, 1971)
-
- Webster's Third New International Dictionary, 1966
-
- The Book of the Dead, Edit. E.A.W. Budge, British Museum, 1895, p.
- 250
-
- J. Jeremias, in Encyclopedia, Iv, 4119, quoting Rawlinson,
- Cuneiform Inscription IV. 19 (59) Cnf. the story of Bel and the
- Dragon.
-
- John McKenzie, The Bible Dictionary (N.Y. MacMillan Pub. Co., 1965)
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Holy Spirit" (15th Edition, 1978)
- Micropaedia, Ready Reference and Index
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Sacrifice" (15th Edition, 1978)
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Pharmacological Cults" (15th Edition,
- 1978), p. 199
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Coptic"
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Essenes"
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Theraputea"
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Sacred Pipe" (15th Edition)
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Incense"
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Hemp" (Microppaedia Ready Reference and
- Index, p. 1016)
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Roman Catholicism, The Eucharist" (Volume
- 15, p. 998)
-
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Mysticism"
-
- King James version of The Bible
-
- The Apocrypha
-
-
-
- We hope you enjoyed this pamphlet. If you have any questions
- or comments, we would like to see them. Send them to the Ethiopian
- Zion Coptic Church, P.O. Box 1161, Minneola, FL 34755-1161.
-
- We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church decided to publish this
- pamphlet in order to give the public an opportunity to study the
- church and its doctrine; not from inflated and misleading media but
- from historical and Biblical reference. The Church has received
- extensive publicity as "60 Minutes" has done a segment; Life, Omni,
- Science, Rolling Stone, and High Times magazines have all done
- articles, countless newspaper articles have been written, and
- various brothers have been on radio and TV talk shows around the
- country.
-
- We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church revere ganja
- (marijuana) as our "holy" Eucharist and "spiritual intensifier"
- with Biblical, historical and divine associations for its use.
- Ganja is the mystical body and blood of "Jes-us" -- the burnt
- offering made by fire -- which allows a member to see and know the
- "living God", or the "God in man".
- --
- The University of Massachusetts at Amherst | _________,^-.
- Cannabis Reform Coalition ( | ) ,>
- S.A.O. Box #2 \|/ {
- 415 Student Union Building `-^-' ? )
- UMASS, Amherst MA 01003 |____________ `--~ ;
- \_,-__/
- verdant@titan.ucs.umass.edu
-
-
-
-
-