The veil is thinning, and the truth about the origins of Christianity is more hallucinatory than we’ve been led to believe. The modern church, sanitized and controlled, is a far cry from its mystical, mind-altering roots.
Numerous sources confirm that early Christians embraced psychedelics as a means of connecting with the divine. This wasn’t mere recreational drug use; it was a deliberate practice to achieve altered states of consciousness, unlocking spiritual insights inaccessible to the sober mind. The Bible, once cryptic and confusing, now makes perfect sense to those who have experienced the profound shifts in perception induced by these substances.
The idea that early Christians were sober-minded teetotalers is a fabrication. Roman-era wine, a staple of Christian communion, was far from the watered-down grape juice of today. Ancient recipes included psychoactive additives like opium. Yes, the wine offered to Christ on the cross may have been laced with opium, a mercy for his suffering but also a sacrament.
It wasn’t just opium. The cult of Demeter and Persephone consumed kykeon, a wine laced with ergot, the natural precursor to LSD. These cults thrived in Rome during Christianity’s rise, their adherents tripping into realms of ecstatic revelation. Did some of these practices bleed into early Christian rituals? The evidence suggests they did.
The knowledge of psychedelics unlocks a deeper understanding of Christianity, taking you from sheep to shepherd, from the exoteric to the esoteric. It doesn’t disprove Christianity; it elevates it, revealing the hidden dimensions obscured by centuries of dogma and control.
The divine is not some distant, unreachable entity. It is within us, accessible through the doors of perception. Early Christians knew this, and they used psychedelics to tear down the walls of the mundane, to glimpse the face of God within themselves.
Those who dismiss this truth are those who haven’t dared to explore the depths of their own consciousness. They are the blind leading the blind, clinging to a false sense of security in their ignorance. Don’t be one of them. Seek the truth, wherever it may lead, even if it means venturing into the psychedelic wilderness.
Remember the words of John: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” This Word is not just a written text; it is a living, breathing force that can be experienced directly through altered states of consciousness. Embrace the future by embracing the past, and discover the psychedelic roots of your faith.
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