The Highest Court

Supreme Court Considers Use of Hallucinogenic Religious Tea No, the Justices aren’t pondering a change in the offerings of the Supreme Court coffee room. In this week’s full-text RNS article, linked above, associate editor Kevin Eckstrom looks at the efforts of a small Christian sect to import hoasca tea, which contains hallucinogens and is used […]

Supreme Court Considers Use of Hallucinogenic Religious Tea

No, the Justices aren’t pondering a change in the offerings of the Supreme Court coffee room. In this week’s full-text RNS article, linked above, associate editor Kevin Eckstrom looks at the efforts of a small Christian sect to import hoasca tea, which contains hallucinogens and is used in a sacramental rite. Their case was argued before the Supreme Court earlier this week.

Quote: UDV members say the tea, which is brewed in the religion’s Brazilian homeland, gives them a “heightened spiritual awareness” that allows them to communicate with God. UDV compares the tea with sacramental wine used in the Christian sacrament of Communion.


and

Several justices asked why hoasca should be banned when peyote-used in Native American rituals-is allowed. “Peyote seems to have been administered without the sky falling in,” said Justice Stephen Breyer.

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