Weed
Christians & Dope
Everything Is Permissible
Over time, we’ve relied on a largely oral tradition, mothers teaching
children right from wrong, to provide the tent poles of our Christian
conduct. Far too many of us sit in Sunday pews waiting for the pastor to
do that for us. What we should be doing is grounding ourselves in God’s
word and submitting our lives to Him through a relationship, a
communion, with the Holy Spirit. It is this relationship—not our
relationship with the pastor or even the laws of the state—which
provides proper guidance for moral conduct. In that proper relational
context, the changing face of society’s moral standards would not affect
us. So, for years, we’ve not taught on this because we didn’t have to.
We’ve simply leaned on the state as a crutch: dope is a crime, end of
discussion. What do we say now about this blunt sparking? This is a
conversation the church should have been having all along: what’s the
argument against Christians smoking pot?
Ben Anderson, Senior Pastor of Solid Rock Christian Center, told me,
“Man, that’s a hard one. I prefer to give people the straight truth and
not fall back on rhetoric. From a medical standpoint, I have no
objection to its usage. But, as Christians, we should be anti-abuse and
anti-addiction. Today’s argument seems to be about morality and
legality, but where’s the discussion about responsibility? I’m not going
to lie to kids and say, ‘God’s gonna send you to Hell if you smoke
weed.” Without that threat, the conversation is much more nuanced and
difficult. It becomes more about initiating habits that can become
destructive, about pleasing God or choosing not to.”
The quick and best answer is that just because something is legal
doesn’t mean we should do it. “Doughnuts are legal,” Dr. Joel Suel,
Senior Pastor of Glory To Glory Christian Center in Aurora, said, “but
you won’t find me eating a dozen of them every day. Marijuana usage
makes us lazy. It robs us of creativity and initiative, taking away
gifts God intended for His divine purpose. Our bodies are the temple of
the Holy Spirit [I Cor 6:19-20]. Being wasted is not what God intended.
Just look at that word—“wasted,” our gifts, our talents, our service to
The Lord.”
Associate Editor Reverend Neil Brown put it this way, “Paul said,
‘Everything is permissible’—but not everything is beneficial.
‘Everything is permissible’—but not everything is constructive.’ [I
Corinthians 10:13]. This is an almost exact quote of I Corinthians 6:12,
where Paul wrote, ‘Everything is permissible for me’ -- but not
everything is beneficial. ‘Everything is permissible for me’ -- but I
will not be mastered by anything.’ Here, Paul is likely quoting an
expression in the city of Corinth, ‘Everything is permissible,’ commonly
used to attempt to justify sinful behavior. But Paul is saying, just
because I can do something doesn’t mean I should.”
Selling Out Today's Toddlers:
Pot shops will seem completely normal to tomorrow's kids.
Gratifying today at the cost of tomorrow.
A Cry For Help
Coming to church stinking of ganja is a terrible testimony. It’s also a
cry for help; people getting lit first thing in the morning are
medicating themselves, most likely for some emotional problem. People
filling their lives with drugs and booze and sex and food are usually
medicating themselves for some emotional condition, trying to fill the
space where God should reign.
The same could be said about ladies who wear too much perfume and men
who wear too much cologne. You don’t realize it because you’re so used
to it that you frankly can’t smell it anymore, so you put on more and
more in order for you to smell yourself, but normal people can smell you
coming way down the street. Strong odor is a red flag. Hypersexual
behavior is a red flag. Obesity is a red flag. There’s something wrong,
something missing, and we’re cramming these things into spaces where God
should be.
Is smoking marijuana a sin? I don’t know, but it may be a sin to *you*.
There are such things as personal sins, things that are wrong *for you,*
even if others practice such things in ignorance [James 4:17]. We can
safely characterize smoking—whether it’s weed, cigarettes or the new
“safer” e-cigarettes—is certainly what we call a “weight;” something
that exists within a doctrinal DMZ so far as right, wrong and sin goes,
but which clearly do not edify the body, mind or spirit in any way.
Weights are things that can and often do negatively impact your
relationship with God.
As Christians, our number one priority should be to please God. Period.
Being led by the Holy Spirit, and not our own desires, is the safest and
most sure path to an enduring and productive relationship with Jesus
Christ. Straying from that path, making excuses for behavior our
conscience and the Holy spirit clearly and viscerally tells us is not
right for our lives, inevitably moves us off of this path.
We, all of us, struggle with personal behavior and/or shortcomings which
do not please God. This is part of the human condition, our carnal
imperfection which can only be made perfect through the Holy Spirit [2
Corinthians 12:9]. In many areas, we do not know right from wrong, and
what may seem right in our eyes can still offend God [Proverbs 14:12].
Keeping our connection strong is the best way to stay on that path and
not be led astray.
Fitting In: How do we reconcile this with spiritual purity?
Acting Like It
Lastly, both tradition and religion like to frame things in a legalistic
manner. Young people asking, “Why can’t we smoke pot?” are looking for a
loophole in a rule. The bible, of course, is silent on marijuana usage
and a great number of other moral and ethical challenges. The church
tends to step in, helping God out by inventing rules and bylaws and all
of that. Sign here. This is the laziest form of ministry, handing
somebody a sheet with a bunch of rules on it. This is not Christianity.
At its heart, Christianity espouses a philosophy of purity. There’s
really not enough talk about purity. There is doctrinal nitpicking and
legalistic end-runs around a selectively-applied Levitical Holiness
Code, but Christ’s vicarious sacrifice swept all of that off the table.
In that view, this whole discussion is moot because the conduct of our
lives is now governed not be a complex set of do’s and don’ts but by a
very simple standard of purity in all that we are and in everything we
do. If you can make an argument for how getting wasted on bud fits that
standard, I’m happy to shut up about it. Teaching young people not about
sin and not-sin, not about sexual abstinence or even morality but about
purity frees the discussion from the bondage of minutiae:
We’re Christians. We should act like it.
I want to live a life that doesn’t embarrass God. I don’t always manage
that, but I desire that and my desiring that pleases God. Now, put
*that* in your pipe and smoke it.
Christopher J. Priest
31 January 2014
editor@praisenet.org
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