Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,151,305 members, 7,811,905 topics. Date: Sunday, 28 April 2024 at 11:01 PM

A Church Of Cannabis Tests Limits Of Religious Law - Religion - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Religion / A Church Of Cannabis Tests Limits Of Religious Law (634 Views)

Mob Destroys Church Of Benin Pastor Accused Of Sleeping With Married Woman. PICS / Lady Who Followed Her Friend To A 'Church Event' In Lagos In Unstable Condition / A Church Of Cannabis Tests Limits Of Religious Law (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

A Church Of Cannabis Tests Limits Of Religious Law by Tomiwaa(m): 1:56pm On Jul 03, 2015
INDIANAPOLIS — On the altar, behind wa row of flickering candles, the silhouette outline of a marijuana leaf shine in lights. Colored balloons occasionally bounced through the air as the minister of music led a band in a pew-shaking rendition of “Mary Jane,” the funk tribute to the drug. And Bill Levin, who was introduced as “the Grand Poobah” of this new church, finished the gathering with a simple message: “Light up, folks!” As legislation that proponents call a religious freedom law took effect in Indiana on Wednesday, Mr. Levin’s First Church of Cannabis held its first service in a quiet neighborhood on this city’s Eastside. Mr. Levin, who is 59 and known around here for his wild puff of white hair, dreamed up the church as a way to test the state’s new, much-debated law: If the law protects religious practices, he figured, how could it not also permit marijuana use — which remains illegal here — as part of a broader spiritual philosophy?
“We will celebrate life’s great adventures,” Mr. Levin said before the service, as clumps of uniformed police officers began gathering outside the newly renovated church, front and back. “This is not just smoking pot and getting high. It’s about the birth of anew religion. I’m a smile harvester.”
Earlier this year, Indiana’s Republican-held legislature approved
a Religious Freedom Restoration Act aimed at preventing government from infringing on religious practices. Critics said the measure was anti-gay and aimed at allowing discrimination against gay men and lesbians in the name of religion. Facing the threat of boycotts and fierce objections from business leaders, state officials swiftly added a provision explicitly blocking the measure from trumping local ordinances that bar discrimination over sexual orientation.
Mr. Levin, who has been a carpenter, a promotions and marketing strategist, and a Libertarian candidate
for political office, had few kind words for the lawmakers who wrote the state’s law in the first place. He called them “clowns” who “polluted and embarrassed” his state. But ifIndiana was going to have such a law, he said, why not test its limits and press for his long-held goal, permission to use cannabis? State leaders, including the office of Gov. Mike Pence, a Republican who supported the religious exceptions law, did not respond to requests for comment on the church. And some legal experts said Mr. Levin may have trouble proving that the use of
marijuana is truly tied to religious expression. But Mr. Levin seemed untroubled. “This is an honest-to-God religion,” he
said. “Other religions have sins and guilt. We’re going to have a really big love-in.”
Near the church, which Mr. Levin said he bought only weeks ago, some neighbors posted yellow “Caution” tape around their yards to keep people away. A group from a nearby church
marched outside with signs in protest.
“What’s next?” Shari Logan, 46, said. “The church of crack? The church of heroin? It’s a mockery to Christians,
to God.” Sarah Taylor, 50 — who watched from her front yard as two food trucks parked outside the church and people
in tie-dye gathered — shook her head and drank her coffee “They’re using religion as a way to legalize their habit,” she said. “If it stands, it’s going to be in your backyard, in your
backyard, in all the backyards.” By Wednesday, though, law
enforcement authorities here had made it abundantly clear that! they viewed the laws on marijuana as unchanged. Lt. Richard Riddle of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police declined to say exactly how many officers were at the church, but there were officers outside, posted on nearby corners, behind the church,
and riding in pairs on bicycles. And officials announced late last week that
anyone smoking marijuana at the First Church of Cannabis’s first service could expect criminal charges. Even observers might be charged, the officials warned, with “visiting a
common nuisance.” So, in the portion of the service when Mr. Levin had planned to pull marijuana from a wooden box and begin smoking it, he did not. Instead, he lit a thick cigar. Some people lit ordinary cigarettes. The legal fight over the religious law needed to be fought in civil court, he said, not in criminal court. The church’s legal advisers, he said, were working on the
next steps for getting the legal test they want. “There was a little bit of intimidation about our religious beliefs,” Mr. Levin told the crowded church.
What was left to do, then?
The rest of the service was part dance party, part comedy routine and part heartfelt, personal testimony from
those in attendance about the medical use of marijuana. Mr. Levin ordered those assembled to rise and say, “I love you,” five times while looking in different directions. He had the crowd
repeat a “Deity Dozen” phrases to liv by, including “Do not be a troll on the Internet” and “Grow food.” The police said no arrests were made, and Police Chief Rick Hite described the events as civil and peaceful. “Enjoy the fellowship,” Mr. Levin called out as he took a drag on his cigar, then started to dance.
Re: A Church Of Cannabis Tests Limits Of Religious Law by dapyd1(m): 1:58pm On Jul 03, 2015
OK, they are hiding under the legislative protection of the church to smoke pot. Well done.
Not every church, is the church of God.
This one definitely isn't.
Re: A Church Of Cannabis Tests Limits Of Religious Law by hefty4real(m): 2:01pm On Jul 03, 2015
Lyk wha?
Re: A Church Of Cannabis Tests Limits Of Religious Law by Tomiwaa(m): 5:24pm On Jul 03, 2015
dapyd1:
OK, they are hiding under the legislative protection of the church to smoke pot. Well done.
Not every church, is the church of God.
This one definitely isn't.
but churches of God can marry Gay Couples? lol. if LGBTs can hide under the legislative protection? what could be the crime of a stoner serving God with the same thing he created?

(1) (Reply)

Open Heavens Daily Devotional 10/07/15 / Deliverance Church Manchester Uk / The Realms Of Dreams PART 1

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 17
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.