Holy Smokes! This Toronto-Based Church Goes to Pot

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
If you yearn to taste religion, it's a spiritual smorgasbord.

Within about 21 major religions there are hundreds of large religious groups and thousands of smaller independent churches. Each one naturally believes theirs is the correct creed.

Signing on can require an introductory course, jumping doctrinal hurdles, obeying rules perhaps and subscribing to an interpretation of sacred scripture.

If you're looking for something simple, however, consider the Church of the Universe. Founded in 1969, it has but two rules: Do not hurt yourself and do not hurt anyone else.

Easy-peasy.

As for scriptural interpretation, it focuses on one verse in the last chapter of the Bible. Revelation 22:2 says "The leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations."

Obviously, says the church, the holy plant here is cannabis and God's children "have a right to God's tree of life."

The church's founder was Walter Tucker, whose wife and family left him when he devoted his life to "worship and the divine weed." The high priest of hemp grew his hair and beard and began to wear hempen cloth. The church was inundated with new members on its property, a quarry outside Toronto. Buildings were erected. Church members shared their bare skins with the sun and rocks, partaking freely of their sacrament of marijuana.

The tree of life, ahem, took hold in the soil. And as the forest grew, so did Tucker's vision. Tucker began ordaining ministers and missionaries. The church currently boasts about 4,000 members across Canada and about 35 ministers who are mandated to wear headgear such as a yarmulke or turban.

The church uses marijuana as a sacrament in the search for an understanding of their spirituality and connection with God. Church members are asked to sign a simple statement of faith and pay a small fee.

Through the years, their holy smoke has been hindered by the prevailing winds of Canadian law.

This week we learned the church will not get the blessings of the court to inhale its blessed sacrament, losing its bid to be exempt from Canada's pot laws.

It launched the constitutional challenge in defence of Peter Styrsky, who along with fellow church minister Shahrooz Kharaghani, was charged with trafficking marijuana in 2006. Prosecutors had argued that allowing the church's challenge would effectively legalize marijuana, as others would claim a religious right as well.

Although Ontario Superior Court Justice Thea Herman ruled against the church, she said the group is sincere in claiming it uses marijuana to connect to God.

"The provisions in question constitute a reasonable limit on the applicants' charter rights," reads Herman's ruling. However, Herman ultimately did not think it was possible to create a workable religious exemption.

"There is no feasible way to make an allowance for the religious use of cannabis in the circumstances of this case," she wrote.

"It is difficult, if not impossible, for an outsider to identify the religious user and religious use because religious use is barely distinguishable from recreational use."

The Crown argued that the applicants' religion is a "sham" and a "joke," a parody of religion designed to legitimize illegal behaviour.

As the church sees it, Adam and Eve, in tending the garden, were given care of the tree of life and were not forbidden its fruits or, I assume, its leaves.

Real religion is and always will be in the mind of the adherent. And the thirst for God satisfied in a multitude of sacramental behaviours.

Not only consuming wine but, allegedly, smoking weed.


NewsHawk: Jim Behr: 420 MAGAZINE
Source: Daily Herald-Tribune, The (CN AB)
Copyright: 2011 Osprey Media
Contact: Grande Prairie Daily Herald Tribune
Website: Grande Prairie Daily Herald Tribune - Alberta, CA
Details: MapInc
Author: Rev. Bob Ripley
 
Genesis 1.29

God said, "See, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit; you shall have them for food.

"Every plant yielding seed," includes cannabis, as the word "every" includes all. But opponents, themselves often Bible-literalists, will say that our interpretation would take this "out of context," though I have had trouble gaining an answer from these prohibitionists as to what else "every" could mean, but all.
 
(continued)

Or what that possible context could distort the plain meaning of a simple declarative statement so dramatically as to make it mean precisely what it does NOT say.

But reason has never been on the side of our opponents, nor are they persuaded by it.
 
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