Marijuana And The Bible


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  1. MARIJUANA AND THE BIBLE
  2. by
  3. The Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church
  4. OFFERINGS OF DEVOTION
  5. With offerings of devotion, ships from the isles will meet to
  6. pour the wealth of the nations and bring tribute to his feet. The
  7. Coptic Church believes fully the teachings of the Bible, and as
  8. such we have our daily obligations, and offer our sacrifices, made
  9. by fire unto our God with chants and Psalms and spiritual hymns,
  10. lifting up holy hands and making melody in our hearts.
  11. Herb (marijuana) is a Godly creation from the beginning of
  12. the world. It is known as the weed of wisdom, angel's food, the
  13. tree of life and even the "Wicked Old Ganja Tree". Its purpose in
  14. creation is as a fiery sacrifice to be offered to our Redeemer
  15. during obligations. The political worldwide organizations have
  16. framed mischief on it and called it drugs. To show that it is not
  17. a dangerous drug, let me inform my readers that it is used as food
  18. for mankind, and as a medicinal cure for diverse diseases. Ganja
  19. is not for commerce; yet because of the oppression of the people,
  20. it was raised up as the only liberator of the people, and the only
  21. peacemaker among the entire generation. Ganja is the sacramental
  22. rights of every man worldwide and any law against it is only the
  23. organized conspiracy of the United Nations and the political
  24. governments who assist in maintaining this conspiracy.
  25. The Coptic Church is not politically originated, and this was
  26. firmly expressed when we met with the political directorate of the
  27. land during the period of pre-incorporation. We support no
  28. political organization, pagan religion, or commercial institution,
  29. seeing that religion, politics, and commerce are the three unclean
  30. spirits which separate the people from their God. Because of our
  31. non-political stand, the church has received tremendous opposition
  32. from the politicians, who do not want the eyes of the people to be
  33. opened. Through its agency, the police force, the church has been
  34. severely harassed, victimized, and discriminated. Our members have
  35. passed through several acts of police brutality, our legal
  36. properties maliciously destroyed, members falsely imprisoned,
  37. divine services broken up and all these atrocities performed upon
  38. the Church, under the name of political laws and their justice.
  39. Walter Wells -- Elder Priest of the
  40. Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church of
  41. Jamaica, West Indies
  42. THE USE OF MARIJUANA IN ANCIENT TIMES
  43. The use of marijuana is as old as the history of man and dates
  44. to the prehistoric period. Marijuana is closely connected with the
  45. history and development of some of the oldest nations on earth.
  46. It has played a significant role in the religions and cultures of
  47. Africa, the Middle East, India, and China
  48. Richard E. Schultes, a prominent researcher in the field of
  49. psychoactive plants, said in an article he wrote entitled "Man and
  50. Marijuana":
  51. "...that early man experimented with all plant materials that
  52. he could chew and could not have avoided discovering the
  53. properties of cannabis (marijuana), for in his quest for seeds
  54. and oil, he certainly ate the sticky tops of the plant. Upon
  55. eating hemp the euphoric, ecstatic and hallucinatory aspects
  56. may have introduced man to an other-worldly plane from which
  57. emerged religious beliefs, perhaps even the concept of deity.
  58. The plant became accepted as a special gift of the gods, a
  59. sacred medium for communion with the spiritual world and as
  60. such it has remained in some cultures to the present."
  61. The effects of marijuana was proof to the ancients that the
  62. spirit and power of the god(s) existed in this plant and that it
  63. was literally a messenger (angel) or actually the Flesh and Blood
  64. and/or Bread of the god(s) and was and continues to be a holy
  65. sacrament. Considered to be sacred, marijuana has been used in
  66. religious worship from before recorded history.
  67. According to William A. Embolden in his book Ritual Use of
  68. Cannabis Sativa L, p. 235:
  69. "Shamanistic traditions of great antiquity in Asia and the
  70. Near East has as one of their most important elements the
  71. attempt to find God without a vale of tears; that cannabis
  72. played a role in this, at least in some areas, is born out in
  73. the philology surrounding the ritualistic use of the plant.
  74. Whereas Western religious traditions generally stress sin,
  75. repentance, and mortification of the flesh, certain older non-
  76. Western religious cults seem to have employed Cannabis as a
  77. euphoriant, which allowed the participant a joyous path to the
  78. Ultimate; hence such appellations as "heavenly guide".
  79. According to "Licit and Illicit Drugs" by the Consumer Union,
  80. page 397-398:
  81. "Ashurbanipal lived about 650 B.C., but the cuneiform
  82. descriptions of marijuana in his library "are generally
  83. regarded as obvious copies of much older texts." Says Dr.
  84. Robert P. Walton, an American physician and authority on
  85. marijuana, "This evidence serves to project the origin of
  86. hashish back to the earliest beginnings of history."
  87. THE USE OF MARIJUANA AS INCENSE
  88. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica: "Pharmacological
  89. Cults"
  90. "...the ceremonial use of incense in contemporary ritual is
  91. most likely a relic of the time when the psychoactive
  92. properties of incense brought the ancient worshipper in touch
  93. with supernatural forces."
  94. In the temples of the ancient world, the main sacrifice was
  95. the inhalation of incense. Incense is defined as the perfume or
  96. smoke from spices and gums when burned in celebrating religious
  97. rites or as an offering to a deity. Bronze and gold incense
  98. burners were cast very early in history and their forms were often
  99. inspired by cosmological themes representing the harmonious nature
  100. of the universe.
  101. The following piece was taken from "Licit and Illicit Drugs",
  102. page 31.
  103. "In the Judaic world, the vapors from burnt spices and
  104. aromatic gums were considered part of the pleasurable
  105. act of worship. In proverbs (27:9) it is said that
  106. 'Ointment and perfumes rejoice the heart.' Perfumes were
  107. widely used in Egyptian worship. Stone altars have been
  108. unearthed in Babylon and Palestine, which have been used
  109. for burning incense made of aromatic wood and spices.
  110. While the casual readers today may interpret such
  111. practices as mere satisfaction of the desire for pleasant
  112. odors, this is almost certainly an error; in many or most
  113. cases, a psychoactive drug was being inhaled. In the
  114. islands of the Mediterranean 2,500 years ago and in
  115. Africa hundreds of years ago, for example leaves and
  116. flowers of a particular plant were often thrown upon
  117. bonfires and the smoke inhaled; the plant was marijuana."
  118. (Edward Preble and Gabriel V. Laurey, Plastic Cement: The
  119. Ten Cent Hallucinogen, International Journal of the
  120. Addictions, 2 (Fall 2967): 271-272.
  121. "The earliest civilizations of Mesopotamia brewed
  122. intoxicating beer of barley more than 5,000 years ago;
  123. is it too much to assume that even earlier cultures
  124. experienced euphoria, accidentally or deliberately,
  125. through inhalation of the resinous smoke of Cannabis?"
  126. (Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L, p. 216.)
  127. "It is said that the Assyrians used hemp (marijuana) as
  128. incense in the seventh or eighth century before Christ
  129. and called it 'Qunubu', a term apparently borrowed from
  130. an old East Iranian word 'Konaba', the same as the
  131. Scythian name 'cannabis'." (Plants of the Gods -- Origin
  132. of Hallucinogenic Use by Richard E. Schultes and Albert
  133. Hoffman)
  134. "It is recorded that the Chinese Taoist recommended the
  135. addition of cannabis to their incense burners in the 1st
  136. century as a means of achieving immortality." (Marijuana,
  137. the First Twelve Thousand Years by Earnest Abel, page 5)
  138. "There is a classic Greek term, cannabeizein, which means
  139. to smoke cannabis. Cannabeizein frequently took the form
  140. of inhaling vapors from an incense burner in which these
  141. resins were mixed with other resins, such as myrrh,
  142. balsam, frankincense, and perfumes." (Ritual Use of
  143. Cannabis Sativa L)
  144. "Herodotus in the fifth century B.C. observed the
  145. Scythians throwing hemp on heated stone to create smoke
  146. and observed them inhaling this smoke. Although he does
  147. not identify them, Herodotus states that when they "have
  148. parties and sit around a fire, they throw some of it into
  149. the flames. As it burns, it smokes like incense, and the
  150. smell of it makes them drunk, just as wine does us. As
  151. more fruit is thrown on, they get more and more
  152. intoxicated until finally they jump up and start dancing
  153. and singing." (Herodotus, Histories 1.202.)
  154. EVIDENCE INDICATING THE SEMITIC ORIGIN OF CANNABIS
  155. The name cannabis is generally thought to be of Scythian
  156. origin. Sula Benet in Cannabis and Culture argues that it has a
  157. much earlier origin in Semitic languages like Hebrew, occurring
  158. several times in the Old Testament. He states that in Exodus 30:23
  159. that God commands Moses to make a holy anointing oil of myrrh,
  160. sweet cinnamon, kaneh bosm, and kassia. He continues that the word
  161. kaneh bosm is also rendered in the traditional Hebrew as kannabos
  162. or kannabus and that the root "kan" in this construction means
  163. "reed" or "hemp", while "bosm" means "aromatic". He states that
  164. in the earliest Greek translations of the old testament "kan" was
  165. rendered as "reed", leading to such erroneous English translations
  166. as "sweet calamus" (Exodus 30:23), sweet cane (Isaiah 43:24;
  167. Jeremiah 6:20) and "calamus" (Ezekiel 27:19; Song of Songs 4:14).
  168. Benet argues from the linguistic evidence that cannabis was known
  169. in Old Testament times at least for its aromatic properties and
  170. that the word for it passed from the Semitic language to the
  171. Scythians, i.e. the Ashkenaz of the Old Testament.
  172. Sara Benetowa of the Institute of Anthropological Sciences in
  173. Warsaw is quoted in the Book of Grass as saying:
  174. "The astonishing resemblance between the Semitic 'kanbos'
  175. and the Scythian 'cannabis' leads me to suppose that the
  176. Scythian word was of Semitic origin. These etymological
  177. discussions run parallel to arguments drawn from history.
  178. The Iranian Scythians were probably related to the Medes,
  179. who were neighbors of the semites and could easily have
  180. assimilated the word for hemp. The Semites could also
  181. have spread the word during their migrations through Asia
  182. Minor.
  183. Taking into account the matriarchal element of Semitic
  184. culture, one is led to believe that Asia Minor was the
  185. original point of expansion for both the society based
  186. on the matriarchal circle and the mass use of hashish."
  187. The Ancient Israelites were a Semitic people. Abraham, the
  188. father of the Israelite nation, came from Ur, a city of Babylonia
  189. located in mesopotamia. The Israelites migrated throughout Asia
  190. Minor and could easily have spread the religious use of marijuana.
  191. THE ISRAELITE USE OF INCENSE
  192. It was said that Moses, at the direction of Almighty God,
  193. first brought in the use of incense in public worship, and that
  194. the other nations of antiquity copied the practice from him. It
  195. was however a practice that began with Adam. The "Book of
  196. Jubilees", an Apocryphal book, (the Apocrypha was considered
  197. canonical by the early church and is to this day by the Ethiopian
  198. Zion Coptic Church) states that "on the day when Adam went forth
  199. from the Garden of Eden, he offered as a sweet savour an offering
  200. of frankincense, galbanum, and stacte, and spices, in the morning
  201. with the rising of the sun, from the day when he covered his
  202. shame." And of Enoch we read that "he burnt the incense of the
  203. sanctuary, even sweet spices, acceptable before the Lord, on the
  204. Mount."
  205. Incense was assigned miraculous powers by the Israelites. It
  206. was burned in golden bowls or cauldrons placed on or beside the
  207. altar. It was also burned in hand-held censers. In the Blessing
  208. of Moses, a poem belonging to the Northern Kingdom of Israel, and
  209. written about 760 B.C., the sacrificial smoke is offered to the God
  210. of Israel.
  211. Let them teach Jacob thy judgments, and Israel thy law;
  212. Let them offer sacrificial smoke to thy nostrils, and
  213. whole burnt sacrifice upon thy altar.
  214. Throughout the Bible the ancient patriarchs were brought into
  215. communion with God through smoking incense and at Mt. Sinai God
  216. talked to Moses out of a bush that burned with fire (Exodus 3:1-
  217. 12). After Moses brought the Israelite people out of Egypt he
  218. returned to Mt. Sinai at which time God made a covenant with Moses
  219. in which the Ten Commandments were revealed. Exodus 19:8 describes
  220. the conditions at the time of this covenant.
  221. Exodus 19:8 "And Mount Sinai was altogether on smoke,
  222. because the Lord descended upon it in fire: and the smoke
  223. thereof ascended as smoke of a furnace, and the whole
  224. mount quaked greatly.
  225. The Mysterious smoke mentioned in the covenant on Mt. Sinai
  226. is also referred to as a cloud.
  227. Exodus 24:15 "And Moses went up into the mount, and a
  228. cloud covered the mount. 16 And the glory of the Lord
  229. abode upon Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it six
  230. days: and the seventh day he called unto Moses out of
  231. the midst of the cloud.
  232. Scriptures make it abundantly clear that the clouds and the
  233. smoke are related to the burning of incense. Exodus 40:26
  234. describes Moses burning incense, a cloud covering the tent of the
  235. congregation and the glory of the Lord filling the tabernacle.
  236. Leviticus 16:2-13 describes how God appeared in a cloud and refers
  237. to it as the clouds of incense. Numbers 16:17-19 describes how
  238. every man of the congregation had a censer full of burning incense
  239. and that the glory of the Lord appeared unto all the congregation.
  240. Isaiah 6:4 describes how Ezekial saw God in a smoke-filled inner
  241. court. Numbers 11:25 describes how God was revealed to moses and
  242. the seventy elders in a cloud; that the spirit rested upon them and
  243. that they prophesied and ceased not.
  244. The Book of Grass by Andrew and Vinkenoog includes a section
  245. on Ancient Scythia and Iran by Mircea Eliade, one of the foremost
  246. experts on the history of religions. On pages 11 and 12 is the
  247. following:
  248. "On one document appears to indicate the existence of a
  249. Getic shamanism: It is Straho's account of the Myssian
  250. KAPNOBATAI, a name that has been translated, by analogy
  251. with Aristophanes' AEROBATES, as 'those who walk in
  252. clouds'; but it should be translated as 'those who walk
  253. in smoke'! Presumably the smoke is hemp smoke, a
  254. rudimentary means of ecstasy known to both the Tracians
  255. and the Scythians..."
  256. This passage should be carefully noted. Biblical passages
  257. make it abundantly clear that the ancient Isrealites also walked
  258. in clouds and in smoke. In fact it was in the clouds of smoke that
  259. God was revealed to the ancient Isrealites. The words "smoke" and
  260. "smoking" appear fifty times in the King James Version of the Bible
  261. and two separate times the Bible says of the Lord, "There went up
  262. a smoke out of his nostrils." II Samuel 22:9, Psalms 18:8.
  263. There are numerous other places in the Bible that mention the
  264. burning of incense, the mysterious cloud, and smoke. This common
  265. thread is found throughout the Bible, including the New Testament.
  266. St. Matthew 24:30 "And then shall appear the sign of the
  267. Son of Man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of
  268. the Earth morn, and they shall see the Son of Man coming
  269. in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory."
  270. Revelations 1:7 "Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every
  271. eye shall see him, and they also which pierced him: and
  272. all the kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him.
  273. Even so, Amen."
  274. Revelations 8:3 "And another angel came and stood at the
  275. altar, having a golden censer: and there was given unto
  276. him much incense, that he should offer it with the
  277. prayers of all saints upon the golden altar which was
  278. before the throne. 4 And the smoke of the incense, which
  279. came with the prayers of the saints, ascended up before
  280. God out of the Angel's hand."
  281. Revelations 15:8 "And the temple was filled with smoke
  282. from the glory of God, and from his power."
  283. THE SYMBOLISM OF FIRE IN THE ANCIENT WORLD
  284. The word "fire" is mentioned several hundred times in the King
  285. James version of the Bible. The sacrifice of the Lord is made by
  286. fire (Exodus 29:18, 25; Leviticus 2:10-11; Leviticus 6:13; Numbers
  287. 28:6; Deuteronomy 4:33; Joshua 13:14; I Samuel 2:28; II Chronicles
  288. 2:4; Isaiah 24:15; Matthew 3:11; Luke 1:9; Revelations 8:4-5)
  289. Abraham, the father of the Israelite nation, came from Ur
  290. which was a city of Ancient Sumer in South Babylonia. For the
  291. Babylonians, fire was essential to sacrifice and all oblations were
  292. conveyed to the gods by the fire god Girru-Nusku, whose presence
  293. as an intermediary between the gods and man was indispensable.
  294. Girru-Nusku, as the messenger of the gods, bore the essence of the
  295. offerings upward to them in the smoke of sacrificial fire.
  296. At Babylon: "The glorious gods smell the incense, noble
  297. food of heaven; pure wine which no hand has touched do
  298. they enjoy." (L. Jeremias, in Encyclopedia Biblica, i.v.
  299. 4119, quoting Rawlinson, Cuneif. Inscrip. IV, 19 (59).)
  300. The most important of the ancient Indian gods was Agni, the
  301. god of fire, who like the Babylonian god Girru-Nusku acted as a
  302. messenger between men and the gods. The fire (Agni) upon the altar
  303. was regarded as a messenger, their invoker.
  304. "...For thou, O sage, goest wisely between these two
  305. creations like a friendly messenger between two hamlets."
  306. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, the section on
  307. "mysticism":
  308. "The Vedas (Hindu sacred writings) are hymns to the
  309. mystic fire and the inner sense of sacrifice, burning
  310. forever on the 'altar Mind'. Hence the abundance of
  311. solar and fire images: birds of fire, the fire of the
  312. sun, and the isles of fire. The symbol system of the
  313. world's religions and mysticisms are profound
  314. illuminations of the human-divine mystery. Be it the
  315. cave of the heart or the lotus of the heart, 'the
  316. dwelling place of that which is the Essence of the
  317. Universe, "the third eye", or the eye of wisdom' -- the
  318. symbols all refer back to wisdom entering the aspiring
  319. soul on its way to progressive self-understanding. 'I
  320. saw the Lord with the Eye of the Heart. I said, "Who
  321. art thou?" and he answered, "Thou"'."
  322. The ancient Indian mystics said,
  323. "...that in the ecstasy of bhang (marijuana) the spark
  324. of the Eternal in man turns into light the murkiness of
  325. matter or illusion and the self is lost in the central
  326. soul fire. Raising man out of himself and above mean
  327. individual worries, bhang makes him one with the divine
  328. force of nature and the mystery 'I am he' grew plain.
  329. (Taken from the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report which
  330. was written at the turn of the twentieth century.)
  331. The concept of spiritual or inner light was found throughout
  332. the ancient world. As we shall see that spiritual light was
  333. directly related to the burning of incense. According to Lucie
  334. Lamy in "Egyptian Mysteries", page 24:
  335. "The Pharaonic word for light is akh. This word, often
  336. translated as 'transfigured', designated transcendental
  337. light as well as all aspects of physical light; and in
  338. the funerary text it denotes the state of ultimate
  339. sublimation.
  340. "The word akh, first of all, is written with a glyph
  341. showing a crested ibis, ibis comata. This bird -- the
  342. name of which was also akh -- lived in the southern part
  343. of the Arabian side of the Red Sea (near Al Qunfidhah)
  344. and migrated to Abyssinia (Ethiopia) during the winter.
  345. Both these places are near the regions from which sacred
  346. incense came, and were called the "Divine Land". The
  347. bird's crest, together with its dark green plumage shot
  348. with glittering metallic specks justifies the meanings
  349. 'to shine', 'to be resplendent', 'to irradiate'; of the
  350. root akh in the hieroglyphic writing.
  351. "Akh indeed expresses all notions of light, both
  352. literally and figuratively, from the Light which comes
  353. forth from Darkness to the transcendental light of
  354. transfiguration. It is also used to designate the 'third
  355. eye', the ureaeus, related in old tradition to the pineal
  356. body and to the spirit."
  357. In the next chapter we will see that the sacred cloud of
  358. incense was instrumental in the transfiguration of Christ.
  359. Note that Ethiopia was referred to as the "Divine Land" and
  360. that it was the source for the sacred incense. The ancients also
  361. referred to Ethiopia as the "Land of God".
  362. The ancient Egyptians believed that they had received their
  363. divinities from Ethiopia and have always held to the ancient and
  364. honored tradition of their southern origin. Ethiopia is so
  365. important in ancient history that it is mentioned as being in the
  366. Garden of Eden (Genesis 2:12).
  367. The ancient Greek historian Diodorus Siculus wrote:
  368. "The Ethiopians conceived themselves to be of greater
  369. antiquity than any other nation; and it is probable that,
  370. born under the sun's path, its warmth may have ripened
  371. them earlier than other men. They supposed themselves
  372. to be the inventors of worship, of festivals, of solemn
  373. assemblies, of sacrifice, and every religious practice."
  374. MARIJUANA AS THE CHRISTIAN SACRAMENT
  375. According to Jack Herer in The Emperor Wears No Clothes or
  376. Everything You Wanted to Know About Marijuana But Were Not Taught
  377. in School, "The Essenes, a kabalistic priest/prophet/healer sect
  378. of Judaism dating back to the era of the Dead Sea Scrolls, used
  379. hemp, as did the Theraputea of Egypt, from where we get the term
  380. 'therapeutic'."
  381. The Theraputea of Egypt were Jewish ascetics that dwelt near
  382. Alexandria and described by Philo (1st century B.C.) as devoted to
  383. contemplation and meditation. Alexandria is where St. Mark is
  384. traditionally held to have established the Coptic Church in 45 A.D.
  385. The Coptic Church has been neglected by Western scholars
  386. despite its historical significance. This has been due to the
  387. various biases and interest of the Catholic Church which claimed
  388. Christianity for its own. The result is that for the Coptic Church
  389. there is very little history. It is however assumed that the
  390. Coptic religious services have their roots in the earliest layers
  391. of Christian ritual in Jerusalem and it is known that the Coptic
  392. church is of ancient origin going back to the time of the first
  393. Christian communities and even before.
  394. Tradition states that "Coptic" was derived from "Kuftaim",
  395. son of Mizraim, a grandchild of Noah who first settled in the Nile
  396. valley, i the neighborhood of Thebes, the ancient capital of Egypt.
  397. At one time Thebes was the greatest city in the world and history
  398. records that by 2200 B.C. the whole of Egypt was united under a
  399. Theban prince. The splendor of Thebes was known to Homer, who
  400. called it "the city with a hundred gates". (Richard Schultes
  401. states that in ancient Thebes marijuana was made into a drink.)
  402. According to E.A. Wallis Budge in The Divine Origin of the
  403. Herbalist, page 79, "The Copts, that is to say the Egyptians who
  404. accepted the teachings of St. Mark in the first century of our era,
  405. and embraced Christianity, seem to have eschewed medical science
  406. as taught by the physicians of the famous School of Medicine of
  407. Alexandria, and to have been content with the methods of healing
  408. employed by their ancestors."
  409. The Essenes were an ascetic sect closely related to the
  410. Theraputea that had established a monastic order in the desert
  411. outside of Palestine and were known as spiritual healers. It has
  412. been suggested that both John the Baptist and Jesus may have been
  413. of the Essene sect as they were both heavily dependent on Essene
  414. teachings. The scripture makes no mention of the life of Jesus
  415. from the age of 13 to 30. Certain theologians speculate that Jesus
  416. was being initiated by the Essenes, the last fraternity to keep
  417. alive the ancient traditions of the prophets.
  418. Every prophet, however great, must be initiated. His higher
  419. self must be awakened and made conscious so that his mission can
  420. be fulfilled. Amongst the Essenes' ritual lustrations preceded
  421. most liturgical rites, the most important one of which was
  422. participation in a sacred meal -- an anticipation of the Messianic
  423. banquet.
  424. Throughout the ancient world sacrifice was a sacramental
  425. communal meal involving the idea of the god as a participant in
  426. the meal or as identical with the food consumed. The communion
  427. sacrifice was one in which the deity indwells the oblation so that
  428. the worshippers actually consume the divine. The original motive
  429. of sacrifice was an effort toward communion among the members of
  430. a group, on one hand, and between them and their god, on the other.
  431. At its best, sacrifice was a "sacrament" and in one form or another
  432. life itself.
  433. The central focus of the early Christian church was the
  434. Eucharist or the "body and blood" of the Lord. This was
  435. interpreted as a fellowship meal with the resurrected Christ. In
  436. meeting the Resurrected One in the Eucharist meal the Christian
  437. community had the expectation of the Kingdom of God and salvation.
  438. Christ communicated life to his disciples through the
  439. Eucharist or Christian sacrament. Christ said in describing the
  440. sacrament, "Take, eat, this is my body, this is my blood. Do this
  441. as often as you will in remembrance of me." (I Corinthians 11:24-
  442. 25)
  443. Baptism is defined as the Christian sacrament used in
  444. purification and the spiritual rebirth of the individual. I
  445. Corinthians 10:1 makes it clear that the smoking cloud of incense
  446. was directly related to baptism.
  447. I Corinthians 10:1 "Moreover, brethren, I would not that
  448. ye should be ignorant, how that our fathers were under
  449. the cloud, and all passed through the sea; 2 And were all
  450. baptized unto Moses in the Cloud and in the sea; 3 And
  451. did all eat the same spiritual meat: for they drank of
  452. that Spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was
  453. Christ.
  454. In the Biblical story of Creation, God said, "Behold, I have
  455. given you every herb bearing seed and to you it will be for meat."
  456. (Genesis 1:29) Marijuana is technically an herb and was considered
  457. a spiritual meat in the ancient world.
  458. From this passage in Corinthians we see that the spiritual
  459. cloud resulting from the burning of incense was instrumental in
  460. the baptism of the Israelites. This baptism is also compared to
  461. the "eating and drinking" of the spirit of Christ.
  462. Spirit is defined as the active essence of the Deity serving
  463. as an invisible and life-giving or inspiring power in motion.
  464. Scripture makes it abundantly clear that the sacrificial cloud or
  465. smoke contained the Spirit of God (Christ) and was instrumental in
  466. inspiring, sanctifying, and purifying the patriarchs.
  467. In Numbers 11:25 the cloud results in the Spirit resting upon
  468. Moses and the seventy elders. This passage indicates that they
  469. prophesied ecstatically. "Prophesy" is defined as follows: to
  470. utter or announce by or as if by divine inspiration; to speak for
  471. God or a deity; to give instruction in religious matters.
  472. Throughout the Holy Bible prophets of God spake as they were moved
  473. by the Holy Spirit. The smoking burning cloud of incense contained
  474. the spirit and was instrumental in bringing about the spiritual
  475. revelations of the prophets. In the ancient world marijuana was
  476. used to reveal the future. The virtues of marijuana include
  477. speech-giving and inspiration of mental powers.
  478. "Psychoactive" is defined as effecting the mind or behavior.
  479. When we of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church think of mind or
  480. behavior we think of that inward essence or element that makes up
  481. the individual. This is the person's spirit. We are all spiritual
  482. beings. It is just as important to keep the spiritual part of a
  483. person healthy as it is to keep the physical body healthy and in
  484. fact they are related. Hence marijuana and its relationship to
  485. spiritual food.
  486. In the Apocrypha (Book of Jubilees), Chapter 10, God tells an
  487. angel to teach Noah the medicines which heal and protect from evil
  488. spirits. Surely God taught Noah about marijuana. In the ancient
  489. world marijuana played an important role in purification and
  490. protecting from evil influences.
  491. Note the following concerning the transfiguration of Christ:
  492. St. Matthew 17:1 "And after six days Jesus taketh Peter,
  493. James, and John his brother, and bringeth them up into
  494. a high mountain apart. 2 And he was transfigured before
  495. them: and his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment
  496. was white as light. 3 And, behold, there appeared unto
  497. them Moses and Elias talking with him. 4 Then answered
  498. Peter, and said unto Jesus, Lord, it is good for us to
  499. be here: if thou wilt, let us make here three
  500. tabernacles; one for thee, one for Moses, and one for
  501. Elias. 5 When yet he spake, behold a bright cloud
  502. overshadowed them; and behold a voice out of the cloud,
  503. which said, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
  504. pleased; hear ye him."
  505. The Bible Dictionary by John McKenzie, page 898, says
  506. concerning the transfiguration that the cloud and the formula of
  507. the utterance of the Father are derived from the baptism of Jesus.
  508. He says that the change described in the appearance of Jesus
  509. suggests the change which is implied in the resurrection
  510. narratives.
  511. Some of the synonyms for transfiguration are transformation,
  512. metamorphosis, transubstantiation, and avatar. These terms imply
  513. the change that accompanies resurrection or deification. Across
  514. the world, legends of godlike men who manage to rise, in a state
  515. of perfection go back to an era before human beings had cast away
  516. from the divine source. Hence the gods were beings which once were
  517. men, and the actual race of men will in time become gods. Christ
  518. revealed this to the people of his day when he told them to whom
  519. the word of God came, "Ye are gods." (St. John 10:34)
  520. St. Matthew 17:2 says that during the transfiguration of
  521. Christ that his face did shine as the sun. The face of Moses also
  522. shone when he returned from the cloud on Mt. Sinai (Exodus 30:34).
  523. The shining countenances are the result of their resurrections, of
  524. their being spiritually illumined in the cloud of smoking incense.
  525. Most people are under the impression that Christ baptized with
  526. water. As you can see from the following account of John the
  527. Baptist this isn't so. John the Baptist baptized with water and
  528. Christ baptized with fire.
  529. St. Matthew 3:11 "I indeed baptize you with water into
  530. repentance: but he that cometh after me is mightier than
  531. I, whose shoes I am not worthy to bear; he shall baptize
  532. you with the Holy Spirit and with fire."
  533. It is only logical that this baptism with the Holy Spirit and
  534. with fire is related to the baptism of Christ in the burning,
  535. smoking cloud of incense and to the baptism of the patriarchs in
  536. which the patriarchs did all eat of the same spiritual meal
  537. (incense). In the section dealing with the "Holy Spirit" the
  538. Encyclopedia Britannica states that Christian writers have seen in
  539. various references to the Spirit of Yahweh in the Old Testament an
  540. anticipation of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. It also says that
  541. the Holy Spirit is viewed as the main agent of man's restoration
  542. to his original natural state through communion in Christ's body
  543. and, thus, as the principle of life in the Christian community.
  544. The patriarchs were recipients of a revelation coming directly
  545. from the Spirit (incense) and this was expressed in the heightening
  546. and enlargement of their consciousness. It is clear from Scripture
  547. that this spiritual dimension was also evident in the life of
  548. Jesus, in whom the experience of the Hebrew prophets was renewed.
  549. Through the Eucharist Christ passed this spiritual dimension on to
  550. his apostles. One of the apostles even makes mention in
  551. Philippians 4:18 of a sweet smelling sacrifice that is well
  552. pleasing to God.
  553. Christ compares this baptism to the drinking of a cup.
  554. St. Mark 10:38 "But Jesus said unto them, Ye know not
  555. what ye ask: can ye drink of the cup that I drink of?
  556. and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized
  557. with?"
  558. This cup is referred to as the cup of salvation in Psalms
  559. 116:12.
  560. Psalms 116:12 "What shall I render unto the Lord for all
  561. his benefits toward me? I will take the cup of salvation
  562. and call upon the name of the Lord.
  563. It is called the cup of blessing in connection in connection
  564. with the eucharist.
  565. 1 Corinthians 10:16 "The cup of blessing which we bless,
  566. is it not the communion of the blood and the body of
  567. Christ? 17 For we being many are one bread, and one body;
  568. for we are all partakers of one bread.
  569. Here we see a connection between the cup of blessing and the
  570. communion of the blood of Christ. Blood is the life-giving
  571. substance of the living being. Christ communicated life to his
  572. disciples through the Eucharist or Christian sacrament.
  573. In I Corinthians 10:16 we note the mention of bread as the
  574. communion of the body of Christ and that we are all partakers of
  575. one bread. This is the spiritual bread or food used by Christ and
  576. his disciples. (A synonym for the Eucharist or the Body and Blood
  577. of the Lord is the bread of life.) It is interesting to note that
  578. the finest marijuana in Jamaica is called Lamb's bread.
  579. 1 Corinthians 12:13 "For by one Spirit are we all
  580. baptized into one body, whether we be Jew or Gentiles,
  581. whether we be bond or free; and have all been made to
  582. drink into one Spirit.
  583. 1 Corinthians 11:25 "After the same manner also he took
  584. the cup, when he had supped, saying, This cup is the New
  585. Testament in my blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it,
  586. in remembrance of me. 26 For as often as ye eat this
  587. bread and drink this cup, ye do shew the Lord's death
  588. till he come.
  589. If these passages are compared to 1 Corinthians 10:1-4, it is
  590. plain that the "eating of one bread" is the same as the patriarchs
  591. "eating the same spiritual meat" and the "drinking of one Spirit"
  592. (the cup) is the same as the patriarchs "drinking of the Spiritual
  593. Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ." By making this
  594. comparison we see that the terminology of the Eucharist is directly
  595. related to the smoking cloud of incense used in the baptism of
  596. Christ and the patriarchs.
  597. It is interesting to note that smoking was referred to as
  598. "eating" or "drinking" by the early American Indians. Peter J.
  599. Furst in Hallucinogen and Culture states the following:
  600. "Considering its enormous geographic spread in the
  601. Americas at the time of European discovery, as well as
  602. the probable age of stone tobacco pipes in California,
  603. the inhaling (often called "drinking" or "eating") of
  604. tobacco smoke by the Shaman, as a corollary to
  605. therapeutic fumigation and the feeding of the gods with
  606. smoke, must also be of considerable antiquity."
  607. In Licit and Illicit Drugs, page 209, the following is quoted:
  608. "Columbus and other early explorers who followed him were
  609. amazed to meet Indians who carried rolls of dried leaves
  610. that they set afire -- and who then "drank the smoke"
  611. that emerged from the rolls. Other Indians carried pipes
  612. in which they burned the same leaves, and from which they
  613. similarly "drank the smoke".
  614. The Encyclopedia Britannica states in the section on
  615. "Sacrifice" that the interpretation of sacrifice and particularly
  616. of the Eucharist as sacrifice has varied greatly within the
  617. different Christian traditions because of the sacrificial
  618. terminology in which the Eucharist was originally described became
  619. foreign to Christian thinkers.
  620. We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church declare that the true
  621. understanding of the Eucharist has been passed down from generation
  622. to generation so that we are able to give an accurate
  623. interpretation of the sacrificial terminology used to describe the
  624. Eucharist. We have shown, using history and Biblical passages,
  625. that his terminology is directly related to burning smoking
  626. incense. We have shown that the "eating" or "drinking" contained
  627. in the terminology concerning the Eucharist is associated with the
  628. inhalation of smoke. We have shown that marijuana was used as
  629. incense and that it was the number one spiritual plant of the
  630. ancient world.
  631. We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church declare that the cup
  632. that Christ baptized his disciples with in the baptism of the Holy
  633. Spirit and fire was in fact a pipe or chillum in which marijuana
  634. was smoked. This is a bottomless cup and soon as it is emptied,
  635. it is filled again and passed in a circle. There is a picture of
  636. this cup or pipe below, as well as on the cover. Like the pipe of
  637. the ancient North American Indians, this cup was a portable altar.
  638. Christ was the Father of the doctrine of the Eucharist which
  639. is the communion that Jesus gave his brethren. Jesus taught that
  640. the communion is his body and blood. Jesus was not speaking of His
  641. physical body and blood. He was speaking of His spiritual body and
  642. spiritual blood that was the communion of his holy church. The
  643. supper that Jesus celebrated with his disciples "on the night that
  644. he was betrayed" (1 Corinthians 11:23) inaugurated the heavenly
  645. meal that was to be continued.
  646. 1 Corinthians 11:23 "For I have received of the Lord that
  647. which also I delivered unto you, that the Lord Jesus the same night
  648. in which he was betrayed took bread: 24 And when he had given
  649. thanks, he brake it and said, Take, eat, this is my body, which is
  650. broken for you; this do in remembrance of me. 25 After the same
  651. manner also he took the cup, which he had supped, saying, This cup
  652. is the new testament in my blood; this do ye, as oft as ye drink
  653. it, in remembrance of me. 26 For as often as ye eat this bread, and
  654. drink of this cup, ye do shew the Lord's death till he come. 27
  655. Wherefore whosoever shall eat of this bread, and drink of this cup
  656. of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of
  657. the Lord. 28 But let a man examine himself, and let him eat of the
  658. bread, and drink of that cup. 29 For he that eateth and drinketh
  659. unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself, not
  660. discerning the Lord's body.
  661. Christ said, "Do this in remembrance of me." Here the
  662. original unity of man with God is restored. In general the
  663. reception of the Holy Spirit is connected with the actual
  664. realization, the inward experiencing of God.
  665. Marijuana has been referred to as a mild euphoric (the
  666. producer of a feeling of well-being) that produces a profound
  667. religious experience of a mystical and transcendental nature. This
  668. religious experience is said to be brought about by the stirring
  669. of deeply buried, unconscious sensitivities so that one experiences
  670. ultimate reality or the divine and confirms the feeling of the
  671. worshipper that he has been in the presence of God and has
  672. assimilated some of His powers.
  673. To be lifted above sense to behold the beatific vision and
  674. become "incorporate" in God is the end sought in ecstasy. The
  675. priest or mystic in enthusiasm or ecstasy enjoys the beatific
  676. vision by entering into communion with God and by undergoing
  677. deification. The experience of ecstasy, states Mircea Eliade, one
  678. of the foremost authorities on religion, is a timeless primary
  679. phenomenon. Psychological experience of rapture, he continues, are
  680. fundamental to the human condition and hence known to the whole of
  681. archaic humanity. (Some of the synonyms of rapture are bliss,
  682. beatitude, transport, exaltation.)
  683. Baudelaire, a member of the Club Des Hashichins (Hashish Club)
  684. founded in Paris around 1835 and writer of Artificial Paradises
  685. states the following about hashish: Hashish is the unadulterated
  686. resin from the flowering tops of the female hemp plant.
  687. "One will find in hashish nothing miraculous, absolutely
  688. nothing but an exaggeration of the natural. The brain
  689. and organisms on which hashish operates will produce only
  690. the normal phenomena peculiar to that individual --
  691. increased, admittedly, in number and force, but always
  692. faithful to the original. A man will never escape from
  693. his destined physical and moral temperament: hashish will
  694. be a mirror of his impression and private thoughts -- a
  695. magnifying mirror, it is true, but only a mirror.
  696. He cautions that the user must be in the right frame of mind
  697. to take hashish, for just as it exaggerates the natural behavior
  698. of the individual, so too does hashish intensify the user's
  699. immediate feelings. Baudelaire describes three successive phases
  700. a hashish user will pass through. He says the final stage is
  701. marked by a feeling of calmness, in which time and space have no
  702. meaning, and there is a sense that one has transcended matter. He
  703. says that in this state, one final supreme thought breaks into
  704. consciousness. "I have become God."
  705. Realization of one's union with God is necessary in
  706. understanding the true Christian sacrament. The understanding of
  707. man's relationship to God and God's relationship to man (God in
  708. Man and Man in God) was quite prevalent in the ancient world,
  709. particularly among the religions that utilized marijuana as part
  710. of their religious practice.
  711. Said the great Hindu sage, Manu, "He who in his own soul
  712. perceives the Supreme Soul in all beings and acquires equanimity
  713. toward them all, attains the highest bliss." To recognize oneness
  714. of self with God was contained in all the teachings of Gautama
  715. Buddha. In the Liturgy of Mithra (the Persian god of light and
  716. truth) the suppliant prays "abide with me in my soul; leave me
  717. not," and "that I may be initiated and the Holy Spirit may breathe
  718. within me." The communion became so intimate as to pass into
  719. identity: "I am thou and thou art I." Athanasius, a theologian,
  720. ecclesiastical statesman, and Egyptian national leader who was
  721. closely tied to the Coptic Church in Egypt said, "Even we may
  722. become gods walking in the flesh," and "God became man that man
  723. might become God."
  724. Western theology (Catholic and Protestant) teaches that the
  725. spirit created matter but remained aloof of it. In Hinduism and
  726. other Eastern religions, the spirit is the inside, the matter is
  727. the outside; the two are inseparable. Eastern theologians hive
  728. rightly perceived that the God one worships must posses all the
  729. aspects of his worshippers' nature as well as his own divine
  730. nature. Otherwise, how can he create beings whose nature is
  731. entirely foreign to his own? What, then, would be the meaning of
  732. the Biblical phrase: "God made man in his own image"?
  733. The fact that modern Christendom has no sense of union with
  734. God has led to numerous churches without the understanding for
  735. building a Christian culture and kingdom to replace the confusion
  736. of modern politics. This lack of understanding was not lacking in
  737. the ancient church and was a major source of enthusiasm for the
  738. prophets of old. In fact, the power of the early church was
  739. manifested due to this understanding of the spirit of God dwelling
  740. in man, the temple of God. To the ancient prophets it was not a
  741. God above, nor a God over yonder, but a God within. "Be still and
  742. know that I am God" -- for the visionaries and mystics of every
  743. time and place, this has been the first and greatest of the
  744. commandments.
  745. In 1 Corinthians 11:28 Christ said, "Let a man examine
  746. himself, and so let him eat of the bread, and drink of the cup."
  747. Probably the most relevant study to date about what might be
  748. considered typical marijuana experience concludes that marijuana
  749. gives spontaneous insights into self (Dr. Charles Tart, "On Being
  750. Stoned: A Psychological Study of Marijuana Intoxication", Science
  751. and Behavior, 1971).
  752. The sacramentality of marijuana is declared by Christ himself
  753. and can be understood only when a person partakes of the natural
  754. divine herb. The fact is communion of Jesus cannot be disputed or
  755. be destroyed. Marijuana is the new wine divine and cannot be
  756. compared to the old wine, which is alcohol. Jesus rejected the old
  757. wine and glorified the "new wine" at the wedding feast of Cana.
  758. Cana is a linguistic derivation of the present day cannabis and so
  759. it is. (Some Biblical scholars -- and there is a certain amount
  760. of support in early tradition of the view -- have looked upon the
  761. miracle of Cana as a sign of the Eucharist.)
  762. Note the references to new wine in the Bible:
  763. Isaiah 65:8 "Thus saith the Lord, As the new wine is
  764. found in the cluster, and one saith, Destroy it not; for
  765. a blessing is in it; so will I do for my servant's sake"
  766. Acts 2:13 "Others mocking said, "These men are full of new
  767. wine."
  768. Isaiah 65:8 declares that the new wine is found in the cluster
  769. and that a blessing is in it. When one mentions clusters, one
  770. thinks of clusters of grapes. Webster's New Riverside Dictionary,
  771. Office Edition, defines marijuana: 1. Hemp 2. The dried flower
  772. clusters and leaves of the hemp plant, esp. when taken to induce
  773. euphoria.
  774. The Encyclopedia Britannica says the following about hemp:
  775. Seed producing flowers form elongate, spike like clusters growing
  776. on the pistillate, or female plants; pollen producing flowers form
  777. many branched clusters or staminate, on male plants. Here and in
  778. Webster's, marijuana fits the description of the new wine and as
  779. history has shown a blessing is in it.
  780. Baudelaire said the following about the effects of hashish:
  781. "This marvelous experience often occurs as if it were
  782. the effect of superior and invisible power acting on the
  783. person from without...This delightful and singular
  784. state...gives no advance warning. It is as unexpected
  785. as a ghost, an intermittent haunting from which we must
  786. draw, if we are wise, the certainty of a better
  787. existence. This acuteness of thought, this enthusiasm
  788. of the senses and the spirit must have appeared to man
  789. through the ages as the first blessing."
  790. In the books of Acts the apostles were accused of being full
  791. of new wine. Acts 2:13 was the time of pentecost when the Holy
  792. Spirit descended upon the apostles. Numerous outpourings of the
  793. Spirit are mentioned in the Acts of the apostles in which healing,
  794. prophesy, and the expelling of demons are particularly associated
  795. with the activity of the Spirit. Incense (marijuana) was used by
  796. the ancients for healing, prophesy, and the expelling of demons.
  797. When Christ ascended into heaven in the cloud (Acts 1:9-11)
  798. he sent his disciples the Holy Spirit with the "gift of tongues"
  799. (Acts 2:3) and there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as a
  800. fire, and it sat upon each of them, and they were filled with the
  801. Holy Spirit and were given the power to prophesy or witness.
  802. (Marijuana has been credited with speech giving and inspiration of
  803. mental powers.)
  804. The first two gifts of the Holy Spirit are traditionally said
  805. to be wisdom and understanding, which no doubt are the two things
  806. most needed by the human race. In Jamaica today marijuana is
  807. referred to as the "weed of wisdom" and is reputed to be the plant
  808. that grew on Solomon's grave, a man known for his great wisdom.
  809. Marijuana expands consciousness and enhances the capacity for
  810. mystical and creative inspiration.
  811. In Acts 2:3 Fire speaks figuratively of the Holy Spirit. Fire
  812. was also a means which to transport a saint to heaven.
  813. 2 Kings 2:11 "And it came to pass, as they still went
  814. on, and talked, that, behold, there appeared a chariot
  815. of fire, and horses of fire, and parted asunder; and
  816. Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven."
  817. Recent writers have speculated that this passage was in
  818. reference to flying saucers. That is because they look at this
  819. passage physically. This ascension of Elijah like the ascension
  820. of Christ in the cloud into heaven is the "withdrawal" from the
  821. external or physical world, to be the inmost reality of all. This
  822. can be referred to as ecstasy, rapture, or transport and is a
  823. result of the Holy Spirit. Ecstasy, rapture, or transport therefor
  824. agree in designating a feeling or state of intense, often extreme
  825. mental and emotional exaltation. Rapture is defined as ecstatic
  826. joy or delight; joyful ecstasy. Some of the synonyms of rapture
  827. are bliss, beatitude, transport, and exultation. The true rapture
  828. is therefore one in which one is spiritually transported to the
  829. heavens. Don't expect to float up into the sky.
  830. Marijuana as history has shown is the catalyst used to achieve
  831. the spiritual journey into the heavens. That is why in India it
  832. was referred to as the Heavenly-Guide, the Poor Man's Heaven, and
  833. the Sky-flier. That is why Professor Mircea Eliade, perhaps the
  834. foremost authority on the history of religion, suggested that
  835. Zoroaster may have caused hemp to bridge the metaphysical gap
  836. between heaven and earth.
  837. One dictionary defines marijuana as the leaves and flowering
  838. tops when taken to induce euphoria. Euphoria is defined by the
  839. same dictionary as great happiness or bliss. (In India, marijuana
  840. has been referred to as the joy-giver and the soother of grief.)
  841. Bliss is defined as the ecstasy of salvation, spiritual joy. Some
  842. of the synonyms of bliss are beatitude, transport, rapture,
  843. ecstasy, paradise, heaven.
  844. Throughout the ancient world there is mention of "magical
  845. flight", "ascent to heaven", and "mystical journey". All these
  846. mythological and folklore traditions have their point of departure
  847. in an ideology and technique of ecstasy that imply "journey in
  848. spirit".
  849. The pilgrimage from earth to heaven is not a journey to some
  850. other place or some other time, but is a journey within. One must
  851. realize that "death" through which we must pass before God can be
  852. seen does not lie ahead of us in time. Rather it is now that we
  853. have a man of sin within us that must be killed and a new man free
  854. from sin that must be born. This is actualized in baptism and the
  855. sacramental life in the church. For as many of you as have been
  856. baptized into Christ have put on Christ (Galatians 3:27). The
  857. effect of baptism is spiritual regeneration or rebirth, whereby one
  858. is "enChristened", involving both union with Christ and remission
  859. of sins. In Titus 3:5 baptism is the "bath of regeneration"
  860. accompanying renewal by the Spirit. Some of the synonyms of
  861. regeneration are beatification, conversion, sanctification,
  862. salvation, inspiration, bread of life, Body and Blood of Christ.
  863. Sara Benetowa of the Institute of Anthropological Sciences in
  864. Warsaw is quoted in the Book of Grass as saying:
  865. "By comparing the old Slavic word 'Kepati' and the
  866. Russian 'Kupati' with the Scythian 'cannabis' Shrader
  867. developed and justified Meringer's supposition that there
  868. is a link between the Scythian baths and Russian vapor
  869. baths.
  870. "In the entire Orient even today to 'go to the bath'
  871. means not only to accomplish an act of purification and
  872. enjoy a pleasure, but also to fulfill the divine law.
  873. Vambery calls 'bath' any club in which the members play
  874. checkers, drink coffee, and smoke hashish or tobacco."
  875. St. Matthew's account of the institution of the Eucharist
  876. attaches to the Eucharist cup these words: "Drink of it, all of,
  877. for this is the blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many
  878. for the remission of sins (st. Matthew 26:27). Drinking the
  879. sacramental cup therefor serves like baptism (Acts 2:38) where
  880. Peter said unto them, "Repent, and be baptized everyone of you in
  881. the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall
  882. receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. We of the Ethiopian Zion
  883. Coptic Church declare a three-part doctrine of the Holy Herb, the
  884. Holy Word, and the Holy Man (Woman).
  885. The present and future benefits to the individual communicant
  886. have their importance given them by Jesus, who said, "He who eats
  887. my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise
  888. them up at the last day." (John 6:54) As such we must see that the
  889. divine person who is active in creation, in renewal, and in human
  890. rebirth and resurrection, is also active in the Eucharist.
  891. There was a profound change in America when marijuana smoking
  892. started on a large scale in the late 1960's. A large number of
  893. people resisted the draft, resisted the war ... started letting
  894. their hair and beards grow ... became interested in natural
  895. foods... the ecology and the environment. What we really saw was
  896. the awakening of our generation to the beginning of Christian
  897. mentality through marijuana smoking. The earmarks of this
  898. mentality are: I don't want to go to war; I really don't want to
  899. be part of the political-military-economic fiasco you call society.
  900. Like the Indians Hemp Drug Commission three quarters of a
  901. century earlier, the Canadian Le Dain Commission conducted an
  902. inquiry into the use of marijuana. On page 156 of the report is
  903. the following:
  904. "In the case of cannabis, the positive points which are
  905. claimed for it include the following: It is a relaxant;
  906. it is disinhibiting; it increases self-confidence and
  907. the feeling of creativity (whether justified by creative
  908. results or not); it increases sensual awareness and
  909. appreciation; it facilitates self acceptance and in this
  910. way makes it easier to accept others; it serves a
  911. sacramental function in promoting a sense of spiritual
  912. community among users; it is a shared pleasure; because
  913. it is illicit and the object of strong disapproval from
  914. those who are, by and large, opposed to social change,
  915. it is a symbol of protest and a means of strengthening
  916. the sense of identity among those who are strongly
  917. critical of certain aspects of our society and value
  918. structure today."
  919. On page 144 of the Report, marijuana is associated with peace.
  920. "In our conversation with (students and young people)
  921. they have frequently contrasted marijuana and alcohol
  922. effects to describe the former as a drug of peace, a drug
  923. that reduces tendencies to aggression while suggesting
  924. that the latter drug produces hostile, aggressive
  925. behavior. Thus marijuana is seen as particularly
  926. appropriate to a generation that emphasizes peace and is,
  927. in many ways, anticompetitive."
  928. In a magazine article by G. S. Chopra entitled "Man and
  929. Marijuana" on page 235 is a section dealing with Human Experiments.
  930. One hundred persons with an established marijuana smoking habit
  931. smoked marijuana. They described the symptoms as follows: "I have
  932. done things today which I usually dislike but which I rather
  933. enjoyed doing today." "Nothing seemed impossible to accomplish."
  934. "I assumed a cool and composed attitude and forgot all mental
  935. worries." "I behaved in a childish and foolish manner." "It
  936. relieves sense of fatigue and gives rise to feelings of happiness."
  937. "I feel like laughing." "My head is dizzy." "I feel like taking
  938. more food." "The world is gay around me." "I feel inclined to
  939. work." "I am a friend to all and have no enemy in the world."
  940. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, in the section on
  941. "Roman Catholicism":
  942. "To understand the meaning and use of the Eucharist we
  943. must see it as an act of universal worship, of
  944. cooperation, of association else it loses the greater
  945. part of its significance. Neither in Roman Catholic nor
  946. in Protestant Eucharistic practice does the sacrament
  947. retain much of the symbolism of Christian unity, which
  948. clearly it has. Originally, the symbolism was that of
  949. a community meal, an accepted social symbol of community
  950. throughout the whole of human culture."
  951. Marijuana has been used as sacrifice, a sacrament, a ritual
  952. fumigant (incense), a good-will offering, and as a means of
  953. communing with the divine spirit. It has been used to seal
  954. treaties, friendships, solemn binding agreements and to legitimize
  955. covenants. It has been used as a traditional defense against evil
  956. and in purification. It has been used in divinations (1. the art
  957. or practice that seeks to foresee or foretell future events or
  958. discover hidden knowledge; 2. unusual insight; intuitive
  959. perception.) It has been used in remembrance of the dead and
  960. praised for its medicinal properties.
  961. Most Christians agree that participation in the Eucharist is
  962. supposed to enhance and deepen communion of believers not only with
  963. Christ but also with one another. We must therefor ask the
  964. question, "What substance did the ancients use as a community meal
  965. to facilitate communion with the Lord?" The answer to that
  966. question is marijuana. Hemp as originally used in religious
  967. ritual, temple activities, and tribal rites, involved groups of
  968. worshippers rather than the solitary individual. The pleasurable
  969. psychoactive effects were then, as now, communal experiences.
  970. Practically every major religion and culture of the ancient
  971. world utilized marijuana as part of their religious observance.
  972. Marijuana was the ambrosia of the ancient world. It was the food,
  973. drink, and perfume of the gods. It was used by the Africans, the
  974. Egyptians, the Assyrians, the Asians, the Europeans, and possibly
  975. the Indians of the Americas. Would it be too much to suggest that
  976. the ancient Israelites also utilized marijuana?
  977. The following information was taken from the most
  978. authoritative books dealing with the history of marijuana. They
  979. are mentioned at the end of this work.
  980. MARIJUANA IN INDIA
  981. In Indian tradition marijuana is associated with immortality.
  982. There is a complex myth of the churning of the Ocean of Milk by the
  983. gods, their joint act of creation. They were in search of Amrita,
  984. the elixir of eternal life. When the gods, helped by demons,
  985. churned the ocean to obtain Amrita, one of the resulting nectars
  986. was cannabis. After churning the ocean, the demons attempted to
  987. gain control of Amrita (marijuana), but the gods were able to
  988. prevent this seizure, giving cannabis the name Vijaya ("victory")
  989. to commemorate their success.
  990. Other ancient Indian names for marijuana were "sacred grass",
  991. "hero leaved", "joy", "rejoicer", "desired in the three worlds"'
  992. "gods' food", "fountain of pleasures"' and "Shiva's plant".
  993. Early Indian legends maintained that the angel of mankind
  994. lived in the leaves of the marijuana plant. It was so sacred that
  995. it was reputed to deter evil and cleanse its user of sin. In Hindu
  996. mythology hemp is a holy plant given to man for the "welfare of
  997. mankind" and is considered to be one of the divine nectars able to
  998. give man anything from good health, to long life, to visions of the
  999. gods. Nectar is defined as the fabled drink of the gods.
  1000. Tradition maintains that when nectar or Amrita dropped from
  1001. heaven, that cannabis sprouted from it. In Hindu mythology Amrita
  1002. means immortality; also, the ambrosial drink which produced it.
  1003. In India hemp is made into a drink and is reputed to be the
  1004. favorite drink of Indra (the King of Indian gods.) Tradition
  1005. maintains that the god Indra gave marijuana to the people so that
  1006. they might attain elevated states of consciousness, delight in
  1007. worldly joy, and freedom from fear.
  1008. According to Hindu legends, Siva, the Supreme God of many
  1009. Hindu sects, had some family squabble and went off to the fields.
  1010. He sat under a hemp plant so as to be sheltered from the heat of
  1011. the sun and happened to eat some of its leaves. He felt so
  1012. refreshed from the hemp plant that it became his favorite food,
  1013. and that is how he got his title, the Lord of Bhang.
  1014. Cannabis is mentioned as a medicinal and magical plant as well
  1015. as a "sacred grass" in the Atharva Veda (dated 2000 - 1400 B.C.)
  1016. It also calls hemp one of the five kingdoms of herbs...which
  1017. releases us from anxiety and refers to hemp as a "source of
  1018. happiness", "joy-giver" and "liberator". Although the holy books,
  1019. the Shastras, forbid the worship of the plant, it has been
  1020. venerated and used as a sacrifice to the deities.
  1021. Indian Tradition, writing, and belief is that the "Siddhartha"
  1022. (the Buddha), used and ate nothing but hemp and its seeds for six
  1023. years prior to announcing (discovering) his truths and becoming the
  1024. Buddha.
  1025. Cannabis held a preeminent place in the Tantric religion which
  1026. evolved in Tibet in the seventh century A.D. Tantrism was a
  1027. religion based on fear of demons. To combat the demonic threat to
  1028. the world, the people sought protection in plants such as cannabis
  1029. which were set afire to overcome evil forces.
  1030. In the tenth century A.D. hemp was extolled as indracanna,
  1031. the "food of the gods". A fifteenth-century document refers to
  1032. cannabis as "light-hearted", "joy-full" and "rejoices", and claimed
  1033. that among its virtues are "astringency", "heat", "speech-giving",
  1034. "inspiration of mental powers", "excitability" and the capacity to
  1035. "remove wind and phlegm".
  1036. Today in the Tantric Buddhism of the Himalayas of Tibet,
  1037. cannabis plays a very significant role in the meditative ritual to
  1038. facilitate deep meditation and heighten awareness. In modern India
  1039. it is taken at Hindu and Sikh temples and Mohammedan shrines.
  1040. Among fakirs (Hindu ascetics) bhang is viewed as the giver of long
  1041. life and a means of communion with the divine spirit. Like his
  1042. Hindu brother, the Musalman fakir reveres bhang as the lengthener
  1043. of life and the freer from the bonds of self.
  1044. At the turn of the twentieth century, the Indian Hemp Drugs
  1045. Commission set up to study the use of hemp in India contains the
  1046. following report:
  1047. "...It is inevitable that temperaments would be found to
  1048. whom the quickening spirit of bhang is the spirit of
  1049. freedom and knowledge. In the ecstasy of bhang the spark
  1050. of the Eternal in man turns into the light the murkiness
  1051. of matter.
  1052. "...Bhang is the Joy-giver, the Sky-filler, the Heavenly-
  1053. Guide, the Poor Man's Heaven, the Soother of Grief...No
  1054. god or man is as good as the religious drinker of
  1055. bhang...The supporting power of bhang has brought many
  1056. a Hindu family safe through the miseries of famine. To
  1057. forbid or even seriously restrict the use of so gracious
  1058. an herb as the hemp would cause widespread suffering and
  1059. annoyance and to large bands of worshipped ascetics,
  1060. deep-seated anger. It would rob the people of a solace
  1061. on discomfort, of a cure in sickness, of a guardian whose
  1062. gracious protection saves them from the attacks of evil
  1063. influences...
  1064. MARIJUANA IN CHINA
  1065. Hemp was so highly regarded in ancient China that the Chinese
  1066. called their country "the land of mulberry and hemp". Hemp was a
  1067. symbol of power over evil and in emperor Shen Nung's pharmacopoeia
  1068. was known as the "liberator of sin". The Chinese believed that the
  1069. legendary Shen Nung first taught the cultivation of hemp in the
  1070. 28th century B.C. Shen Nung is credited with developing the
  1071. sciences of medicine from the curative power of plants. So highly
  1072. regarded was Shen Nung that he was deified and today he is regarded
  1073. as the Father of Chinese medicine. Shen Nung was also regarded as
  1074. the Lord of fire. He sacrificed on T'ai Shan, a mountain of hoary
  1075. antiquity.
  1076. A statement in the Pen-ts'ao Ching of some significance is
  1077. that Cannabis "grows along rivers and valleys at T'ai-shan, but it
  1078. is now common everywhere." Mount T'ai is in Shangtung Privince,
  1079. where the cultivation of the hemp plant is still intensive to this
  1080. day. Whether or not this early attribution indicates the actual
  1081. geographic origin of the cultivation of the Cannabis plant remains
  1082. to be seen. (An Archeological and Historical Account of Cannabis
  1083. in China by Hui-Lin Li)
  1084. A chines Taoist priest wrote in the fifth century B.C. that
  1085. cannabis was used in combination with Ginseng to set forward time
  1086. in order to reveal future events. It is recorded that the Taoist
  1087. recommended the addition of cannabis to their incense burners in
  1088. the 1st century A.D. and that the effects thus produced were highly
  1089. regarded as a means of achieving immortality. In the early Chinese
  1090. Taoist ritual the fumes and odors of incense burners were said to
  1091. have produced a mystic exaltation and contribution to well-being.
  1092. Webster's New Riverside Dictionary defines marijuana: 1. Hemp
  1093. 2. The dried flower clusters and leaves of the hemp plant, esp.
  1094. when taken to induce euphoria. Euphoria is defined as a strong
  1095. feeling of elation or well-being.
  1096. Like the practice of medicine around the world, early Chinese
  1097. doctoring was based on the concept of demons. The only way to cure
  1098. the sick was to drive out the demons. The early priest doctors
  1099. used marijuana stalks into which snake-like figures were carved.
  1100. Standing over the body of the stricken patient, his cannabis stalk
  1101. poised to strike, the priest pounded the bed and commanded the
  1102. demon to be gone. The cannabis stalk with the snake carved on it
  1103. was the forerunner to the sign of modern medicine (the staff with
  1104. the entwined serpents.)
  1105. MARIJUANA IN JAPAN
  1106. Hemp was used in Ancient Japan in ceremonial purification
  1107. rites and for driving away evil spirits. In Japan, Shinto priests
  1108. used a gohei, a short stick with undyed hemp fibers (for purity)
  1109. attached to one end. According to Shinto beliefs, evil and purity
  1110. cannot exist alongside one another, and so by waving the gohei
  1111. (purity) above someone's head the evil spirit inside him would be
  1112. driven away. Clothes made of hemp were especially worn during
  1113. formal and religious ceremonies because of hemp's traditional
  1114. association with purity.
  1115. MARIJUANA IN ANCIENT IRAN
  1116. Ancient Iran was the source for the great Persian empire,
  1117. Iran is located slightly to the northeast of the ancient kingdoms
  1118. of Sumeria, Babylonia, and Assyria. According to Mircea Eliade,
  1119. "Shamanistic ecstasy induced by hemp smoke was known in ancient
  1120. Iran." Professor Eliade has suggested that Zoroaster, the Persian
  1121. prophet, said to have written the Zend-Avesta, was a user of hemp.
  1122. In the Zend-Avesta hemp occupies the first place in a list of
  1123. 10,000 medicinal plants.
  1124. One of the few surviving books of the Zend-Avesta, called the
  1125. Venidad, "The Law Against Demons", calls bhanga (marijuana)
  1126. Zoroaster's "good narcotic", and tells of two mortals who were
  1127. transported in soul to the heavens where, upon drinking from a cup
  1128. of bhang, they had the highest mysteries revealed to them.
  1129. Professor Eliade has theorized that Zoroaster may have used hemp
  1130. to bridge the metaphysical gap between heaven and earth.
  1131. MARIJUANA IN ANCIENT EGYPT
  1132. In the book, Plants of the Gods: Origin of Hallucinogenic Use
  1133. by Richard E. Schultes and Albert Hofman, page 72, it is stated
  1134. that the specimens of marijuana nearly 4,000 years old have turned
  1135. up in an Egyptian site and that in ancient Thebes the plant was
  1136. made into a drink.
  1137. MARIJUANA IN EUROPE
  1138. According to Nikolaas j. van der Merwe (Department of
  1139. Archaeology, University of Cape Town, South Africa) the peasants
  1140. of Europe have been using cannabis as medicine, ritual material,
  1141. and to smoke or chew as far back as oral traditions go.
  1142. Marijuana was an integral part of the Scythian cult of the
  1143. dead wherein homage was paid to the memory of their departed
  1144. leaders. This use of cannabis was found in frozen Scythian tombs
  1145. dated from 500 to 300 B.C. Along with the cannabis a miniature
  1146. tripod-like tent over a copper censer was found in which the sacred
  1147. plant was burned.
  1148. It is interesting to note that two extraordinary rugs were
  1149. also found in the frozen Scythian tombs. One rug had a border
  1150. frieze with a repeated composition of a horseman approaching the
  1151. Great Goddess who holds the "Tree of Life" in one hand and raises
  1152. the other hand in welcome.
  1153. MARIJUANA IN AFRICA
  1154. The African continent is probably the zone showing the widest
  1155. prevalence of the hemp drug habit. When white men first went to
  1156. Africa, marijuana was part of the native way of life. Africa was
  1157. a continent of marijuana cultures where marijuana was an integral
  1158. part of religious ceremony. The Africans were observed inhaling
  1159. the smoke from piles of smoldering hemp. Some of these piles had
  1160. been placed upon altars. The Africans also utilized pipes. The
  1161. African Dagga (marijuana) cults believed that Holy Cannabis was
  1162. brought to earth by the gods. (Throughout the ancient world
  1163. Ethiopia was considered the home of the gods.)
  1164. In south central Africa, marijuana is held to be sacred and
  1165. is connected with many religious and social customs. Marijuana is
  1166. regarded by some sects as a magic plant possessing universal
  1167. protection against all injury to life, and is symbolic of peace
  1168. and friendship. Certain tribes consider hemp use a duty.
  1169. The earliest evidence for cannabis smoking in Africa outside
  1170. of Egypt comes from fourteenth century Ethiopia, where two ceramic
  1171. smoking-pipe bowls containing traces of excavation. In many parts
  1172. of East Africa, especially near Lake Victoria (the source for the
  1173. Nile), hemp smoking and hashish snuffing cults still exist.
  1174. MARIJUANA IN THE NEW WORLD
  1175. According to Richard L. Lingeman in his book Drugs from A to
  1176. Z, page 146, "Marijuana smoking was known by the Indians before
  1177. Columbus." After the Spanish conquest in 1521 the Spaniards
  1178. recorded that the Aztecs (Mayans) used marijuana.
  1179. The present day Cuna Indians of Panama use marijuana as a
  1180. sacred herb and the Cora Indians of the Sierra Madre Occidental of
  1181. Mexico smoke marijuana in this course of their sacred ceremonies.
  1182. In the Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L by William A Emboden,
  1183. Jr., pages 229 and 231, is the following:
  1184. "A particularly interesting account of a Tepehua (no
  1185. relationship to "Tepecana") Indian ceremony with cannabis
  1186. was published in 1963 by the Mexican ethnologist Roberto
  1187. William Garcia of the University of Veracruz,
  1188. northernmost branch of the Maya language family.
  1189. "In his account of Teehua religion and ritual, Willianm
  1190. Garcia (1963:215-21) describes in some detail a communal
  1191. curing ceremony focused on a plant called santa rose,
  1192. "The Herb Which Makes One Speak", which he identified
  1193. botanically as Cannabis Sativa: According to Garcia it
  1194. is worshipped as an earth deity and is thought to be
  1195. alive and comparable to a piece of the heart of God."
  1196. MARIJUANA USE BY THE MOSLEMS
  1197. It is interesting to note that the use of hemp was not
  1198. prohibited by Mohammed (570-632 A.D.) while the use of alcohol was.
  1199. Moslems considered hemp as a "Holy Plant" and medieval Arab doctors
  1200. considered hemp as a sacred medicine which they called among other
  1201. names kannab. The Sufis (a Moslem sect) originating in 8th century
  1202. Persia used hashish as a means of stimulating mystical
  1203. consciousness and appreciation of the nature of Allah. Eating
  1204. hashish to the Sufis was "an act of worship". They maintained that
  1205. hashish gave them otherwise unattainable insights into themselves,
  1206. deeper understanding and that it made them feel witty. They also
  1207. claimed that it gave happiness, reduced anxiety, reduced worry, and
  1208. increased music appreciation.
  1209. According to one Arab legend Haydar, the Persian founder of
  1210. the religious order of Sufi came across the cannabis plant while
  1211. wandering in the Persian mountains. Usually a reserved and silent
  1212. man, when he returned to his monastery after eating some cannabis
  1213. leaves, his disciples were amazed at how talkative and animated
  1214. (full of spirit) he seemed. After cajoling Haydar into telling
  1215. them what he had done to make him feel so happy, his disciples went
  1216. out into the mountains and tried the cannabis themselves. So it
  1217. was, according to the legend, that the Sufis came to know the
  1218. pleasures of hashish. (Taken from the Introduction to A
  1219. Comprehensive Guide to Cannabis Literature by Earnest Abel.)
  1220. SUMMARY
  1221. Due to the prosecution of God's church from the beginning of
  1222. the Christian era and due to the persecution against marijuana the
  1223. true understanding of the Eucharist has remained hidden from
  1224. Christendom and the world, only to be revealed in these times, the
  1225. culmination of all human history.
  1226. We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church declare marijuana for
  1227. the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, and for the
  1228. resurrection of mankind. The fruits of the mystery are remembrance
  1229. of the passions and death of Christ, propitiation for sins, defense
  1230. against temptation, and the indwelling of Christ in the faithful.
  1231. Preparations for communion consist of confession of sins,
  1232. fasting from sin, and reconciliation with all mankind. As such
  1233. the participant in the Eucharist will be in a condition in which
  1234. prayer and meditation are easy and fruitful. He will find his
  1235. emotion purified and stimulated, his spirituality quickened and
  1236. his heart filled with love.
  1237. SOURCES
  1238. Richard E. Schultes, article: "Man and Marijuana"
  1239. Richard E. Schultes and Albert Hofman, Plants of the Gods -- Origin
  1240. of Hallucinogenic Use (McGraw-Hill Book Co. [U.K.] Limited,
  1241. Maidenhead, England [1979]).
  1242. G.S. Chopra, article: "Man and Marijuana", International Journal
  1243. of the Addict,1969, 4, 215-247.
  1244. Earnest L. Abel, Marijuana, the First Twelve Thousand Years (Phenum
  1245. Press, New York, 1980)
  1246. Earnest L. Abel, A Comprehensive Guide to Cannabis Literature
  1247. Earnest L. Abel, Marijuana Dictionary: Words, Terms, Events and
  1248. Persons Relating to Cannabis(Greenwood Press, Westpoint,
  1249. Connecticut [1982])
  1250. Edward M. Breecher and the Editors of Consumer Reports, The
  1251. Consumer Union Report, "Licit and Illicit Drugs", (Little, Brown,
  1252. and Co.)
  1253. Louis Lewin, Phantastica, Narcotic and Stimulating Drugs: Their Use
  1254. and Abuse, (London: Kegan, Trench, Turbner and Co., Ltd. Translated
  1255. from the second German edition by P.H.A. Wirth, 1931) (N.Y.,
  1256. Dutton, 1964, reprint, 1924, trans. 1931)
  1257. Sula Benet, Cannabis and Culture, ed. V. Rubin (The Hague: Moutan,
  1258. 1975)
  1259. Richard E. Lingeman, Drugs from A to Z, A Dictionary (McGraw-Hill
  1260. Book Co., 1969, 74)
  1261. John R. Glowa, The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Drugs (Chelsea
  1262. House Pub., N.Y., New Haven, Philadelphia, 1986)
  1263. George Andrews and Simon Vinkenoog, The Book of Grass: An Anthology
  1264. on Indian Hemp; Chandler and Sharp Series in Cross Cultural Themes
  1265. (N.Y., Grove Press [1967])
  1266. Jack Herer, The Emperor Wears No Clothes, 1985, 90, 91, 92.
  1267. Peter T. Furst, Hallucinogens and Culture (Chandler and Sharp
  1268. Publishers, Inc., 1976)
  1269. Baudelaire, Artificial Paradises
  1270. Dr. Charles Tart, "On Being Stoned: A Psychological Study of
  1271. Marijuana Intoxication" (Science and Behavior, 1971)
  1272. William A. Emboden, Jr. Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L
  1273. S.I. Rudenko, Frozen Tombs of Siberia (Dent., London, 1970)
  1274. Edward Atchley, A History of the Use of Incense in Divine Worship
  1275. E. A. Wallis Budge, The Divine Origin of the Craft of the Herbalist
  1276. Egon C. Corti, A history of Smoking, by Count Corti; Translated by
  1277. Paul England (G.G. Harrap, London, England, 1931)
  1278. Francis Robicsek, The Smoking Gods: Tobacco in Mayan Art, History,
  1279. and Religion (University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1978)
  1280. Diodurus, Histories 1.97.7
  1281. Herman Scneider, History of World Civilization, 2v (New York, 1931)
  1282. M.N. Dhalla, Zoroastrian Civilization (Oxford University Press,
  1283. N.Y., 1922)
  1284. Sir Charles Eliot, Hinduism and Buddhism 3v. (Routledge & K. Paul,
  1285. London, 1921)
  1286. A.A. McDonell, India's Past (The Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1927)
  1287. Charles Anthon, A Classical Dictionary (N.Y., Harpers and Brothers,
  1288. 1848)
  1289. G. Maspero, The Dawn of Civilization: Egypt and Chaldea (London,
  1290. 1897)
  1291. Lucy Lamy, Egyptian Mysteries
  1292. Friedrich Ratzel, History of Mankind (N.Y., Gordon Press)
  1293. R.H. Charles The Book of Jubilees, cap, iij, (London, 1902)
  1294. Alfred Wiedemann, Religion of the Ancient Egyptians (London, 1987)
  1295. Geoffrey Wainwright, Eucharist and Eschatology (Epworth Press,
  1296. London, 1971)
  1297. Webster's Third New International Dictionary, 1966
  1298. The Book of the Dead, Edit. E.A.W. Budge, British Museum, 1895, p.
  1299. 250
  1300. J. Jeremias, in Encyclopedia, Iv, 4119, quoting Rawlinson,
  1301. Cuneiform Inscription IV. 19 (59) Cnf. the story of Bel and the
  1302. Dragon.
  1303. John McKenzie, The Bible Dictionary (N.Y. MacMillan Pub. Co., 1965)
  1304. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Holy Spirit" (15th Edition, 1978)
  1305. Micropaedia, Ready Reference and Index
  1306. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Sacrifice" (15th Edition, 1978)
  1307. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Pharmacological Cults" (15th Edition,
  1308. 1978), p. 199
  1309. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Coptic"
  1310. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Essenes"
  1311. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Theraputea"
  1312. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Sacred Pipe" (15th Edition)
  1313. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Incense"
  1314. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Hemp" (Microppaedia Ready Reference and
  1315. Index, p. 1016)
  1316. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Roman Catholicism, The Eucharist" (Volume
  1317. 15, p. 998)
  1318. Encyclopedia Britannica, "Mysticism"
  1319. King James version of The Bible
  1320. The Apocrypha
  1321. We hope you enjoyed this pamphlet. If you have any questions
  1322. or comments, we would like to see them. Send them to the Ethiopian
  1323. Zion Coptic Church, P.O. Box 1161, Minneola, FL 34755-1161.
  1324. We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church decided to publish this
  1325. pamphlet in order to give the public an opportunity to study the
  1326. church and its doctrine; not from inflated and misleading media but
  1327. from historical and Biblical reference. The Church has received
  1328. extensive publicity as "60 Minutes" has done a segment; Life, Omni,
  1329. Science, Rolling Stone, and High Times magazines have all done
  1330. articles, countless newspaper articles have been written, and
  1331. various brothers have been on radio and TV talk shows around the
  1332. country.
  1333. We of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church revere ganja
  1334. (marijuana) as our "holy" Eucharist and "spiritual intensifier"
  1335. with Biblical, historical and divine associations for its use.
  1336. Ganja is the mystical body and blood of "Jes-us" -- the burnt
  1337. offering made by fire -- which allows a member to see and know the
  1338. "living God", or the "God in man".

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