Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: Was there a whiff of cannabis about Jesus?

Carl Ruck

The Sunday Times

Sunday 12 Jan 2003

---
Was Jesus a Stoner? is the mischievous title of an article about the use of
cannabis in ancient Judaism in next month's High Times, a pro-cannabis
magazine. Its author, Chris Bennett, likes to shock. He is the host of
Burning Shiva, a show on Canada's Pot-TV, and an advocate for the medical
use and decriminalisation of marijuana.

Bennett first looked at the use of drugs in religion two years ago in his
book Sex, Drugs, Violence, and the Bible. He postulates that Jesus's
ministry was fuelled by mind-altering substances, that he may have used
cannabis-based oils to heal eye and skin diseases and that his very name -
Christ - derives from being anointed with cannabis-enriched oil.

His politics and television career might make it tempting to dismiss him
but what Bennett says makes perfect sense. Over the centuries drugs have
been used by virtually all religions. Why not Christianity?

In ancient times cannabis was widely cultivated throughout the Middle East.
It grows like a weed and provides nourishing seed, which is also a good
source of fibre used to make rope.

People certainly knew of its pleasurable effects; it would have been
impossible to harvest it without becoming ecstatic as the drug would be
absorbed through the skin. And as long ago as 1935 a Slovakian linguist
identified the plant known as "fragrant cane" in the English Bible as
flowering cannabis, a link since accepted by some Jewish authorities.

Ancient people were fascinated by herbs and their healing powers and knew
much more about them than we do; at least about mixing herbs to release
their potency.

Ancient wines were always fortified, like the "strong wine" of the Old
Testament, with herbal additives: opium, datura, belladonna, mandrake and
henbane. Common incenses, such as myrrh, ambergris and frankincense are
psychotropic; the easy availability and long tradition of cannabis use
would have seen it included in the mixtures. Modern medicine has looked
into using cannabis as a pain reliever and in treating multiple sclerosis.
It may well be that ancient people knew, or believed, that cannabis had
healing power.

Much of their knowledge, passed down through an oral tradition, has been
lost and to some extent it is the modern prejudice against drugs that has
stopped us looking for it. Revulsion against drugs and the hippie culture
even led to the term "entheogen" being coined to describe a psychotropic
substance used in religious rituals.

Entheogen comes from the Greek entheos (meaning "god-inspired within") and
the word is now commonly employed in English and European languages to
discuss sacramental foods used by shamans (mystic or visionary priests) to
achieve spiritual ecstasy.

So what of the early Christians? At the time they were evolving, they had
to compete with other religions of the Roman empire. The strongest of those
was Mithraism, imported from Persia, which exists today as Zoroastrianism.

Its sacrament, Haoma, was virtually identical to what we know of soma, in
Brahmanism. Worshipped as a god, soma was a strange plant without leaves or
roots that needed little light and induced religious ecstasy. It was most
likely amanita muscaria: a magic mushroom. In ancient Rome sharing the
Haoma cemented the bond of brotherhood of emperors, bureaucrats and
soldiers. Pagan Greek celebrations at the sanctuary of Eleusis, meanwhile,
included a visionary experience for a crowd of 1,000 people, from drinking
a potion made from a fungus that grows on wheat and produces an effect
similar to LSD.

So, did Jesus use cannabis? I think so. The word Christ does mean "the
anointed one" and Bennett contends that Christ was anointed with chrism, a
cannabis-based oil, that caused his spiritual visions. The ancient recipe
for this oil, recorded in Exodus, included over 9lb of flowering cannabis
tops (known as kaneh-bosem in Hebrew), extracted into a hin (about 11
pints) of olive oil, with a variety of other herbs and spices. The mixture
was used in anointing and fumigations that, significantly, allowed the
priests and prophets to see and speak with Yahweh.

Residues of cannabis, moreover, have been detected in vessels from Judea
and Egypt in a context indicating its medicinal, as well as visionary, use.
Jesus is described by the apostle Mark as casting out demons and healing by
the use of this holy chrism. Earlier, from the time of Moses until the
later prophet Samuel, holy anointing oil was used by the shamanic Levite
priesthood to receive the "revelations of the Lord". The chosen ones were
drenched in this potent cannabis oil.

Early Christian documents found in Eygpt, thought to be a more accurate
record than the New Testament, portray Jesus as an ecstatic rebel sage who
preached enlightenment through rituals involving magical plants. Indeed,
Bennett goes so far as to say that Jesus was probably not born the messiah
but acquired the title when he was anointed with cannabis oil by John the
Baptist. The baptism in the Jordan was probably to wash away the oil after
it had done its work. The early Christians fought hard for followers in the
ancient world, recognising the similarity of their own "foreign" god and
his eucharistic meal to the Greek gods. Various sects and even the elite in
what would eventually become the Roman Catholic church probably used the
full range of available entheogens for baptism, ordination and the
eucharistic meal.

What we now call the host might have been more than just bread. There are
indications that early Christians shared magic mushrooms - and the
spiritual visions and ecstasies they occasioned - as their eucharistic
meal. A 4th-century mosaic discovered at a basilica in Aquileia in northern
Italy depicts baskets of mushrooms. Why? This wasn't a restaurant. Could
the "red mushrooms" have been the ritual meal?

Eating bread and sharing wine together was, and remains, at the heart of
the Christian ritual. We'll never know exactly what Jesus and his disciples
consumed at the Last Supper, but as they believed they were drinking the
blood of Christ we must accept it was - if not actually hallucinatory - at
least fortified by God.

Carl Ruck is professor of classics at Boston University

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!