THE CHRISTIAN AND DRUG ABUSE [1]By Spencer Gear [1a] |
How should you respond to
the escalating drug problem?
What should you relate to your
children & friends?
What is the
message we should take
to a culture that is enmeshed in drugs -- legal and illicit?
What reasons can
we give for our
approaches to drug abuse?
I. THE FOUNDATION |
Isaiah 8:19-20 reads:
A. Foundation Principles |
1. Drugs & the Doctrine of Creation |
This have moved our thinking away from the truth of Creation, for people in Western cultures. I have people who come to me who have perpetrated horrible sexual abuse against children and ask, "What wrong have I done?" Children who lie, steal, are disobedient, rebel like crazy, and think it's their right. Many of them have no remorse for the wrong they have done. Where is conscience?
What is right and what is wrong? Just your opinion against mine? This is postmodern relativism. Anything goes as far as values are concerned. Why the hue and cry when euthanasia is voted down by the parliament? Why is the government even thinking of lowering the age of consent for sex to 10 and making incest no longer a criminal offence? How do we choose right vs. wrong?
That's why we must get back to Creation.
The second reason we must get back to Creation when talking about drugs is:
This comment comes from the front page article of Contact [7], "a monthly Newsletter for people interested in mental health in the Bundaberg district" (May, 1997). It recommended Eastern meditation, saying it
Through the deep relaxation that meditation can bring, comes an altered state of awareness. This altered state of awareness can take people from aggressive to tranquil, from fearful to confident, from doubtful to positive and from discontented to understanding.
The third reason we must get back to Creation is because:
Why do you think the Green movement has become so big? Nature is part of God and needs to be preserved, according to pantheism. Ecological movements use pantheism in their presentations.
There's a fourth reason to get back to Creation:
To get
to the sinful response of the Fall
into sin, you must start with Creation. After the Fall comes
Redemption. We
must start with Creation to oppose pantheism. I also put it to you that
in
this secular age, we need to get back to Creation, the Fall and
Redemption in our witnessing for Christ.
The doctrine of Creation means:
The Eastern/New Age pantheist wants to get away from life and the body in this world. He/she wants to escape to an inner world of non-material reality. Only in the teaching on Creation, do we find a positive attitude to material reality. It is all made by God for a purpose.
Pantheism can never use drugs for the correct purpose in its escape to "Nirvana." The Hindus see themselves as trapped in a wheel of suffering "and they yearn to break out of the cycle so that they can finally merge as a mindless drop in the great sea of forgetfulness that they call Nirvana." [8] This is what many on drug trips expect.
Only the biblical doctrine of Creation serves as the positive, useful and correct use of drugs which God created.
Don (D.A.) Carson preached a series of messages for the Presbyterian Theological College, Melbourne, in late 1996. He's an outstanding evangelical scholar of the Bible as well as a thinking, enthusiastic university evangelist. He says that he is having considerable impact on these postmodern students by going back to Genesis 1-3. He places a photocopy of Gen. 1-3 on each seat in the building and proclaims Creation, the Fall and then Redemption in Christ. You can read of his approach in his massive book, The Gagging of God (600 pages) [9]. Some of it is heavy going, but Carson's analysis and solutions are brilliant, in my estimate.
2. Drugs and the Biblical Teaching on the Fall |

But then sin entered (Gen. 3). Original sin was a deliberate act of rebellion. Gen. 2:16, "And the Lord God commanded the man, `You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat of it you will surely die."
Gen. 3 shows how they listened to Satan, ate the fruit and the dreadful consequences of sin and eternal damnation came on the human race. This original sin was rebellion of human beings misusing part of creation to satisfy the evil desires of the heart.
The sin of Adam had two effects:
Our thoughts, feelings, desires come out of wickedness in every area of our experience. In relation to God, sin is disobedience to God's Holy Law and Word (I John 3:4). Sin is a form of idolatry (Ex. 20:3-7). In relation to the world around us, sin is the abuse and misuse of the creation -- in opposition to the commands of God's law (Ex. 20:8-17).
This means that a person does not ultimately become a drug abuser because of environmental or psychological factors. These are important factors, but they are not the ultimate cause of drug abuse. From the Christian perspective, drug abuse does not come from people's ignorance or peer pressure but from sinfulness.
Why am I going over this fundamental doctrine of sin? Unless we see this, we are misguided in our attempts to help drug users. We must lay the axe at the root of the problem, because a radical cure is needed. If a person is serious about getting off drugs, he/she must see drug abuse as something that is sinful, that needs repentance from sin.
I read about
3. Drugs and Redemption |
Then the Father and the Son send the Holy Spirit to apply Christ's redemption to sinners. We could say, "Christians were chosen by the Father, purchased by the Son, and sealed by the Spirit (Eph. 1:13-14). Salvation is from the Triune God." [11]
This Eastern view of the
annihilation of the individual self is a popular explanation of
drug-induced experiences. This impersonal annihilation teaching has
been known to be the background of some suicide attempts.
| II. A PROPOSAL (THESIS) CONCERNING DRUG ABUSE |
Based on the foundation laid, we can say, concerning drug abuse:
A. The Distinction Between Medical Use of Drugs and Illicit Drugs |

If we take the teachings of Christ, we can construct a biblical view of the role of a physician to indicate some of the functions of medicines.
Robert Morey's summary is penetrating: "The use of any drug for the purposes of entertainment, escape, mind-control, religious worship, occult experiences, magic or murder is a sin against God, the Creation, the Society and the Individual." [14]
My proposal to you condemns any use of drugs for non-medical reasons, regardless of whether that use has developed into a physical dependence or continuous use. I do not support the methadone program. It is the giving of a synthetic morphine substitute (methadone) to heroin addicts. The methadone is not for medicinal reasons. It is a continuation of drug addiction. Neither the individual nor the government has the power to change the drug addiction. Some by sheer determination have come out of the drug scene -- but it's a tough battle. That's why the Australian government's policy is "harm minimisation."
However, I know of many who have
been
set free from the oppression of drug addiction through a life changing
encounter
with Jesus Christ -- through repentance, forgiveness and faith. If you
are
interested in the Gospel of Jesus Christ that changes people NOW and
guarantees
eternal life -- see "The Content of the Gospel." [15]
| III. WITCHCRAFT (SORCERY) AND DRUGS |
Some people seem to think the Bible has nothing to say about the drug problem in our society. They reach this understanding because of
A. Two basic misunderstandings: |
1. They assume drug problems are peculiar to the 21st century. |
2. In their reading of the Scriptures, they fail to see the places where the writers raise the issue. |
Consider the Greek word, "pharmakeia."
The English words, "pharmacy, pharmaceutical, pharmacist", come from the Greek word, pharmakeia. The origin of this word refers to the making and use of drugs. "The word means in the classical writers, a preparer of drugs." [17]
W.E. Vine in his Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words says, "In sorcery, the use of drugs whether simple or potent, was generally accompanied by incantations and appeals to occult powers, with the provision of various charms, amulets, etc., professedly designed to keep the applicant or patient from the attention and power of demons, but actually to impress the applicant with the mysterious resources and powers of the sorcerer." [18]
A more recent word study by Colin
Brown,
says, concerning pharmakeia, "Its meaning of medicine, magic
potion,
poison gives the underlying idea of the words. Potions include poisons
but
there has always been a magical tradition of herbs gathered and
prepared
for spells, and also for encouraging the presence of spirits at magical
ceremonies."
[19]
B. Biblical Use of "Pharmakeia" |
We see the use of pharmakeia in passages like Gal. 5:20 where one of the works of the flesh ("acts of the sinful nature") is witchcraft or sorcery (depending on the translation). Drugs were part of witchcraft. Pharmakeia was only part of sorcery, "it literally means the act of administering drugs." [20]
In the context of Galatians, pharmakeia refers to sinful activity. It is the practice of witchcraft, involving drug abuse. It is the non-medical use of drugs that is one of the "acts of the sinful nature." We must get this clear. People may say the reasons they use drugs are: boredom, to get kicks, or to escape, "but the ultimate motive lying behind all other seeming motives is a self-satisfaction of the inner, depraved desires. This reveals that a drug experience is essentially selfish because it directs one entirely into oneself.
Galatians 5: 17 makes it clear that drug abuse is being in total opposition to the work of the Holy Spirit, "For the sinful nature desires what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit what is contrary to the sinful nature. They are in conflict with each other, so that you do not do what you want."
In this context, the remedy for witchcraft and drug abuse is the work of the Spirit of God which replaces the "acts of the sinful nature" with "love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, meekness and self-control" (Gal. 5:22-23).
You will also notice in Galatians 5 that pharmakeia is linked with other sins. For example, in v. 20 the list "couples idolatry with its habitual ally, sorcery." [21] The Bible seems to place certain sins together because there are elements that bind them together -- idolatry and witchcraft.
With this is mind, what kinds of sins are generally associated with witchcraft and drug abuse? If you look at the list of sinful practices here is Gal. 5:19-21, they divide into four basic categories: [22]
1. Sins of sensual passion. "Fornication" or "sexual immorality" (NIV) refers to any kind of sexual immorality outside of marriage. "Impurity" or "uncleanness" often refers to the unnatural sexual acts such as homosexuality. "Debauchery" or "licentiousness" indicates the "giving up of oneself totally to sensuality and is expressed in such sins as pornography, exhibitionist nudity, sleeping around with anybody. These are sins against the body. [23]
2. Sins of unlawful dealing in spiritual things. "Idolatry" means that one makes a god out of some aspect of created things. The wood or stone idols of the heathen are obvious. The secularism and exaltation of reason of modern human beings are also forms of idolatry. All idolatry is a direct sin against the God who exists.
3. Sins of "violations of brotherly love." Or, sins against your neighbour -- hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissension, factions and envy.
4. Sins of "intemperate excesses." Or, sins against society. These are sins that usually happen in groups. In Gal. 5, these sins are mentioned as "drunkenness, orgies and the like."
Western people seem to be returning to the "Age of Magic" through the New Age Movement There's a resurgence in meditation, yoga, crystals, astrology, the occult, witchcraft and Satanism. "There is an acknowledged attitude toward drug abuse which views it as a magical solution to personal problems." [24]
Wherever the Bible mentions sorcery/witchcraft (pharmakeia), it also refers to drug abuse, which was an integral part of ancient sorcery. When the Bible condemns witchcraft/sorcery, the denunciation includes drug abuse. This position is taken by many well known New Testament commentators and scholars. [25]
There are other biblical uses of pharmakeia that I can mention briefly:
Rev. 9:20-21:
Even after a third of the human race has perished under God's relentless, severe punishment, people still will not repent of their sins and turn to God. John, the revelator, mentions certain sins that were prominent at that stage of society. They include "magic arts" (NIV), pharmakeia. We could just as easily translate v. 21, "Nor did they repent of their... drug abuse." [26]
The existence of these things in cultures of the East and now in the West (thanks to the New Age) supports the underlying unity between these evils. "What binds them together is a lust to substitute the world of the creature for the world of the Creator. In his rebellion, man wants to be his own Creator and to live in a pleasure world which panders to the desires of the flesh.
Rev. 9 says that the people "did not repent... they did not stop worshiping demons and idols" (v. 20).
Alan Watts, one of the leaders in the hippie drug culture in the 1960s and 70s, "pointed out that drugs cause a person to loosen up in the area of inter-physical and inter-sexual contact with other people." [28] We know that some drugs seem to heighten sexual sensations during intercourse. When a person takes drugs, he/she often loses self-control, including sex-control.
I don't have space to look into Revelation 18:23; 21:8; 22:15 to see how illicit drugs will be used by people and nations at the end of the church age. Just before Christ returns. However, it is important "to note that the last chapter of the last book of the New Testament ends with a warning to those who traffic in sorcery and the wrong use of drugs." [29]
The Old Testament is just as adamant against use of drugs and sorcery. e.g. Ex. 7:11, 22; 8:18; 22:18; Deut. 18:11; 2 Kings 9:22; Isa. 47:9, 12; Dan. 2:2; Micah 5:12; Nahum 3:4; Mal. 3:5.
IV. DRUGS AND GOD |
1. Even some of
those coming out
of
the hippie movement of the 1970s, such as Timothy Leary & Alan
Watts, linked "religious" and "mystical" experiences with LSD and other
drugs. This
was their wonderful motive for taking drugs. [32] Aldous Huxley, who
didn't
believe in "god", linked the "religious" experience with taking drugs.
[33]
2. But what has liberalism done over the last 100 years in the church? It has not taught people to fear God and it has rejected the new birth that brings regeneration. It brought "dead, formal, and external religion. This created a vacuum within [people] which drugs now attempt to fill." [34]
3. Liberalism rejects the Christianity of the Bible, shattering the foundation of historical "facts", leaving religion to be a non-rational leap of faith or state of mind. This opens life up to the drug experience.
4. This view is not only in modern liberalism, but in modern philosophies of art, music and literature of the last century. It is also the experience of the New Age Movement. Those on drugs, often say, "Why waste time meditating or praying when I can drop out on drugs?" How are modern liberal theologians going to interpret the drug-induced, non-rational religious experience when there is nothing like it in orthodox Christianity? The answers will come from: (1) Eastern religion (Hinduism, Buddhism), or (2) Existential Christianity of the Charismatics/Pentecostals.
5. Drug-induced mystical experience or hyped-up experiential highs of some Christian groups are not acceptable before God. Hebrews 11:6, "And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him."
The way to the true God is the way of "faith." The Bible's view of faith is "that certain conscious commitment of the whole [person] to the Lord Jesus Christ in all the glory of His person and work." [35]
6. Your true worship of God is this, "Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength" (Mark 12:30). You cannot love, obey and worship the one true God through a drug-induced experience. Your heart will be somewhere else, your soul high, your mind blown and your strength zapped.
When Jesus saved the demoniac, the demons were gone; he was clothed and in his right mind (Mark 5:15). According to 2 Tim. 1:7, the work of the Spirit in your life produces a sound mind/self-discipline. When the prodigal son was converted "he came to his senses/he came to himself" (Luke 15:17). Acts 19:18-20 makes it clear that the sign of true conversion is turning away from all forms of witchcraft -- drug abuse.
Many people try to get to God via
a
drug experience. They by-pass Jesus Christ and are damned. "Since the
Fall,
[human beings have] attempted to find inward peace, happiness, and joy
by
any means except the way laid out for [them] in the Scriptures." [36]
The use of drugs in every aspect is opposed to the work of the
Spirit
in producing the fruit of the Spirit. Drugs is a manifestation of the
sinful
nature. Refer to Gal. 5:16-23.
V. SOME QUESTIONS FOR YOU TO CHEW ON |
1. In Gen. 1:28 we have the Cultural Mandate that God has given to human beings. Does drug abuse violate the Cultural Mandate? If so, why & how?
2.
Why is a
widespread turning to drugs detrimental to society?
Remember, injecting SPEED may KILL you; LSD probably breaks chromosomes; many drugs destroy brain cells; marijuana has serious adverse effects. There are grave personal consequences from using drugs. They may alter your mind permanently. You can expect basic, and maybe, permanent change to your personality. Many times you may lose your ability to concentrate or read. Motivation could be zapped -- especially with marijuana.
4. Pill popping is much quicker than sanctification. Some ask, "Why spend hours in prayer when a pill can give you instant peace? Why seek to put to death the sin of anxiety when a tranquillizer will calm your nerves?" Read James 1:2-4.
5. The use of drugs may open you up to demonic or satanic control. Is it worth it? Many pagan religions have used drugs to gain entrance into the spirit world to commune with evil spirits and gods.
6. Addiction is slavery. Paul to
the
Corinthians said, "I will not be mastered by anything" (I Cor. 6:12).
VI. WHAT IS HAPPENING? |
|
|
In the Bundaberg News-Mail, "Friday Faith", April 4, 1997, p. 18, it recorded:
2. "Current legislation [in SA] is responsible for many young people moving on to other drugs";
3. "Lives are being ruined by m. because many teenagers were unaware of its dangers";
4. "Many young people did not believe m. was harmful to their health despite `the peak health bodies in the world (being) unanimous in their condemnation of the drug' because of a lack of information";
5. Because the general community is ambivalent in its attitude, due mainly to misinformation, criminals are reaping a rich reward";
6. "M. laws should be tightened to make growing `any quantity' of the drug a criminal offence with `extremely heavy fines'";
7. "A reward system should also be set up for information leading to conviction";
8. "M. use could lead to harder drug abuse because `soft law' sent a message to the community that `drugs are OK'".
|
|
An April 12, 1997 letter to the Bundaberg News-Mail, in reply to an article, "Call for tough laws", News-Mail, April 4, 1997, warning of the dangers of marijuana use contained this content :
2. "The nonsense printed by Drug Arm on marijuana";
3. "The most dangerous drugs in common use are the legal ones: alcohol and cigarettes. . . The drug most linked with a greater use of hard drugs is alcohol";
4. "Marijuana has never killed anyone";
5. "The ban on alcohol earlier this century did nothing to curb its use, and only enriched the mafia. . . Marijuana now performs this role";
6. "The drug debate needs informed opinion, not hysterical lies";
7. "The best approach, I believe, is moderation in all drug use, whether legal or illegal";
8. "Any high can induce an addiction cycle, and that mixing hard drugs, especially with alcohol, can be fatal";
9. The ABC's Quantum is running an excellent series on drugs at the moment. I am sure we will all find it informative on m., and that the claims made by the above writers will be entirely discredited":
|
|
An April 21, 1997 letter to the Bundaberg News-Mail (replying to letter of April 12) proclaimed:
4. "It is rapidly absorbed by the blood through the lungs and accumulates in heart, brain, liver and body fats. Since release from fat can take up to 40 days the residual effects of marijuana can be topped up by intermittent smoking. Is this the recreational aspect you refer to?"
5. "Effects such as memory loss, balance and co-ordination impairment, hallucinations, anxiety and panic attacks and a form of psychosis..."
6. "The increase in the incidence of tongue, mouth and jaw cancer is apparent but as yet undocumented. It may be no worse than tobacco smoke but it does exist."
7. "The biological dependence is well known."
8. "All addictions need financial input to support them... supplemented by crime... juveniles turning to crime to support their addiction."
9. "You look at the long term effects of drug dependency and not at the short term pleasures."
|
|
1. "Where oh where do
you get
your facts on marijuana use?"
2. "Your exaggeration of undocumented stories and half truths have little factual basis."
3. "When we discuss m. it is essential that we are entirely truthful and do not conduct a campaign of scaremongering."
4. "While the ACT and SA Governments have decriminalised m., Qld persists in prosecuting it as a dangerous drug."
5. "If it must remain illegal surely the word `prohibited' would be more descriptive than the word `dangerous'."
6. "One of the most remarkable qualities of this drug is its safety as medicine. It is non toxic. No deaths from overdose have been reported. In fact it is safer than some foods... It is far safer than aspirin and many legal medicines which commonly have a lethal dose only 10 times their effective dose."
7. "It has been estimated that one would have to smoke 800 m. cigarettes to induce a fatal reaction."
8. "Like any drug used to excess it can have minor side effects. It is not called dope for nothing."
9. "The citizens of Arizona and
California voted into law their right to have legal access to marijuana
for medicinal uses."
| VII. WHY DO PEOPLE USE DRUGS FOR NON-MEDICAL REASONS? |
A. Initially, people use drugs because of: |
1. We must distinguish between needs based on creation and sinful needs. |
Gen. 1:27, "So God created man (human beings) in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.
Psalm 8:3-9:
Gen. 2:18, "The Lord God
said, `It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper
suitable for
him."
We are created with a need for human
companionship,
communication and love. There are created needs, but there are also
Sinful needs
In Gen. 3, human beings sinned and the results are: needs and desires are contaminated by sin. The desire to kill oneself or other human beings goes back to the Fall. When talking about drug abuse, we must make sure we are clear about the difference between created desires and sinful desires.
Within the limits of God's will, He has provided us with wonderful ways to satisfy created needs: companionship through friends, marriage; relating to God through His Word, worship, prayer.
The desire for food and sleep comes through creation. The desire for a drug experience comes from the Fall into sin and the guilt that comes.
Initially, people use drugs for many sinful reasons.
B. Why do people continue to use drugs? |
Most people would not risk memory loss, zapped motivation, schizophrenia, etc. if it were not for the altered states of consciousness that they experience.
C. The Pluses and Minuses of the Drug Experience |
2. contact with the normal world of sense perception;
3. any accurate perception of the size, shape, or colour of objects;
4. the ability to perceive differences between objects;
5. the sense of self and its identity;
6. the awareness of time;
7. consciousness of the past and its importance;
8. consciousness of the future and its goals;
9. the ability to give sustained attention;
10. the ability to communicate intelligently.
During the drug experience, you may
gain:
2. the monistic or pantheistic perception of the universe;
3. the experience of godhood by sensing that one is infinite, all-knowing, all-powerful, indestructible, and eternal;
4. the sense of being possessed, overpowered, or carried along by some force greater than oneself;
5. a heightened perception of sounds sights, and colours;
6. a heightened sensual experience of sex, touch, and taste;
7. a confusion of the senses in which one may see music and hear colours;
8. the ability to live in the present without any care or concern for the past or future;
9. the ability to be released from all responsibility and restraint and to do whatever one feels like doing;
10. mystical or religious
experiences with God/"god" or spirit beings. [41]
D. What can we say about the altered state of consciousness? |
Once we realise that the core issue is the drug experience itself, then anything that produces in human beings this altered mental state must be condemned. This condemnation stands whether this drug is physically harmless and non-addictive. [42]
There are other ways to produce this altered mental state: Eastern meditation, yoga, chanting, singing and dancing.
I am convinced that biblical
Christianity can give the proper arguments against drug abuse and
answers to the issue of the drug experience. This requires a knowledge
of basic Christianity --
which is fairly scarce these days. We are in a day of shocking biblical
illiteracy,
even in the evangelical church.

| X. Endnotes |
Drug Use & Abuse
The Truth
Challenge (homepage)
