Jim Finnel
Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
Kaneh Bosm: Cannabis in the Old Testament
By Chris Bennett
THEN GOD SAID,
I GIVE YOU EVERY SEED-BEARING
PLANT ON THE FACE OF THE WHOLE
EARTH, AND EVERY TREE THAT
HAS FRUIT IN IT."
GENESIS 1:29-30
Those words seem straightforward enough, and yet cannabis and most other psychoactive medicine plants are outlawed in our society. Those who use these plant gat
eways to other states of consciousness are jailed for doing so.
Ironically, the major force for continuing this plant prohibition is a group referred to as the
Christian Right. They claim to believe in both the Bible and old Yahweh, yet Yahweh's
opinion on the matter is stated quite clearly in the above quotation.
This article shows how the Old Testament Prophets were none other than ancient shamans,
and that cannabis and other entheogens played a very prominent role in ancient Hebrew culture.
THE ROOTS OF KANEH-BOSM
The first solid evidence of the Hebrew use of cannabis was established in 1936 by Sula Benet,
a little known Polish etymologist from the Institute of Anthropological Sciences in Warsaw.'
The word cannabis was generally thought to be of Scythian origin, but Benet showed that it
has a much earlier origin in Semitic languages like Hebrew, and that it appears
several times throughout the Old Testament. Benet explained that "in the original
Hebrew text of the Old Testament there are references to hemp, both as incense,
which was an integral part of religious celebration, and as an intoxicant."
Benet demonstrated that the word for cannabis is kaneh-bosm, also rendered in
traditional Hebrew as kaneh or kannabus. The root kan in this construction
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means
"reed" or "hemp", while bosm means "aromatic". This word appears five times in the Old Testament;
in the books of Exodus, the Song of Songs, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel.
The word kaneh-bosm has been mistranslated as calamus, a common marsh
plant with little monetary value that does not have the qualities or value ascribed to kaneh-bosm.
The error occurred in the oldest Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, the Septuagint
in the third century BC, and was repeated in the many translations that followed."
THE HIDDEN STORY
When we take a chronological look at biblical references to kaneh-bosm, we reveal more than just
the story of cannabis in the Old Testament. Another exciting and concealed story emerges as well,
that of the suppression of the worship of Astarte, also called Ashera, known t
o the ancient Semites as the Queen of Heaven.
The First Reference
to Kaneh-Bosm
MOSES & MARIJUANA
The first mention of kaneh-bosm in the Old Testament appears with the prophet-shaman Moses.
At the beginning of his shamanic career, Moses discovered the angel of the Lord in flames
of fire from within a bush.
It is later in his life however, that a definite reference to cannabis is made. Sula Benet
explains this reference as follows:
The sacred character of hemp in biblical times is evident from Exodus 30:22-33,
where Moses was instructed by God to anoint the meeting tent and all its furnishings
with specially prepared oil, containing hemp.
Anointing set sacred things apart from secular. The anointment of sacred
objects was an ancient tradition in Israel: holy oil was not to be used for secular purposes...
Above all, the anointing oil was used for the installation rites of all Hebrew kings and priests.
This first reference to kaneh-bosm is the only that describes it as an ointment to be applied externally.
However, anointing oils made with cannabis are indeed psychoactive and have been used by such seemingly
diverse groups as 19th century occultists and medieval witches.''
Closer to Moses' own time, cannabis was used as a topical hallucinogen by the ancient worshippers
of Asherah, the Queen of Heaven. Asherah has also been referred to as the Hebrew Goddess.'"
The shamanistic Ashera priestesses of pre-reformation Jerusalem mixed cannabis resins with those from myrrh,
balsam, frankincense, and perfumes, and then anointed their skins with the mixture as well as burned it.'"
THEN THE LORD SAID TO MOSES, "TAKE THE FOLLOWING FINE SPICES: 500 SHEKELS OF LIQUID MYRRH,
HALF AS MUCH OF FRAGRANT CINNAMON, 250 SHEKELS OF KANNABOSM, 500 SHEKELS OF CASSIA -
ALL ACCORDING TO THE SANCTUARY SHEKEL - AND A HIND OF OLIVE OIL. MAKE THESE INTO
MAKE THESE INTO A SACRED ANNOITING OIL, A FRAGRANT BLEND, THE WORK OF A PERFUMER.
IT WILL BE THE SACRED ANNOITING OIL.
THEN USE IT TO ANOINT THE TENT OF THE MEETING, THE ARK OF THE TESTIMONY,
THE TABLE AND ALL ITS ARTICLES, THE LAMPSTAND AND ITS ACCESSORIES, THE ALTAR OF INCENSE, THE ALTAR OF
BURNT OFFERING AND ALL ITS UTENSILS, AND THE BASIN WITH ITS STAND. YOU SHALL CONSECRATE THEM SO THEY WILL
BE MOST HOLY, AND WHATEVER TOUCHES THEM WILL BE HOLY.
ANOINT AARON AND HIS SONS AND CONSECRATE THEM SO THEY MAY SERVE ME
AS PREISTS. SAY TO THE ISRAELITES, "THIS IS TO BE MY SACRED ANOINTING OIL FOR THE
GENERATIONS TO COME. DO NOT POUR IT ON MEN'S BODIES AND DO NOT MAKE ANY OIL WITH THE
SAME FORMULA. IT IS SACRED, AND YOU ARE TO CONSIDER IT SACRED. WHOEVER MAKES PERFUME LIKE IT
AND WHOEVER PUTS IT ON ANYONE OTHER THAN A PREIST MUST BE CUT OFF FROM HIS PEOPLE."
EXODUS 30:22-33
THE PRIESTS OF POT
The above Old testament passage makes the sacredness of this
ointment quite clear. Moses and the Levite priesthood jealously guarded its use,
and enforced this discriminatory prohibition with God's commandment that any transgressors
be 'cut off from his people'. This law amounted to a death sentence
in the ancient world.
SMOKE IN THE TENT
Lacking the invention of pipes, it was the practice of some ancient peoples
to burn cannabis and other herbs in tents, so that more smoke could be captured
and inhaled. In the last installment of this column we discussed such a group, t
he ancient Scythians. The Scythians were a nomadic people who travelled and settled
extensively throughout Europe, the Mediterranean, Central Asia, and Russia.
They burned cannabis inside small tents and inhaled the fumes for ritualistic and
recreational purposes.
Moses and his priests burned incense and used the holy ointment in a portable 'tent of meeting',
the famous Tent of the Tabernacle. As cannabis is listed directly as an
incense later in the Bible, it seems likely that Moses and the Levite priesthood
would have burned cannabis flowers and pollen along with the ointment and incense
which God commanded them to make.
AND AARON SHALL BURN INCENSE EVERY MORNING: WHEN HE DRESSETH
THE LAMPS, HE SHALL BURN INCENSE UPON IT. AND WHEN AARON LIGHTETH THE LAMPS AT EVEN,
HE SHALL BURN INCENSE UPON IT, A PERPETUAL INCENSE BEFORE THE LORD THROUGHOUT YOUR GENERATIONS.
EXODUS 30:8-10
THE SCYTHIAN CONNECTION
Given that the Scythians and Israelites were involved in a trade of goods and knowledge,
it is not surprising to find the similar technique of using tents to retain smoke.
Benet commented on the often overlooked connections between these two groups.
The Scythians participated in both trade and wars alongside the ancient Semites
for at least one millennium before Herodotus encountered them in the fifth century BC.
The reason for the confusion and relative obscurity of the role played by the Scythians
in world history is the fact that they were known to the Greeks as Scythians but
to the Semites as Ashkenaz.
The earliest reference to the Ashkenaz people appears in the Bible in Genesis 10:3, where
Ashkenaz, their progenitor, is named the son of Gomer, the great-grandson of Noah.
GOD WITHIN A CLOUD
A reading of the Old Testament reveals that Yahweh "came to Moses out of the midst of the cloud"
and that this cloud came from smoke produced by the burning of incense.
As scholar Ralph Patai commented in his book The Hebrew Goddess,
"Yahweh merely put in temporary appearances in the tent of meeting. He was a visiting deity
whose appearance in or departure from the tent was used for oracular purposes."
One is reminded of the ancient Persian sage Zoroaster, another monotheist like Moses,
who heard the voice of his god, Ahura Mazda, while in a state of shamanistic ecstasy
produced by cannabis. The Greek oracle of Delphi also revealed her prophecies from behind
a veil of intoxicating smoke.
The insights achieved from the use of cannabis, whether inhaled
in the Tent of the Tabernacle or applied topically, could have been interpreted
by Moses as messages from God. This is similar to modern shamans who interpret
their experiences with plant hallucinogens as containing divine revelations.
CANNABIS CONCIOUSNESS
In issue #1 of CANNABIS CANADA, we discussed a book by Julian Jaynes called
The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind.
Jaynes offers an interesting explanation of how the development of consciousness
may have taken place. Although he failed to fully recognize the strong role that plant-drugs
may have played in the development of consciousness,"' Jaynes did come up with a most
revolutionary theory.
In his book, Jaynes claims that ancient people were not as fully conscious and self-aware as modern humans.
Being unable to introspect, they experienced their own higher cognitive functioning as
auditory hallucinations - the voices of gods, actually heard as in the Old Testament or the Iliad -
which told a person what to do in circumstances of novelty or stress.
GOD SAID TO MOSES, I AM THAT I AM. THIS IS WHAT YOU ARE TO SAY
TO THE ISREALITES: 'I AM HAS SENT ME TO YOU.'
EXODUS 3:14
I AM THAT I AM
Could the commandments given by God to Moses and other Biblical prophets have been the
early beginnings of full human self-awareness? Cannabis has its own unique receptor sites
in the human brain, located in the areas governing higher thinking and memory.
Could it be that deep interior thought grew out of language and the use of psychoactive
plants like cannabis? And that the first prototypes of this ability for deep interior thinking,
an ability we now take for granted, would have been considered Prophets? Would this make God's
commandments any less sacred?
In light of this information, is not the above statement more believable as the birth words of
Judaic consciousness, rather than as the commandment of an omnipotent God?
The Second Appearance
of Cannabis
The next Biblical account of cannabis comes under the name kaneh and appears in
relation to King Solomon. In Solomon's Song of Songs, one of the most beautifully written
pieces in the Old Testament, Solomon mentions kaneh in describing his bride.
COME WITH ME FROM LEBANON, MY BRIDE, COME WITH ME FROM LEBANON.
DESCEND FROM THE CREST OF AMANA, FROM THE TOP OF SENIR, THE SUMMIT OF HERMON. . .
HOW DELIGHTFUL IS YOUR LOVE, MY SISTER, MY BRIDE! HOW MUCH MORE PLEASING
IS YOUR LOVE THAN WINE, AND THE FRAGRANCE OF YOUR OINTMENT THAN ANY SPICE!. . .
THE FRAGRANCE OF YOUR GARMENTS IS LIKE THAT OF LEBANON. . .
YOUR PLANTS ARE AN ORCHARD OF POMEGRANATES WITH CHOICE FRUITS, WITH HENNA AND
NARD, NARD AND SAFFRON, KANEH AND CINNAMON, WITH EVERY KIND OF INCENSE TREE.
SONG OF SONGS 4:8-14
THE GARDEN OF THE GODDESS
The ancients worshiped the Goddess as a nude female image, the earth they lived on
and the nature around them. The fertile rays of the sun on the earth was thought of as God's
fertilization of the Great Mother. In light of this symbolism, it is not surprising to find
Solomon's Song to be full of both erotic and vegetative imagery.""
In The Woman's Book of Myths and Secrets, Feminist Scholar Barbara Walker explains
the Old Testament 'Ashera' is translated 'grove', without any explanation that the sacred
grove represented the Goddess' genital center, birthplace of all things. In the matriarchal period,
Hebrews worshiped the Goddess in groves (1 Kings 14:23), later cut down by patriarchal
reformers who burned the bones of Ashera's priests on their own altars (2
Chronicles 24:4-5).
SOLOMON ANDAND THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN
In The Temple and the Lodge by Baigent and Leigh, the authors state that Solomon's 'Song of Songs'
is a hymn and invocation to the Phoenician mother goddess Astarte. Astarte was known as "Queen of Heaven",
"Star of the Sea" and "Stella Marris".
The authors show us that Astarte was conventionally worshiped on mountains and hilltops,
and then point to a quote from I Kings 3:3.
SOLOMON LOVED YAHWEH; HE FOLLOWED THE PRECEPTS OF DAVID HIS FATHER,
EXCEPT THAT HE OFFERED SACRIFICE AND INCENSE ON THE HIGH PLACES.
I Kings 11:4-5 offers an even more explicit example of Solomon's ties to Astarte.
WHEN SOLOMON GREW OLD HIS WIVES SWAYED HIS HEART TO OTHER GODS; AND HIS
HEART WAS NOT WHOLLY WITH YAHWEH HIS GOD AS HIS FATHER DAVID'S HAD BEEN. SOLOMON BECAME A FOLLOWER OF
ASTARTE, THE GODDESS OF THE SIDONIANS.
THE SPIRIT OF THE SCYTHIANS
Solomon's practice of burning incense on high to the Queen of Heaven may have been a custom done in
the same spirit as that of the Scythians, who burned cannabis in mountain caves
and consecrated the act to their version of the Great Goddess, Tabiti-Hestia.""
Archeological finds show that the worship of the old Canaanite gods was an integral
part of the religion of the Hebrews, through to the very end of Hebrew monarchy.
The worship of the Goddess played a much more important role in this popular
religion than that of the gods.
The Third Reference
to Cannabis
GOD WANTS HERB
The next direct reference to kaneh-bosm appears in Isaiah, where God is reprim
anding the Israelites for, among other things, not supplying him with his due of
the Holy Herb.
YOU HAVE NOT BROUGHT ANY KANEH FOR ME, OR LAVISHED ON ME THE FAT
OF YOUR SACRIFICES. BUT YOU HAVE BURDENED ME WITH YOUR SINS AND WEARIED ME WITH YOUR OFFENCES.
ISAIAH 43:23-24
A HOUSEFUL OF SMOKE
An excerpt from earlier in Isaiah indicates that God's appetite had previously been appeased,
and "the house was filled with smoke..."
AND THE POSTS OF THE DOOR MOVED AT THE VOICE OF HIM THAT CRIED, AND THE HOUSE
WAS FILLED WITH SMOKE
THEN SAID I, WOE IS ME, FOR I AM UNDONEL BECAUSE I AM A MAN OF UNCLEAN LIPS, AND I DWELL
IN THE MIDST OF A PEOPLE OF UNCLEAN LIPS; FOR MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE KING, THE LORD OF HOSTS.
THEN FLEW ONE OF THE SERAPHIMS UNTO ME, HAVING A LIVE COAL IN HIS HAND, WHICH HE HAD TAKEN WITH
THE TONGS FROM OFF THE ALTAR,
AND HE LAID IT UPON MY MOUTH AND SAID, LO, THIS HATH TOUCHED THY LIPS;
AND THYNE INIQUITY IS TAKEN AWAY, AND THY SIN PURGED.
ISAIAH 6:4-7
EATING ANGELS
In The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross, Scholar John M. Allegro points out that
ancient peoples believed psychoactive plants to be living gateways to other realms,
and thought of them as angels. The Greek and Hebrew equivalent of the word angel
literally means messenger or worker of miracles.
SHAMANS IN DISGUISE
It seems much more believable that the winged beings which appeared to Isaiah
and other Biblical prophets were not actual angels,"' but rather ancient shamans,
wearing elaborate costumes and enacting trance inducing rituals, all enhanced by the use
of cannabis smoke and psychotropic compounds like anamita muscaria, mandrake, and others.
This type of ritual initiation was common in the ancient middle east, and often involved the use of winged costumes
and masks like those the early European explorers would find the aboriginal peoples of the world still
using thousands of years later.
DRINKING IN THE HOLY SMOKE
Seraphim translates as "smoke drinker," and those of us familiar with hashish know
that it burns in a similar way to both incense and coal. It isn't hard to imagine
an ancient shaman lifting a burning coal of hashish or pressed bud to the lips of the
ancient prophet Isaiah.
Isaiah, upon having the coal lifted to his lips, had his iniquity taken away and his sins purged.
This is comparable to the way in which the Hindu sadhus lift their chillums to their third eye and exclaim
"Boom Shiva," an act indicating their loss of ego and oneness with Shiva.
The Fourth
Reference to
Cannabis
KANEH FROM A DISTANT LAND
The fourth appearance of cannabis in the Old Testament is in Jeremiah, by which time it seems
that Yahweh's taste for the herb had declined. In the same way that God rejected Cain's offering
of grain in favour of Abel's blood sacrifice, the cannabis also is rejected.
What do I care about incense from Sheba or kaneh from a distant land? Your bu
rnt offerings are not acceptable; your sacrifices do not please me.?
Jeremiah 6:
20
The Final
Reference
to Cannabis
Trading with Tyre
The final Biblical referen
ce to kaneh appears in Ezekiel 27, in a passage called ?A Lament for Tyre.? The
kingdom of Tyre had fallen into disfavor with Yahweh, and cannabis appears as ju
st one of many of the wares received by Tyre, the ?merchant of peoples on many c
oasts.?
Both of these passages refer obliquely back to the story of King Solomon
. The mention of Sheba brings to mind Solomon?s love affair with the Queen of Sh
eba, and the King of Tyre played a pivotal role in Solomon?s building of the tem
ple.
Danites and Greeks from Uzal bought your merchandise; they exchang-ed wrou
ght iron, cassia and kaneh for your wares.
Ezekiel 27:19
From Favour to Disfavo
ur
Of these five references to kaneh and kaneh-bosm, the first three have cannab
is appear in Yahweh?s favour, the fourth definitely in his disfavour, and the fi
fth on a list from a kingdom that had fallen from grace in the eyes of the Israe
lite God. One might wonder at the reason for these apparent contradictions, and
the answer can be found within the story of the suppression of the cult of Asher
a, or Astarte, the ancient Queen of Heaven.
In The Chalice and the Blade, Riane
Eisler explains this as follows:
?There are of course some allusions to this in
the Bible itself. The prophets Ezra, Hosea, Nehemiah, and Jeremiah constantly r
ail against the ?abomination? of worshipping other gods. They are particularly o
utraged at those who still worship the ?Queen of Heaven?. And their greatest wra
th is against the ?unfaithfulness of the daughters of Jerusalem,? who were under
standably ?backsliding? to beliefs in which all temporal and spiritual authority
was not monopolized by men. But other than such occasional, and always pejorati
ve, passages, there is no hint that there ever was ? or could be ? a deity that
is not male.?
The ties between cannabis and the Queen of Heaven are probably mos
t apparent in Jeremiah 44, where the ancient patriarch seems to be concerned by
the people?s continuing worship of the Queen of Heaven, especially by the burnin
g of incense in her honour.
Keep in mind the documented use of cannabis by the s
hamanistic Ashera priestesses of pre-reformation Jerusalem, who anointed their s
kins with cannabis mixtures as well as burning it as incense.
Thus saith the Lo
rd of hosts, the God of Israel;
Ye have seen all the evil that I have brought up
on Jerusalem, and upon all the cities of Judah; and behold, this day they are a
desolation...
Because of their wickedness which they have committed to provoke m
e to anger, in that they went to burn incense, and to serve other gods...
Theref
ore now... wherefore commit ye this great evil against your souls... in that ye
provoke me to wrath with the works of your hands, burning incense unto other god
s in the land of Egypt?
Then all the men which knew that their wives had burned
incense unto other gods, and all the women that stood by, a great multitude, eve
n all the people that dwelt in the land of Egypt, answered Jeremiah,
saying,
As
for the word that thou hast spoken unto us in the name of the Lord, we will not
hearken unto thee.
But we will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of
our own mouth, to burn incense unto the queen of heaven, and to pour drink offer
ings unto her, as we have done. we, and our fathers, our kings, and our princes,
in the city of Judah, and in the streets of Jerusalem: for then we had plenty o
f victuals, and were well, and saw no evil.
JEREMIAH 44:15-23
Biblical Prohibit
ion
Jeremiah?s reference to the previous kings and princes that burned incense t
o the Queen of Heaven can be seen as referring to King Solomon, his son Rehoboam
, and other Biblical kings and prophets.
Other key Biblical figures in the prohi
bition of cannabis use and the worship of the Queen of Heaven include King Hezek
iah and his great-grandson Josiah.
II Kings 18:4 reports of Hezekiah that:
He
removed the high places, and brake the images, and cut down the asheras, and bra
ke into pieces the brazen serpent that Moses had made; for unto those days the c
hildren of
Israel did burn incense to it:
And he called it
Nehushtan.
breaking
the serpent
The interesting thing about this passage is that the Ark of the cove
nant does not contain the ten commandments of the law of Moses, rather it holds
Nehushtan, a brass serpent. The serpent is a frequent component in early represe
ntations of the goddess.
The Bible reports that the kings before Hezekiah ?set u
p images and groves in every high hill, and under every green tree; And there th
ey burnt incense in all the high places...?(1Kings 17) So did the kings who reig
ned after Josiah, who was killed in battle in 609 BC. According to The Columbia
History of the World, Josiah?s defeat ?seems to have been taken as proof of the
error of his ways... the later prophecies of Jeremiah and Ezekiel show polytheis
m back in practice.?
A Forged
Book of Law
The Book of the Law, which makes up mo
st of Deuteronomy and Leviticus, was used to prohibit the worship of the Goddess
and instill the death penalty for the burning of incense. Although it was suppo
sedly written by Moses, it was not discovered until some 600 years after Moses?
death.
In Green Gold, Judy Osburn follows the suggestion that the Book of the La
w may have been a forgery committed by the Hebrew priesthood with the hope of er
adicating the competing temples and their deities, which were getting more sacri
fices from the people than was the temple of Yahweh.
Osburn quotes Occidental My
thology by theologian Joseph Campbell, as stating that, before the discovery of
the Book of the Law,
neither kings nor people had paid attention whatsoever to t
he law of Moses which, indeed, they had not even known. They had been devoted to
the normal deities of the nuclear Near east, with all the usual cults...
Up unt
il that time the Hebrew people worshiped in the old ways, practicing their cult
in open places on peaks and hills and mountains, and even caves below.
The myste
rious discovery of the Book of the Law took place during the reign of King Josia
h. Once informed of the new regulations, Josiah?s wrath against the incense burn
ers was far harsher than that of his great-grandfather Hezekiah. The Bible descr
ibes his actions as follows.
And the king commanded Hilkiah the high priest...
to bring forth out of the temple of the Lord all the vessels that were made for
Baal and for Asherah, and for all the host of heaven: and he burned them outside
Jerusalem in the fields of Kidron...
And he put down the idolatrous priests, wh
om the kings of Judah had ordained to burn incense in the high places in the cit
ies of Judah, and in the places round about Jerusalem; them also that burned inc
ense unto Baal, to the sun, and to the moon, and to the planets, and to all the
host of heaven.
And he brought out the Asherah from the house of the Lord, outsi
de Jerusalem... and burned it at the brook Kidron, and stamped it small to powde
r... And he brought all the priests out of the cities of Judah, and defiled the
high places where the priests had burned incense...
And the high places that wer
e before Jerusalem... which Solomon the king of Israel had builded for Ashtoreth
the abomination of thr Zidonians... did the king defile. And he brake in pieces
the images, and cut down the groves, and filled their places with the bones of
men.
And he slew all the priests of the high places that were upon the altars, a
nd burned men?s bones upon them, and returned to Jerusalem...
And like unto him
was there no king before him, that turned to the Lord with all his heart, and wi
th all his soul, and with all his might, according to the law of Moses; neither
after him arose there any like him.
2 Kings 23
separation from the shekinah
The
Goddess returned to the Hebrew faith somewhat later in a form of Jewish mystici
sm called the Cabala. This teaches that the Shekinah is the female soul of God,
who couldn?t be perfect until he was reunited with her. Cabalists believed that
it was God?s loss of his Shekinah that brought about all evils. In some traditio
ns the Shekinah is seen as the pillar of smoke that guided the wandering nation
of Israel during its Exodus from Egypt.
The return of the goddess
Our separation
from the ancient Goddess and the denial of her ecstasies could well be seen as
the root cause of humanity?s separation from nature, both our own and that of th
e world around us. Perhaps the Goddess? ancient spirit won?t fully be restored u
ntil her children begin to respect and heal her abused body the Earth, return to
her sacred groves in dance and worship, and are free to once again burn the hol
y incense of kaneh-bosm in her honor and praise.
It would seem that the spirit o
f Ashera?s ancient incense burners has returned, in the form of the modern-day s
moke-in. Once again people of all ages, races, and creeds are gathering together
illegally, to celebrate the many benefits and uses of the sacred tree, and to b
urn holy incense in protest, as did the defiant crowd before Jeremiah so long ag
o.
Cannabis and the Christ?
But what of the Bible?s new Testament? Was Jesus a s
ecret imbiber of the herb, or did he continue on with the harsh prohibition of c
annabis, instituted with the zeal of Hezekiah, Josiah and Jeremiah? For the answ
er to those questions, you?ll have to order a copy of Green Gold, or wait for a
distant installment of When Smoke gets in my I.
BOOM SHIVA! BOOM SHAKTI!
HARI HA
RI GUNJA!
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The Chalice and the Blade by Riane Eisler; Harper Row;
1987.
Early Diffusions and Folk Uses of Hemp by Sula Benet; Reprinted in Cannab
is and Culture edited by Vera Rubin; Mouton; 1975.
Flesh of the Gods edited by P
T Furst; Praeger; 1972.
Green Gold the Tree of Life; Marijuana in Magic and Reli
gion by Chris Bennet, Judy Osburne, & Lynn Osburne; Access Unlimited; 1995.
The
Hebrew Goddess by Raphael Patai; Avon Books; 1967.
Marihuana: The First Twelve
Thousand Years by Ernest Abel; Plenum Press; 1980.
Marijuana and the Bible edite
d by Jeff Brown; The Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church; 1981.
Occidental Mythology by
Joseph Campbell; Penguin Books; 1982.
The Origins of Consciousness in the Break
down of the Bicameral Mind by Julian Jaynes; Houghton Mifflin Company; 1976.
The
Sacred Mushroom and the Cross by John M. Allegro; Double day; 1969.
Techniques
of High Magic, by King and Skinner; Destiny Books; 1976.
The Temple and the Lodg
e by Baignet and Leigh; Corgy Books; 1989.
The Woman?s Encyclopedia of Myths and
Secrets by Barbara G. Walker; Harper Collins; 1983.
ENDNOTES
1 In 1903, Briti
sh physician Dr. C. Creighton wrote Indications of the Hashish Vice in the Old T
estament, in which he concluded that several references to cannabis can be found
in the Old Testament. Examples are the ?honeycomb? referred to in the Song of S
olomon, 5:1, and the ?honeywood? in I Samuel 14: 25-45. Creighton also suggested that
Saul?s madness, Jonathan?s and Samson?s strength, and the first chapter of Ezekiel
are all to be explained by the use of cannabis.
2 All quotations from Sula Benet in
this article are taken from Early Diffusions and Folk Uses of Hemp, reprinted in Cannabis
and Culture, Vera Rubin, Ed.
3 At this same point in history, 300 BC, a group which
would become known as the Gnostics was formed. The Gnostics (meaning knowledge) were a
symbiosis of Judaic, Zoroastrian and Neo-Platonic thought, and claimed direct knowledge of the divine.
The Sufis, a group that is said to be an offshoot of Gnostic knowledge, use a similar term
for cannabis: khaneh.
4 In Techniques of High Magic, authors King and Skinner list the following
astral projection ointment from the 1890?s: lanolin ? 5 ounces;
hashish ? 1 ounce; hemp flowers ? 1 handful;
poppy flowers ? 1 handful; hellebore ? 1/2 handful. In 1615, Italian physician and demonologist Giovanni
De Ninault listed hemp as the main ingredient in the ointments and unguents used by the
?Devil?s followers?.
5 As in Raphael Patai?s The Hebrew Goddess, published by Avon Books
in 1967. (Quoted in The Once and Future Goddess, by Elinor W Gadon, Harper & Row, 1989.)
6
William A.Emboden Jr., Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L.: A Historic-Ethnographic Survey,
printed in Flesh of the Gods, edited by P.T.Furst, published by Praeger in 1972.
7
An idea which is fully explored in Terence McKenna?s Food of the Gods, published by Bantam in 1992.
8 For more information on Bible erotica see The X-Rated Bible; An Irrevent Survey of Sex in the Scriptures,
by Ben Edward Akerley.
9 For more information on the Scythian use of cannabis see the second installment
of this series in Cannabis Canada number 2.
10 Wings on gods or angels can be seen as symbolizing the
ability to travel between the ?two worlds?. For example, the Greek god Hermes, who?s winged feet enabled
him to act as messenger between men and gods.
Source: Kaneh Bosm: Cannabis in the Old Testament~ | Cannabis Culture Magazine
By Chris Bennett
THEN GOD SAID,
I GIVE YOU EVERY SEED-BEARING
PLANT ON THE FACE OF THE WHOLE
EARTH, AND EVERY TREE THAT
HAS FRUIT IN IT."
GENESIS 1:29-30
Those words seem straightforward enough, and yet cannabis and most other psychoactive medicine plants are outlawed in our society. Those who use these plant gat
eways to other states of consciousness are jailed for doing so.
Ironically, the major force for continuing this plant prohibition is a group referred to as the
Christian Right. They claim to believe in both the Bible and old Yahweh, yet Yahweh's
opinion on the matter is stated quite clearly in the above quotation.
This article shows how the Old Testament Prophets were none other than ancient shamans,
and that cannabis and other entheogens played a very prominent role in ancient Hebrew culture.
THE ROOTS OF KANEH-BOSM
The first solid evidence of the Hebrew use of cannabis was established in 1936 by Sula Benet,
a little known Polish etymologist from the Institute of Anthropological Sciences in Warsaw.'
The word cannabis was generally thought to be of Scythian origin, but Benet showed that it
has a much earlier origin in Semitic languages like Hebrew, and that it appears
several times throughout the Old Testament. Benet explained that "in the original
Hebrew text of the Old Testament there are references to hemp, both as incense,
which was an integral part of religious celebration, and as an intoxicant."
Benet demonstrated that the word for cannabis is kaneh-bosm, also rendered in
traditional Hebrew as kaneh or kannabus. The root kan in this construction
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means
"reed" or "hemp", while bosm means "aromatic". This word appears five times in the Old Testament;
in the books of Exodus, the Song of Songs, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel.
The word kaneh-bosm has been mistranslated as calamus, a common marsh
plant with little monetary value that does not have the qualities or value ascribed to kaneh-bosm.
The error occurred in the oldest Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, the Septuagint
in the third century BC, and was repeated in the many translations that followed."
THE HIDDEN STORY
When we take a chronological look at biblical references to kaneh-bosm, we reveal more than just
the story of cannabis in the Old Testament. Another exciting and concealed story emerges as well,
that of the suppression of the worship of Astarte, also called Ashera, known t
o the ancient Semites as the Queen of Heaven.
The First Reference
to Kaneh-Bosm
MOSES & MARIJUANA
The first mention of kaneh-bosm in the Old Testament appears with the prophet-shaman Moses.
At the beginning of his shamanic career, Moses discovered the angel of the Lord in flames
of fire from within a bush.
It is later in his life however, that a definite reference to cannabis is made. Sula Benet
explains this reference as follows:
The sacred character of hemp in biblical times is evident from Exodus 30:22-33,
where Moses was instructed by God to anoint the meeting tent and all its furnishings
with specially prepared oil, containing hemp.
Anointing set sacred things apart from secular. The anointment of sacred
objects was an ancient tradition in Israel: holy oil was not to be used for secular purposes...
Above all, the anointing oil was used for the installation rites of all Hebrew kings and priests.
This first reference to kaneh-bosm is the only that describes it as an ointment to be applied externally.
However, anointing oils made with cannabis are indeed psychoactive and have been used by such seemingly
diverse groups as 19th century occultists and medieval witches.''
Closer to Moses' own time, cannabis was used as a topical hallucinogen by the ancient worshippers
of Asherah, the Queen of Heaven. Asherah has also been referred to as the Hebrew Goddess.'"
The shamanistic Ashera priestesses of pre-reformation Jerusalem mixed cannabis resins with those from myrrh,
balsam, frankincense, and perfumes, and then anointed their skins with the mixture as well as burned it.'"
THEN THE LORD SAID TO MOSES, "TAKE THE FOLLOWING FINE SPICES: 500 SHEKELS OF LIQUID MYRRH,
HALF AS MUCH OF FRAGRANT CINNAMON, 250 SHEKELS OF KANNABOSM, 500 SHEKELS OF CASSIA -
ALL ACCORDING TO THE SANCTUARY SHEKEL - AND A HIND OF OLIVE OIL. MAKE THESE INTO
MAKE THESE INTO A SACRED ANNOITING OIL, A FRAGRANT BLEND, THE WORK OF A PERFUMER.
IT WILL BE THE SACRED ANNOITING OIL.
THEN USE IT TO ANOINT THE TENT OF THE MEETING, THE ARK OF THE TESTIMONY,
THE TABLE AND ALL ITS ARTICLES, THE LAMPSTAND AND ITS ACCESSORIES, THE ALTAR OF INCENSE, THE ALTAR OF
BURNT OFFERING AND ALL ITS UTENSILS, AND THE BASIN WITH ITS STAND. YOU SHALL CONSECRATE THEM SO THEY WILL
BE MOST HOLY, AND WHATEVER TOUCHES THEM WILL BE HOLY.
ANOINT AARON AND HIS SONS AND CONSECRATE THEM SO THEY MAY SERVE ME
AS PREISTS. SAY TO THE ISRAELITES, "THIS IS TO BE MY SACRED ANOINTING OIL FOR THE
GENERATIONS TO COME. DO NOT POUR IT ON MEN'S BODIES AND DO NOT MAKE ANY OIL WITH THE
SAME FORMULA. IT IS SACRED, AND YOU ARE TO CONSIDER IT SACRED. WHOEVER MAKES PERFUME LIKE IT
AND WHOEVER PUTS IT ON ANYONE OTHER THAN A PREIST MUST BE CUT OFF FROM HIS PEOPLE."
EXODUS 30:22-33
THE PRIESTS OF POT
The above Old testament passage makes the sacredness of this
ointment quite clear. Moses and the Levite priesthood jealously guarded its use,
and enforced this discriminatory prohibition with God's commandment that any transgressors
be 'cut off from his people'. This law amounted to a death sentence
in the ancient world.
SMOKE IN THE TENT
Lacking the invention of pipes, it was the practice of some ancient peoples
to burn cannabis and other herbs in tents, so that more smoke could be captured
and inhaled. In the last installment of this column we discussed such a group, t
he ancient Scythians. The Scythians were a nomadic people who travelled and settled
extensively throughout Europe, the Mediterranean, Central Asia, and Russia.
They burned cannabis inside small tents and inhaled the fumes for ritualistic and
recreational purposes.
Moses and his priests burned incense and used the holy ointment in a portable 'tent of meeting',
the famous Tent of the Tabernacle. As cannabis is listed directly as an
incense later in the Bible, it seems likely that Moses and the Levite priesthood
would have burned cannabis flowers and pollen along with the ointment and incense
which God commanded them to make.
AND AARON SHALL BURN INCENSE EVERY MORNING: WHEN HE DRESSETH
THE LAMPS, HE SHALL BURN INCENSE UPON IT. AND WHEN AARON LIGHTETH THE LAMPS AT EVEN,
HE SHALL BURN INCENSE UPON IT, A PERPETUAL INCENSE BEFORE THE LORD THROUGHOUT YOUR GENERATIONS.
EXODUS 30:8-10
THE SCYTHIAN CONNECTION
Given that the Scythians and Israelites were involved in a trade of goods and knowledge,
it is not surprising to find the similar technique of using tents to retain smoke.
Benet commented on the often overlooked connections between these two groups.
The Scythians participated in both trade and wars alongside the ancient Semites
for at least one millennium before Herodotus encountered them in the fifth century BC.
The reason for the confusion and relative obscurity of the role played by the Scythians
in world history is the fact that they were known to the Greeks as Scythians but
to the Semites as Ashkenaz.
The earliest reference to the Ashkenaz people appears in the Bible in Genesis 10:3, where
Ashkenaz, their progenitor, is named the son of Gomer, the great-grandson of Noah.
GOD WITHIN A CLOUD
A reading of the Old Testament reveals that Yahweh "came to Moses out of the midst of the cloud"
and that this cloud came from smoke produced by the burning of incense.
As scholar Ralph Patai commented in his book The Hebrew Goddess,
"Yahweh merely put in temporary appearances in the tent of meeting. He was a visiting deity
whose appearance in or departure from the tent was used for oracular purposes."
One is reminded of the ancient Persian sage Zoroaster, another monotheist like Moses,
who heard the voice of his god, Ahura Mazda, while in a state of shamanistic ecstasy
produced by cannabis. The Greek oracle of Delphi also revealed her prophecies from behind
a veil of intoxicating smoke.
The insights achieved from the use of cannabis, whether inhaled
in the Tent of the Tabernacle or applied topically, could have been interpreted
by Moses as messages from God. This is similar to modern shamans who interpret
their experiences with plant hallucinogens as containing divine revelations.
CANNABIS CONCIOUSNESS
In issue #1 of CANNABIS CANADA, we discussed a book by Julian Jaynes called
The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind.
Jaynes offers an interesting explanation of how the development of consciousness
may have taken place. Although he failed to fully recognize the strong role that plant-drugs
may have played in the development of consciousness,"' Jaynes did come up with a most
revolutionary theory.
In his book, Jaynes claims that ancient people were not as fully conscious and self-aware as modern humans.
Being unable to introspect, they experienced their own higher cognitive functioning as
auditory hallucinations - the voices of gods, actually heard as in the Old Testament or the Iliad -
which told a person what to do in circumstances of novelty or stress.
GOD SAID TO MOSES, I AM THAT I AM. THIS IS WHAT YOU ARE TO SAY
TO THE ISREALITES: 'I AM HAS SENT ME TO YOU.'
EXODUS 3:14
I AM THAT I AM
Could the commandments given by God to Moses and other Biblical prophets have been the
early beginnings of full human self-awareness? Cannabis has its own unique receptor sites
in the human brain, located in the areas governing higher thinking and memory.
Could it be that deep interior thought grew out of language and the use of psychoactive
plants like cannabis? And that the first prototypes of this ability for deep interior thinking,
an ability we now take for granted, would have been considered Prophets? Would this make God's
commandments any less sacred?
In light of this information, is not the above statement more believable as the birth words of
Judaic consciousness, rather than as the commandment of an omnipotent God?
The Second Appearance
of Cannabis
The next Biblical account of cannabis comes under the name kaneh and appears in
relation to King Solomon. In Solomon's Song of Songs, one of the most beautifully written
pieces in the Old Testament, Solomon mentions kaneh in describing his bride.
COME WITH ME FROM LEBANON, MY BRIDE, COME WITH ME FROM LEBANON.
DESCEND FROM THE CREST OF AMANA, FROM THE TOP OF SENIR, THE SUMMIT OF HERMON. . .
HOW DELIGHTFUL IS YOUR LOVE, MY SISTER, MY BRIDE! HOW MUCH MORE PLEASING
IS YOUR LOVE THAN WINE, AND THE FRAGRANCE OF YOUR OINTMENT THAN ANY SPICE!. . .
THE FRAGRANCE OF YOUR GARMENTS IS LIKE THAT OF LEBANON. . .
YOUR PLANTS ARE AN ORCHARD OF POMEGRANATES WITH CHOICE FRUITS, WITH HENNA AND
NARD, NARD AND SAFFRON, KANEH AND CINNAMON, WITH EVERY KIND OF INCENSE TREE.
SONG OF SONGS 4:8-14
THE GARDEN OF THE GODDESS
The ancients worshiped the Goddess as a nude female image, the earth they lived on
and the nature around them. The fertile rays of the sun on the earth was thought of as God's
fertilization of the Great Mother. In light of this symbolism, it is not surprising to find
Solomon's Song to be full of both erotic and vegetative imagery.""
In The Woman's Book of Myths and Secrets, Feminist Scholar Barbara Walker explains
the Old Testament 'Ashera' is translated 'grove', without any explanation that the sacred
grove represented the Goddess' genital center, birthplace of all things. In the matriarchal period,
Hebrews worshiped the Goddess in groves (1 Kings 14:23), later cut down by patriarchal
reformers who burned the bones of Ashera's priests on their own altars (2
Chronicles 24:4-5).
SOLOMON ANDAND THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN
In The Temple and the Lodge by Baigent and Leigh, the authors state that Solomon's 'Song of Songs'
is a hymn and invocation to the Phoenician mother goddess Astarte. Astarte was known as "Queen of Heaven",
"Star of the Sea" and "Stella Marris".
The authors show us that Astarte was conventionally worshiped on mountains and hilltops,
and then point to a quote from I Kings 3:3.
SOLOMON LOVED YAHWEH; HE FOLLOWED THE PRECEPTS OF DAVID HIS FATHER,
EXCEPT THAT HE OFFERED SACRIFICE AND INCENSE ON THE HIGH PLACES.
I Kings 11:4-5 offers an even more explicit example of Solomon's ties to Astarte.
WHEN SOLOMON GREW OLD HIS WIVES SWAYED HIS HEART TO OTHER GODS; AND HIS
HEART WAS NOT WHOLLY WITH YAHWEH HIS GOD AS HIS FATHER DAVID'S HAD BEEN. SOLOMON BECAME A FOLLOWER OF
ASTARTE, THE GODDESS OF THE SIDONIANS.
THE SPIRIT OF THE SCYTHIANS
Solomon's practice of burning incense on high to the Queen of Heaven may have been a custom done in
the same spirit as that of the Scythians, who burned cannabis in mountain caves
and consecrated the act to their version of the Great Goddess, Tabiti-Hestia.""
Archeological finds show that the worship of the old Canaanite gods was an integral
part of the religion of the Hebrews, through to the very end of Hebrew monarchy.
The worship of the Goddess played a much more important role in this popular
religion than that of the gods.
The Third Reference
to Cannabis
GOD WANTS HERB
The next direct reference to kaneh-bosm appears in Isaiah, where God is reprim
anding the Israelites for, among other things, not supplying him with his due of
the Holy Herb.
YOU HAVE NOT BROUGHT ANY KANEH FOR ME, OR LAVISHED ON ME THE FAT
OF YOUR SACRIFICES. BUT YOU HAVE BURDENED ME WITH YOUR SINS AND WEARIED ME WITH YOUR OFFENCES.
ISAIAH 43:23-24
A HOUSEFUL OF SMOKE
An excerpt from earlier in Isaiah indicates that God's appetite had previously been appeased,
and "the house was filled with smoke..."
AND THE POSTS OF THE DOOR MOVED AT THE VOICE OF HIM THAT CRIED, AND THE HOUSE
WAS FILLED WITH SMOKE
THEN SAID I, WOE IS ME, FOR I AM UNDONEL BECAUSE I AM A MAN OF UNCLEAN LIPS, AND I DWELL
IN THE MIDST OF A PEOPLE OF UNCLEAN LIPS; FOR MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE KING, THE LORD OF HOSTS.
THEN FLEW ONE OF THE SERAPHIMS UNTO ME, HAVING A LIVE COAL IN HIS HAND, WHICH HE HAD TAKEN WITH
THE TONGS FROM OFF THE ALTAR,
AND HE LAID IT UPON MY MOUTH AND SAID, LO, THIS HATH TOUCHED THY LIPS;
AND THYNE INIQUITY IS TAKEN AWAY, AND THY SIN PURGED.
ISAIAH 6:4-7
EATING ANGELS
In The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross, Scholar John M. Allegro points out that
ancient peoples believed psychoactive plants to be living gateways to other realms,
and thought of them as angels. The Greek and Hebrew equivalent of the word angel
literally means messenger or worker of miracles.
SHAMANS IN DISGUISE
It seems much more believable that the winged beings which appeared to Isaiah
and other Biblical prophets were not actual angels,"' but rather ancient shamans,
wearing elaborate costumes and enacting trance inducing rituals, all enhanced by the use
of cannabis smoke and psychotropic compounds like anamita muscaria, mandrake, and others.
This type of ritual initiation was common in the ancient middle east, and often involved the use of winged costumes
and masks like those the early European explorers would find the aboriginal peoples of the world still
using thousands of years later.
DRINKING IN THE HOLY SMOKE
Seraphim translates as "smoke drinker," and those of us familiar with hashish know
that it burns in a similar way to both incense and coal. It isn't hard to imagine
an ancient shaman lifting a burning coal of hashish or pressed bud to the lips of the
ancient prophet Isaiah.
Isaiah, upon having the coal lifted to his lips, had his iniquity taken away and his sins purged.
This is comparable to the way in which the Hindu sadhus lift their chillums to their third eye and exclaim
"Boom Shiva," an act indicating their loss of ego and oneness with Shiva.
The Fourth
Reference to
Cannabis
KANEH FROM A DISTANT LAND
The fourth appearance of cannabis in the Old Testament is in Jeremiah, by which time it seems
that Yahweh's taste for the herb had declined. In the same way that God rejected Cain's offering
of grain in favour of Abel's blood sacrifice, the cannabis also is rejected.
What do I care about incense from Sheba or kaneh from a distant land? Your bu
rnt offerings are not acceptable; your sacrifices do not please me.?
Jeremiah 6:
20
The Final
Reference
to Cannabis
Trading with Tyre
The final Biblical referen
ce to kaneh appears in Ezekiel 27, in a passage called ?A Lament for Tyre.? The
kingdom of Tyre had fallen into disfavor with Yahweh, and cannabis appears as ju
st one of many of the wares received by Tyre, the ?merchant of peoples on many c
oasts.?
Both of these passages refer obliquely back to the story of King Solomon
. The mention of Sheba brings to mind Solomon?s love affair with the Queen of Sh
eba, and the King of Tyre played a pivotal role in Solomon?s building of the tem
ple.
Danites and Greeks from Uzal bought your merchandise; they exchang-ed wrou
ght iron, cassia and kaneh for your wares.
Ezekiel 27:19
From Favour to Disfavo
ur
Of these five references to kaneh and kaneh-bosm, the first three have cannab
is appear in Yahweh?s favour, the fourth definitely in his disfavour, and the fi
fth on a list from a kingdom that had fallen from grace in the eyes of the Israe
lite God. One might wonder at the reason for these apparent contradictions, and
the answer can be found within the story of the suppression of the cult of Asher
a, or Astarte, the ancient Queen of Heaven.
In The Chalice and the Blade, Riane
Eisler explains this as follows:
?There are of course some allusions to this in
the Bible itself. The prophets Ezra, Hosea, Nehemiah, and Jeremiah constantly r
ail against the ?abomination? of worshipping other gods. They are particularly o
utraged at those who still worship the ?Queen of Heaven?. And their greatest wra
th is against the ?unfaithfulness of the daughters of Jerusalem,? who were under
standably ?backsliding? to beliefs in which all temporal and spiritual authority
was not monopolized by men. But other than such occasional, and always pejorati
ve, passages, there is no hint that there ever was ? or could be ? a deity that
is not male.?
The ties between cannabis and the Queen of Heaven are probably mos
t apparent in Jeremiah 44, where the ancient patriarch seems to be concerned by
the people?s continuing worship of the Queen of Heaven, especially by the burnin
g of incense in her honour.
Keep in mind the documented use of cannabis by the s
hamanistic Ashera priestesses of pre-reformation Jerusalem, who anointed their s
kins with cannabis mixtures as well as burning it as incense.
Thus saith the Lo
rd of hosts, the God of Israel;
Ye have seen all the evil that I have brought up
on Jerusalem, and upon all the cities of Judah; and behold, this day they are a
desolation...
Because of their wickedness which they have committed to provoke m
e to anger, in that they went to burn incense, and to serve other gods...
Theref
ore now... wherefore commit ye this great evil against your souls... in that ye
provoke me to wrath with the works of your hands, burning incense unto other god
s in the land of Egypt?
Then all the men which knew that their wives had burned
incense unto other gods, and all the women that stood by, a great multitude, eve
n all the people that dwelt in the land of Egypt, answered Jeremiah,
saying,
As
for the word that thou hast spoken unto us in the name of the Lord, we will not
hearken unto thee.
But we will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of
our own mouth, to burn incense unto the queen of heaven, and to pour drink offer
ings unto her, as we have done. we, and our fathers, our kings, and our princes,
in the city of Judah, and in the streets of Jerusalem: for then we had plenty o
f victuals, and were well, and saw no evil.
JEREMIAH 44:15-23
Biblical Prohibit
ion
Jeremiah?s reference to the previous kings and princes that burned incense t
o the Queen of Heaven can be seen as referring to King Solomon, his son Rehoboam
, and other Biblical kings and prophets.
Other key Biblical figures in the prohi
bition of cannabis use and the worship of the Queen of Heaven include King Hezek
iah and his great-grandson Josiah.
II Kings 18:4 reports of Hezekiah that:
He
removed the high places, and brake the images, and cut down the asheras, and bra
ke into pieces the brazen serpent that Moses had made; for unto those days the c
hildren of
Israel did burn incense to it:
And he called it
Nehushtan.
breaking
the serpent
The interesting thing about this passage is that the Ark of the cove
nant does not contain the ten commandments of the law of Moses, rather it holds
Nehushtan, a brass serpent. The serpent is a frequent component in early represe
ntations of the goddess.
The Bible reports that the kings before Hezekiah ?set u
p images and groves in every high hill, and under every green tree; And there th
ey burnt incense in all the high places...?(1Kings 17) So did the kings who reig
ned after Josiah, who was killed in battle in 609 BC. According to The Columbia
History of the World, Josiah?s defeat ?seems to have been taken as proof of the
error of his ways... the later prophecies of Jeremiah and Ezekiel show polytheis
m back in practice.?
A Forged
Book of Law
The Book of the Law, which makes up mo
st of Deuteronomy and Leviticus, was used to prohibit the worship of the Goddess
and instill the death penalty for the burning of incense. Although it was suppo
sedly written by Moses, it was not discovered until some 600 years after Moses?
death.
In Green Gold, Judy Osburn follows the suggestion that the Book of the La
w may have been a forgery committed by the Hebrew priesthood with the hope of er
adicating the competing temples and their deities, which were getting more sacri
fices from the people than was the temple of Yahweh.
Osburn quotes Occidental My
thology by theologian Joseph Campbell, as stating that, before the discovery of
the Book of the Law,
neither kings nor people had paid attention whatsoever to t
he law of Moses which, indeed, they had not even known. They had been devoted to
the normal deities of the nuclear Near east, with all the usual cults...
Up unt
il that time the Hebrew people worshiped in the old ways, practicing their cult
in open places on peaks and hills and mountains, and even caves below.
The myste
rious discovery of the Book of the Law took place during the reign of King Josia
h. Once informed of the new regulations, Josiah?s wrath against the incense burn
ers was far harsher than that of his great-grandfather Hezekiah. The Bible descr
ibes his actions as follows.
And the king commanded Hilkiah the high priest...
to bring forth out of the temple of the Lord all the vessels that were made for
Baal and for Asherah, and for all the host of heaven: and he burned them outside
Jerusalem in the fields of Kidron...
And he put down the idolatrous priests, wh
om the kings of Judah had ordained to burn incense in the high places in the cit
ies of Judah, and in the places round about Jerusalem; them also that burned inc
ense unto Baal, to the sun, and to the moon, and to the planets, and to all the
host of heaven.
And he brought out the Asherah from the house of the Lord, outsi
de Jerusalem... and burned it at the brook Kidron, and stamped it small to powde
r... And he brought all the priests out of the cities of Judah, and defiled the
high places where the priests had burned incense...
And the high places that wer
e before Jerusalem... which Solomon the king of Israel had builded for Ashtoreth
the abomination of thr Zidonians... did the king defile. And he brake in pieces
the images, and cut down the groves, and filled their places with the bones of
men.
And he slew all the priests of the high places that were upon the altars, a
nd burned men?s bones upon them, and returned to Jerusalem...
And like unto him
was there no king before him, that turned to the Lord with all his heart, and wi
th all his soul, and with all his might, according to the law of Moses; neither
after him arose there any like him.
2 Kings 23
separation from the shekinah
The
Goddess returned to the Hebrew faith somewhat later in a form of Jewish mystici
sm called the Cabala. This teaches that the Shekinah is the female soul of God,
who couldn?t be perfect until he was reunited with her. Cabalists believed that
it was God?s loss of his Shekinah that brought about all evils. In some traditio
ns the Shekinah is seen as the pillar of smoke that guided the wandering nation
of Israel during its Exodus from Egypt.
The return of the goddess
Our separation
from the ancient Goddess and the denial of her ecstasies could well be seen as
the root cause of humanity?s separation from nature, both our own and that of th
e world around us. Perhaps the Goddess? ancient spirit won?t fully be restored u
ntil her children begin to respect and heal her abused body the Earth, return to
her sacred groves in dance and worship, and are free to once again burn the hol
y incense of kaneh-bosm in her honor and praise.
It would seem that the spirit o
f Ashera?s ancient incense burners has returned, in the form of the modern-day s
moke-in. Once again people of all ages, races, and creeds are gathering together
illegally, to celebrate the many benefits and uses of the sacred tree, and to b
urn holy incense in protest, as did the defiant crowd before Jeremiah so long ag
o.
Cannabis and the Christ?
But what of the Bible?s new Testament? Was Jesus a s
ecret imbiber of the herb, or did he continue on with the harsh prohibition of c
annabis, instituted with the zeal of Hezekiah, Josiah and Jeremiah? For the answ
er to those questions, you?ll have to order a copy of Green Gold, or wait for a
distant installment of When Smoke gets in my I.
BOOM SHIVA! BOOM SHAKTI!
HARI HA
RI GUNJA!
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The Chalice and the Blade by Riane Eisler; Harper Row;
1987.
Early Diffusions and Folk Uses of Hemp by Sula Benet; Reprinted in Cannab
is and Culture edited by Vera Rubin; Mouton; 1975.
Flesh of the Gods edited by P
T Furst; Praeger; 1972.
Green Gold the Tree of Life; Marijuana in Magic and Reli
gion by Chris Bennet, Judy Osburne, & Lynn Osburne; Access Unlimited; 1995.
The
Hebrew Goddess by Raphael Patai; Avon Books; 1967.
Marihuana: The First Twelve
Thousand Years by Ernest Abel; Plenum Press; 1980.
Marijuana and the Bible edite
d by Jeff Brown; The Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church; 1981.
Occidental Mythology by
Joseph Campbell; Penguin Books; 1982.
The Origins of Consciousness in the Break
down of the Bicameral Mind by Julian Jaynes; Houghton Mifflin Company; 1976.
The
Sacred Mushroom and the Cross by John M. Allegro; Double day; 1969.
Techniques
of High Magic, by King and Skinner; Destiny Books; 1976.
The Temple and the Lodg
e by Baignet and Leigh; Corgy Books; 1989.
The Woman?s Encyclopedia of Myths and
Secrets by Barbara G. Walker; Harper Collins; 1983.
ENDNOTES
1 In 1903, Briti
sh physician Dr. C. Creighton wrote Indications of the Hashish Vice in the Old T
estament, in which he concluded that several references to cannabis can be found
in the Old Testament. Examples are the ?honeycomb? referred to in the Song of S
olomon, 5:1, and the ?honeywood? in I Samuel 14: 25-45. Creighton also suggested that
Saul?s madness, Jonathan?s and Samson?s strength, and the first chapter of Ezekiel
are all to be explained by the use of cannabis.
2 All quotations from Sula Benet in
this article are taken from Early Diffusions and Folk Uses of Hemp, reprinted in Cannabis
and Culture, Vera Rubin, Ed.
3 At this same point in history, 300 BC, a group which
would become known as the Gnostics was formed. The Gnostics (meaning knowledge) were a
symbiosis of Judaic, Zoroastrian and Neo-Platonic thought, and claimed direct knowledge of the divine.
The Sufis, a group that is said to be an offshoot of Gnostic knowledge, use a similar term
for cannabis: khaneh.
4 In Techniques of High Magic, authors King and Skinner list the following
astral projection ointment from the 1890?s: lanolin ? 5 ounces;
hashish ? 1 ounce; hemp flowers ? 1 handful;
poppy flowers ? 1 handful; hellebore ? 1/2 handful. In 1615, Italian physician and demonologist Giovanni
De Ninault listed hemp as the main ingredient in the ointments and unguents used by the
?Devil?s followers?.
5 As in Raphael Patai?s The Hebrew Goddess, published by Avon Books
in 1967. (Quoted in The Once and Future Goddess, by Elinor W Gadon, Harper & Row, 1989.)
6
William A.Emboden Jr., Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L.: A Historic-Ethnographic Survey,
printed in Flesh of the Gods, edited by P.T.Furst, published by Praeger in 1972.
7
An idea which is fully explored in Terence McKenna?s Food of the Gods, published by Bantam in 1992.
8 For more information on Bible erotica see The X-Rated Bible; An Irrevent Survey of Sex in the Scriptures,
by Ben Edward Akerley.
9 For more information on the Scythian use of cannabis see the second installment
of this series in Cannabis Canada number 2.
10 Wings on gods or angels can be seen as symbolizing the
ability to travel between the ?two worlds?. For example, the Greek god Hermes, who?s winged feet enabled
him to act as messenger between men and gods.
Source: Kaneh Bosm: Cannabis in the Old Testament~ | Cannabis Culture Magazine