Houston Chronicle Sunday

Does God care if you smoke weed? Many faith groups say yeah, man

- By Jeffrey MacDonald RELIGION NEWS SERVICE

BOSTON — Since the East Coast’s first recreation­al marijuana shops opened in Massachuse­tts this past fall, pot fans have snapped up more than $20 million worth of legal weed.

But for many people of faith in the Bay State, legalizati­on hasn’t burned away the moral and health concerns about the use of drugs for fun.

What’s legal isn’t always right — but using pot isn’t always wrong, either, some religious leaders say.

“What sort of a standard do we want to set for marijuana use?” asked Liz Goodman, pastor of Monterey United Church of Christ in Monterey, Mass. “There’s kind of a norm, still, among people who drink alcohol that you don’t drink before 5 o’clock. That’s still kind of a benchmark. But there are no real cultural benchmarks or norms around legal pot use.”

Massachuse­tts is one of 10 states that have, along with the District of Columbia, legalized small amounts of marijuana for adult recreation­al use. The door to dope swung open despite opposition from the Roman Catholic Archdioces­e of Boston, which poured $850,000 into a last-minute effort to defeat the ballot measure in 2016.

Now that new pot shops are opening each month, Catholics leery of recreation­al marijuana are taking a more nuanced approach. Those urged to abstain include young adults, whose brains are still developing well into their 20s, and anyone who’s prone to abusing it, according to the Rev. Richard McGowan, a Boston College economist who studies the marijuana industry.

“The problem for the church is going to be: If you say the use of alcohol is all right, then why not marijuana?” McGowan said. “There’s a difference. Alcohol can lead to all kinds of problems, and so can marijuana. So you’re expecting a level of maturity around this substance that, probably, the people who are going to use it don’t have.”

Some Massachuse­tts evangelica­ls are still trying to stop new pot shops from opening, only now the fight has gone local. They’re counting on a NIMBY (not in my backyard) dynamic in communitie­s such as Acton, which voted in favor of legalizing marijuana statewide and then barred pot shops from town.

The socially conservati­ve Massachuse­tts Family Institute is now visiting churches twice a week, up from once per quarter two years ago, according to Director of Community Alliances Mike King. The message is always the same: Demand that your elected officials ban pot shops before they’re out there selling marijuana edibles, which might be packaged like candy but can cause harm, especially when kids get their hands on them.

“I’ve got a marijuana sermon all ready for your church,” King said in a podcast posted at the MFI website on Jan. 11. He told Religion News Service that Massachuse­tts evangelica­l churches are more eager to hear a call to action around drugs than other issues, including abortion.

“The ability to get into a church and speak on Sunday morning becomes much easier, for some reason, when you’re talking about drugs than when you’re talking about life and religious liberty,” King said.

Bay State evangelica­ls have shown they can keep pot shops out of cities where pews are filled with immigrants. Example: In Lawrence, where 40 percent of the population is foreign-born, 120 congregati­ons banded together and helped pressure the City Council to impose a ban. In 20 of the approximat­ely 100 communitie­s that have banned pot shops, King said, MFI was active in mobilizing churches to help make it happen.

Yet as Massachuse­tts residents grow more comfortabl­e with legal pot, many in faith communitie­s aren’t fighting the sale of weed in their towns. Nor are they saying the faithful must always abstain in order to have clear conscience­s. Some situations neverthele­ss call for restraint, leaders say, and they’re beginning to carve out guidelines for the new landscape.

For Goodman, the question of whether to get high isn’t a dilemma; she’s never done it and has no interest in starting. But she’d like her fellow clergy to heed some rules of thumb if they’re going to use legal marijuana.

“I would expect my colleagues, at least, to not use pot when they’re with their parishione­rs, in the same way that they would not use alcohol when they’re with their parishione­rs,” Goodman said. “It’s less a matter of standards than a condition of mind. … (After) a toke or two, you’re less careful about what you divulge or what your manner is.”

Using marijuana for medicinal purposes is easier to justify than recreation­al use, some say.

“I don’t know where the line is between medical and recreation­al,” said Rabbi David Lerner of Temple Emunah, a Conservati­ve congregati­on in Lexington. “I think there would be more of an argument to (use marijuana) if there was some kind of medical component.”

Lerner said it can be important in some cases for clergy to explore why individual congregant­s are getting high, especially if it’s interferin­g with daily tasks or responsibi­lities. He said it could be an indicator of deeper, unresolved issues.

“We want to make sure that people who are using marijuana recreation­ally are not medicating themselves and avoiding concerns that should be treated medically,” Lerner said. “For some people, using substances recreation­ally can lead to more problemati­c use. People need to be mindful of their purpose in turning to a substance.”

And while clergy can now get high without breaking the law, they’re still held to a higher standard, sources say. Lerner noted that religious leaders are role models, and young people who see elders getting high might wrongly decide: “It’s fine for them, so it’s fine for me.”

“It certainly keeps things clearer and cleaner if clergy just don’t use it,” Goodman said. “But you’re not talking about behavior that is unquestion­ably problemati­c. You’re talking about use of marijuana for pleasure.”

 ?? Stephanie Zollshan / The Berkshire Eagle / Associated Press ?? Customers wait in line on the opening day of recreation­al marijuana sales at Theory Wellness in Great Barrington, Mass. Theory is the first dispensary in the Berkshires region of Massachuse­tts to open its doors for recreation­al marijuana sales.
Stephanie Zollshan / The Berkshire Eagle / Associated Press Customers wait in line on the opening day of recreation­al marijuana sales at Theory Wellness in Great Barrington, Mass. Theory is the first dispensary in the Berkshires region of Massachuse­tts to open its doors for recreation­al marijuana sales.
 ?? Steven Senne / Associated Press ?? Head grower Mark Vlachos tends to cannabis plants at Sira Naturals medical marijuana cultivatio­n facility in Milford, Mass.
Steven Senne / Associated Press Head grower Mark Vlachos tends to cannabis plants at Sira Naturals medical marijuana cultivatio­n facility in Milford, Mass.

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