>From verdant@student.umass.edu Mon May  3 19:03:24 1993
Date: 03 May 1993 17:44:40 -0400
From: Sol Lightman <verdant@student.umass.edu>
To: pauls@css.itd.umich.edu
Subject: incense:UMACRC_requested_file

+---------------------------------------------------------------+
: DISCLAIMER -- The UMACRC does not affiliate with ANY religion.|
+---------------------------------------------------------------+

We do, however, believe that the right to use marijuana in
religious ceremony should not be violated.

The following is the text of a pamphlet entitled "Marijuana and
The Bible" published by the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church,
or an excerpt thereof.


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----- to request the entire pamphlet, use {{{#bible}}}


                   USE OF MARIJUANA AS INCENSE


     According to the Encyclopedia Britannica: "Pharmacological
Cults"

     "...the ceremonial use of incense in contemporary ritual is
     most likely a relic of the time when the psychoactive
     properties of incense brought the ancient worshipper in touch
     with supernatural forces."

     In the temples of the ancient world, the main sacrifice was
the inhalation of incense.  Incense is defined as the perfume or
smoke from spices and gums when burned in celebrating religious
rites or as an offering to a deity.  Bronze and gold incense
burners were cast very early in history and their forms were often
inspired by cosmological themes representing the harmonious nature
of the universe.

     The following piece was taken from "Licit and Illicit Drugs",
page 31.

     "In the Judaic world, the vapors from burnt spices and
     aromatic gums were considered part of the pleasurable
     act of worship.  In proverbs (27:9) it is said that
     'Ointment and perfumes rejoice the heart.'  Perfumes were
     widely used in Egyptian worship.  Stone altars have been
     unearthed in Babylon and Palestine, which have been used
     for burning incense made of aromatic wood and spices. 
     While the casual readers today may interpret such
     practices as mere satisfaction of the desire for pleasant
     odors, this is almost certainly an error; in many or most
     cases, a psychoactive drug was being inhaled.  In the
     islands of the Mediterranean 2,500 years ago and in
     Africa hundreds of years ago, for example leaves and
     flowers of a particular plant were often thrown upon
     bonfires and the smoke inhaled; the plant was marijuana."
     (Edward Preble and Gabriel V. Laurey, Plastic Cement: The
     Ten Cent Hallucinogen, International Journal of the
     Addictions, 2 (Fall 2967): 271-272.

     "The earliest civilizations of Mesopotamia brewed
     intoxicating beer of barley more than 5,000 years ago;
     is it too much to assume that even earlier cultures
     experienced euphoria, accidentally or deliberately,
     through inhalation of the resinous smoke of Cannabis?" 
     (Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L, p. 216.)

     "It is said that the Assyrians used hemp (marijuana) as
     incense in the seventh or eighth century before Christ
     and called it 'Qunubu', a term apparently borrowed from
     an old East Iranian word 'Konaba', the same as the
     Scythian name 'cannabis'."  (Plants of the Gods -- Origin
     of Hallucinogenic Use by Richard E. Schultes and Albert
     Hoffman)

     "It is recorded that the Chinese Taoist recommended the
     addition of cannabis to their incense burners in the 1st
     century as a means of achieving immortality." (Marijuana,
     the First Twelve Thousand Years by Earnest Abel, page 5)

     "There is a classic Greek term, cannabeizein, which means
     to smoke cannabis.  Cannabeizein frequently took the form
     of inhaling vapors from an incense burner in which these
     resins were mixed with other resins, such as myrrh,
     balsam, frankincense, and perfumes." (Ritual Use of
     Cannabis Sativa L)

     "Herodotus in the fifth century B.C. observed the
     Scythians throwing hemp on heated stone to create smoke
     and observed them inhaling this smoke.  Although he does
     not identify them, Herodotus states that when they "have
     parties and sit around a fire, they throw some of it into
     the flames.  As it burns, it smokes like incense, and the
     smell of it makes them drunk, just as wine does us.  As
     more fruit is thrown on, they get more and more
     intoxicated until finally they jump up and start dancing
     and singing." (Herodotus, Histories 1.202.)




                     ISRAELITE USE OF INCENSE

     It was said that Moses, at the direction of Almighty God,
first brought in the use of incense in public worship, and that
the other nations of antiquity copied the practice from him.  It
was however a practice that began with Adam.  The "Book of
Jubilees", an Apocryphal book, (the Apocrypha was considered
canonical by the early church and is to this day by the Ethiopian
Zion Coptic Church) states that "on the day when Adam went forth
from the Garden of Eden, he offered as a sweet savour an offering
of frankincense, galbanum, and stacte, and spices, in the morning
with the rising of the sun, from the day when he covered his
shame."  And of Enoch we read that "he burnt the incense of the
sanctuary, even sweet spices, acceptable before the Lord, on the
Mount."

     Incense was assigned miraculous powers by the Israelites.  It
was burned in golden bowls or cauldrons placed on or beside the
altar.  It was also burned in hand-held censers.  In the Blessing
of Moses, a poem belonging to the Northern Kingdom of Israel, and
written about 760 B.C., the sacrificial smoke is offered to the God
of Israel.

     Let them teach Jacob thy judgments, and Israel thy law;
     Let them offer sacrificial smoke to thy nostrils, and
     whole burnt sacrifice upon thy altar.

     Throughout the Bible the ancient patriarchs were brought into
communion with God through smoking incense and at Mt. Sinai God
talked to Moses out of a bush that burned with fire (Exodus 3:1-
12).  After Moses brought the Israelite people out of Egypt he
returned to Mt. Sinai at which time God made a covenant with Moses
in which the Ten Commandments were revealed.  Exodus 19:8 describes
the conditions at the time of this covenant.

     Exodus 19:8 "And Mount Sinai was altogether on smoke,
     because the Lord descended upon it in fire: and the smoke
     thereof ascended as smoke of a furnace, and the whole
     mount quaked greatly.

     The Mysterious smoke mentioned in the covenant on Mt. Sinai
is also referred to as a cloud.

     Exodus 24:15 "And Moses went up into the mount, and a
     cloud covered the mount.  16 And the glory of the Lord
     abode upon Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it six
     days: and the seventh day he called unto Moses out of
     the midst of the cloud.

     Scriptures make it abundantly clear that the clouds and the
smoke are related to the burning of incense.  Exodus 40:26
describes Moses burning incense, a cloud covering the tent of the
congregation and the glory of the Lord filling the tabernacle. 
Leviticus 16:2-13 describes how God appeared in a cloud and refers
to it as the clouds of incense.  Numbers 16:17-19 describes how
every man of the congregation had a censer full of burning incense
and that the glory of the Lord appeared unto all the congregation. 
Isaiah 6:4 describes how Ezekial saw God in a smoke-filled inner
court.  Numbers 11:25 describes how God was revealed to moses and
the seventy elders in a cloud; that the spirit rested upon them and
that they prophesied and ceased not.

     The Book of Grass by Andrew and Vinkenoog includes a section
on Ancient Scythia and Iran by Mircea Eliade, one of the foremost
experts on the history of religions.  On pages 11 and 12 is the
following:

     "On one document appears to indicate the existence of a
     Getic shamanism:  It is Straho's account of the Myssian
     KAPNOBATAI, a name that has been translated, by analogy
     with Aristophanes' AEROBATES, as 'those who walk in
     clouds'; but it should be translated as 'those who walk
     in smoke'!  Presumably the smoke is hemp smoke, a
     rudimentary means of ecstasy known to both the Tracians
     and the Scythians..."

     This passage should be carefully noted.  Biblical passages
make it abundantly clear that the ancient Isrealites also walked
in clouds and in smoke.  In fact it was in the clouds of smoke that
God was revealed to the ancient Isrealites.  The words "smoke" and
"smoking" appear fifty times in the King James Version of the Bible
and two separate times the Bible says of the Lord, "There went up
a smoke out of his nostrils."  II Samuel 22:9, Psalms 18:8.

     There are numerous other places in the Bible that mention the
burning of incense, the mysterious cloud, and smoke.  This common
thread is found throughout the Bible, including the New Testament.

     St. Matthew 24:30 "And then shall appear the sign of the
     Son of Man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of
     the Earth morn, and they shall see the Son of Man coming
     in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory."

     Revelations 1:7 "Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every
     eye shall see him, and they also which pierced him: and
     all the kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him. 
     Even so, Amen."

     Revelations 8:3 "And another angel came and stood at the
     altar, having a golden censer: and there was given unto
     him much incense, that he should offer it with the
     prayers of all saints upon the golden altar which was
     before the throne. 4 And the smoke of the incense, which
     came with the prayers of the saints, ascended up before
     God out of the Angel's hand."

     Revelations 15:8 "And the temple was filled with smoke
     from the glory of God, and from his power."





                        SOURCES

Richard E. Schultes, article: "Man and Marijuana"

Richard E. Schultes and Albert Hofman, Plants of the Gods -- Origin
of Hallucinogenic Use  (McGraw-Hill Book Co. [U.K.] Limited,
Maidenhead, England [1979]).

G.S. Chopra, article: "Man and Marijuana", International Journal
of the Addict,1969, 4, 215-247.

Earnest L. Abel, Marijuana, the First Twelve Thousand Years (Phenum
Press, New York, 1980)

Earnest L. Abel, A Comprehensive Guide to Cannabis Literature

Earnest L. Abel, Marijuana Dictionary: Words, Terms, Events and
Persons Relating to Cannabis(Greenwood Press, Westpoint,
Connecticut [1982])

Edward M. Breecher and the Editors of Consumer Reports, The
Consumer Union Report, "Licit and Illicit Drugs", (Little, Brown,
and Co.)

Louis Lewin, Phantastica, Narcotic and Stimulating Drugs: Their Use
and Abuse, (London: Kegan, Trench, Turbner and Co., Ltd. Translated
from the second German edition by P.H.A. Wirth, 1931)  (N.Y.,
Dutton, 1964, reprint, 1924, trans. 1931)

Sula Benet, Cannabis and Culture, ed. V. Rubin (The Hague: Moutan,
1975)

Richard E. Lingeman, Drugs from A to Z, A Dictionary (McGraw-Hill
Book Co., 1969, 74)

John R. Glowa, The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Drugs (Chelsea
House Pub., N.Y., New Haven, Philadelphia, 1986)

George Andrews and Simon Vinkenoog, The Book of Grass: An Anthology
on Indian Hemp; Chandler and Sharp Series in Cross Cultural Themes
(N.Y., Grove Press [1967])

Jack Herer, The Emperor Wears No Clothes, 1985, 90, 91, 92.

Peter T. Furst, Hallucinogens and Culture (Chandler and Sharp
Publishers, Inc., 1976)

Baudelaire, Artificial Paradises

Dr. Charles Tart, "On Being Stoned: A Psychological Study of
Marijuana Intoxication" (Science and Behavior, 1971)

William A. Emboden, Jr. Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L

S.I. Rudenko, Frozen Tombs of Siberia (Dent., London, 1970)

Edward Atchley, A History of the Use of Incense in Divine Worship

E. A. Wallis Budge, The Divine Origin of the Craft of the Herbalist

Egon C. Corti, A history of Smoking, by Count Corti; Translated by
Paul England (G.G. Harrap, London, England, 1931)

Francis Robicsek, The Smoking Gods: Tobacco in Mayan Art, History,
and Religion (University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1978)

Diodurus, Histories 1.97.7

Herman Scneider, History of World Civilization, 2v (New York, 1931)

M.N. Dhalla, Zoroastrian Civilization (Oxford University Press,
N.Y., 1922)

Sir Charles Eliot, Hinduism and Buddhism 3v. (Routledge & K. Paul,
London, 1921)

A.A. McDonell, India's Past (The Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1927)

Charles Anthon, A Classical Dictionary (N.Y., Harpers and Brothers,
1848)

G. Maspero, The Dawn of Civilization: Egypt and Chaldea (London,
1897)

Lucy Lamy, Egyptian Mysteries

Friedrich Ratzel, History of Mankind (N.Y., Gordon Press)

R.H. Charles The Book of Jubilees, cap, iij, (London, 1902)

Alfred Wiedemann, Religion of the Ancient Egyptians (London, 1987)

Geoffrey Wainwright, Eucharist and Eschatology (Epworth Press,
London, 1971)

Webster's Third New International Dictionary, 1966

The Book of the Dead, Edit. E.A.W. Budge, British Museum, 1895, p.
250

J. Jeremias, in Encyclopedia, Iv, 4119, quoting Rawlinson,
Cuneiform Inscription IV. 19 (59)  Cnf. the story of Bel and the
Dragon.

John McKenzie, The Bible Dictionary (N.Y. MacMillan Pub. Co., 1965)

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Holy Spirit" (15th Edition, 1978)
Micropaedia, Ready Reference and Index

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Sacrifice" (15th Edition, 1978)

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Pharmacological Cults" (15th Edition,
1978), p. 199
Encyclopedia Britannica, "Coptic"

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Essenes"

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Theraputea"

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Sacred Pipe" (15th Edition)

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Incense"

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Hemp" (Microppaedia Ready Reference and
Index, p. 1016)

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Roman Catholicism, The Eucharist" (Volume
15, p. 998)

Encyclopedia Britannica, "Mysticism"

King James version of The Bible

The Apocrypha

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