I hope this works:  The article was originally posted on the Puritan Board, but is so thorough that I have exercised the review purposes copyright under the 
  
Pharmakeia II:  Biblically-defined Sorcery in the 20th and 21st Centuries
 
This is a sequel to the thread, 
‘Pharmakeia’ in the NT Era: Exposition and Application.   In the event some throw up their hands and say, “Oh no! haven’t we had  enough of this?”, I answer in the negative and say, No, the unsettled  state of this issue endangers souls who may be led to begin using  marijuana (or other drugs) where it is legal to use it, by the  affirmation of some who say it is not necessarily a sin – a violation of  God’s word – to use it. While this is about marijuana, it is not 
only  about that drug but the other psychedelics as well, and how they are to  be seen in light of the Biblical data.  For it may come to pass, even  if not at present, that it will be legal to use a number of these drugs.
 
At issue is that the psychedelic drugs generally are those drugs spoken  about in the Scripture and prohibited; some deny this; others deny that  we can identify them since they are not specifically named.  So this  will be about the psychedelics generally – marijuana being just one  among many – and classified as 
pharmakeia agents.
 
The seriousness of this discussion, and the moral accountability of  individuals participating, increases with increasing light, for it will  be shown that to allow (to condone, or 
not to forbid) 
a major idolatrous practice  is the “doctrine of Balaam”, which includes [spiritual] fornication of  different sorts, as was the case in Pergamos (Rev 2:14) and in Thyatira  (2:20 ff.), which represent principles relevant for the entire church  age.  Therefore it would be most prudent to look before leaping into  this discussion.  To strongly state a view is tantamount to teaching it,  as there are many observing who would act on a reasoned argument, not  perceiving it may be wrong.  We see this all the time when it comes to  doctrine; with praxis (accepted practice or custom) it is the same.
 
For reasons to be made clear, I did not in the aforementioned thread  sufficiently present the Biblical view, and would call my “debate” with  Ruben there a draw, and given the stakes involved – the eternal destiny  of souls – that is certainly not acceptable.  So here we continue.
 
It will be obvious I am presenting this more strongly than before, while, at the same time, will endeavor to reflect 
graciously  on the motives of those who oppose the view I present.  R.C. Sproul, in  an audio series on building Christian character, posited the concept  “judgment of charity”, which is putting the best rather than the worst  spin on others’ motives and actions, unless evidence demands otherwise. 
 
I can see that one objection to the view I put forth is that people do  not want to entertain – much less see established – more legalism.  I  wholeheartedly agree as I am of the same mind.  I will endeavor to show  that the 
pharmakeia-class substances are a genuine Biblical  prohibition, why they are prohibited, that they are identifiable by  means of their properties and their affect in the human system, and also  the church’s obligation – 
mandate – to discern this matter,  establish it by teaching, and enforce it by church discipline (the  church aspects will not require a separate thread, thank you).
 
If this seems a little long, consider it a booklet, for the sake of thoroughness.
 
Something I have noticed while studying the interaction 
in this post  (as well others) in the precursor thread to this, is that my main  discussion partner, Ruben, had conflated the simple concept I presented  regarding psychedelic drugs and their effects with the vast realm of  “magical traditions, rites, and lore” which really do abound in  superstition and charlatanism.  The impression conveyed by him was that  the view of 
pharmakeia I present was of the same cloth, which it is not.
 
This is why I have titled the thread “
Biblically-defined”  sorcery, that it may be distinguished from the common superstitious  definition and class.  If you want to know what this latter is just  check out “Sorcery” in the 5-volume Hastings 
Dictionary of the Bible (what Sir Robert Anderson calls “the standard textbook of the [Unitarian] cult” in his 
The Lord from Heaven, p. 35).  With their anti-supernatural bent they just posit garbage, recounting one superstition after another.  The 
Biblical view and teaching regarding 
pharmakeia / sorcery is 
not filled with all sorts of this arcana and nonsense, but is plain and clear.
 
I think in trying to “get a handle” on a matter he is thoroughly  unfamiliar with Ruben brought to bear in the discussion something he  knew a little of, but which had nothing to do with what I am talking  about, and so we spoke but from different frames of reference and thus  did not communicate well.  Admittedly it confused me that he brought up  all manner of extraneous matters and expected me to answer them.
 
So I want to say, Ruben, that I am not talking of that entire field you  repeatedly refer to, such as herbs and ingredients used in occult stores  today, “sorcerers” as considered in magical traditions and rites, all  of which 
are steeped in superstition, hoaxes, and nonsense.
 
I can understand your reverting to such things in the absence of  familiarity with the topic at hand, but it would seem that intellectual  humility and honesty would not venture forth to opine so strongly on  what one does not know.  I am surely not talking of all the magic and  occult stuff you repeatedly bring up.  It but serves the cause of  obfuscation to do so, though I do not believe you intended this, but  were unwitting in it.
 
I have a concern that the plug may again be pulled on this thread – as on a previous one – because some folks will feel 
reproved?   Come on!  This is a Christian board and we are talking of very serious  matters, not only the taking of drugs, but a certain class of drugs  which Scripture says regular use of will warrant damnation (Rev 21:8;  22:15).  There ought to be no place for our own insipid form of  “political correctness” here!  Before folks venture an opinion they  should be advised that gracious – albeit strong – reproof comes with the  territory; we’re talking of 
sin such as can destroy souls, and where bad counsel is immensely destructive; should not such counsel be reproved?
 
I do not “hide behind” my standing as an officer in the church but  involve myself in this discussion / debate simply as a brethren down in  the trenches; I would appreciate the same from any admins and mods that  participate, given that I conduct myself decently and in order.
 
I see reproof is given over such matters as celebrating Christmas in  one’s own home, and how much more serious is this!?  If one wants to  avoid being reproved, one should guard one’s tongue, as the psalmist  urges.
 
Nor is reproof wrong or ungodly:
“He that rebukes  a man afterward shall find more favour than he that flatters with the  tongue . . . Let the righteous smite me; it shall be a kindness:  and  let him reprove me; it shall be an excellent oil, which shall not break  my head” (Prov 28:23; Ps 141:5).
In the  previous aforementioned thread we played softball; here it’s hardball.   This is the lot Luther and Calvin played on.  Though I’m not in their  league, this is no less serious – unless defending the true exposition  of God’s word in a life-and-death matter is less important today.
 
I will review some of the exchanges in the previous thread.  Often, to  help clarify between speakers, those I quote will be in blue type and  myself in grey (or whatever).  Before that, for those new to the  discussion, I will post some lexical data, and also give another link to  an even earlier thread on the topic.  Then I will go further into the  phenomenon of increasing drug use – 
sorcerous drug use – in the  20th and the present centuries in the light of Scripture, and the  foretelling of this in the Book of Revelation.
 
I will also present some examples, toward the end of the post, of the  devastation the legalizing of marijuana has wreaked on the children of  England.
 
------------
 
To get started I’ll interact with some of Ruben’s objections:
 
Post #55
It was said by Ruben, 
“If the prohibitions of pharmakeia are prohibitions of substances then there must be some guidance in determining which those are.”  Exactly so.  And what would we receive as acceptable guidance?  This is a primary issue, and I will address it.
 
Post #62
Ruben continues, 
“[Steve’s] argument is made based on  experiences that certain drugs bring you into contact with the occult.  But it hasn't been explained how we know that some sort of heightened  occult contact is the right interpretation of those drug-induced  experiences. 
 
The argument is made based on a word-study that Scripture prohibits  certain drugs; but unless Scripture prohibits all drugs you have the  difficulty of identifying which drugs are in view.”
 
This is a good place to start.  First of all, what is this 
pharmakeia  about?  It is the Greek word used in Revelation 18:23, where harlot  Babylon is said to have deceived the nations by means of her  “sorceries”, and it is also used in Rev 9:21 of the Textus Receptus (the  so-called Majority Text and the Critical Text have instead the Greek  word 
pharmakon:  drugs “that induce magic spells” – interesting  discussion on this variant below.  Suffice it to say for the moment that  it doesn’t affect the translation, per the NASB or ESV) – in Rev 9:21  it is said of men refusing to repent of their “sorceries” in the time of  the sixth trumpet and its judgments, those that survived the lethal  judgments.
 
When Paul uses this word in Galatians 5:20 (translated “witchcraft” AV)  it is called a work of the flesh, equal to murder and adultery.  We will  have an extended discussion below of its use in Rev 18:23 and the  deception of the nations by Babylon’s use of “sorceries” (
pharmakeia);  a related word (called a cognate) is used also in Rev 21:8 and 22:15 of  “sorcerers”, those who use and administer the drugs, and influence  others by means of them.  In 21:8 it says that these people have their  part in the lake of fire – “the second death” – and in 22:15 these are  said to be eternally barred from the City of God.
 
In the LXX 
pharmakeia and its cognates are used when referring to persons or activities in the OT involving 
the magic arts  (cf. Ex 7:11, 22; 8:7, 18; 9:11; 22:18; Deut 18:10; Isa 47:9, 12; 2 Chr  33:6; 2 Kings 9:22; Dan 2:2; Mic 5:12; Nah 3:4; Mal 3:5).  The Jews and  others who translated the OT into the Greek LXX invariably used a word  signifying “drugs used as magic potions” 
whenever referring to the magic arts and its practitioners.  The apostles Paul and John likewise – we see them using the words 
pharmakeia  and its cognates as such drugs are always connected by them with the  magic arts.  Bear in mind, please, these drug-related “magic arts” are  not those of fairytales, legends, and superstitious beliefs, but such  activities as warranted the death penalty under Moses’ law and  excommunication from the people of God in the New Covenant under Christ.
 
Before going further to define what 
kind of drugs these are and  what their significance is to us in the 21st century, I’d like to post  some lexical data concerning them, as this will shed light on the  matter.
 
 
The Complete Word Study Dictionary: New Testament, by Spiros Zodhiates, gives us a start:
“Strong’s #5331, pharmakeia, from pharmakon, a drug, which in the Gr. writers is used both for a curative or medicinal drug, and also as a poisonous one. Pharmakeia means the occult, sorcery, witchcraft, illicit pharmaceuticals, trance, magical incantation with drugs (Gal. 5:20; Rev. 9:21; 18:23; Sept.: Ex. 7:22; Is. 47:9, 12). (pp. 1437, 1438)
 
“Strong’s #5332, pharmakeus; gen. pharmakeos, from pharmakeuo, to administer a drug.  An enchanter with drugs, a sorcerer (Rev. 21:8 [TR]) (Ibid., p. 1438)
 
“Strong’s #5333, pharmakos, gen. pharmakou.  A magician, sorcerer, enchanter (Rev. 21:8 [UBS]; 22:15; Sept.: Ex. 7:11; 9:11; Deut. 18:10; Dan. 2:2).  The same as pharmakeus (5332).  The noun pharmakeia (5331) means the preparing and giving of medicine, and in the NT, sorcery, enchantment.” (Ibid.)
“The word translated in the AV ‘witchcraft’ in Gal 5:20 (pharmakeia)  is the ordinary Greek one for ‘sorcery,’ and is so rendered in the RV,  though it means literally the act of administering drugs and then of  magical potions.  It naturally comes then to stand for the magician’s  art, as in the present passage and also in . . . the LXX of Isa 47:9 . .  . translated ‘sorceries’.” (International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, James Orr, Ed., Vol. 5, p. 3097.)
 
Concerning pharmakon – drug – in classical use (it’s not  used in the AV NT) there are 3 meanings: 1) “poison”, 2) “magic potion,  charm”, and 3) “medicine, remedy”.  These are on page 854a of Bauer,  Arndt, Gingrich, and Danker’s, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, 2nd Edition.
 
In both Biblical (as well classical) and modern Greek, the semantic  range of these words with “similar lexemes” is clear.  There are three  primary uses of the basic word, pharmakon, drug:  1) medicinal / curative, 2) poison, and 3) magic potion.  That’s the extent of the semantic range.
 
John was not talking of poisoners (murderers!) in Rev 21:8 and 22:15 as  he had already listed “murderers” separately; neither was he talking of  murders in Rev 9:21, as there also he had listed “murders” separately.   Nor was he talking of legitimate medicines; these are used for curing  illnesses and not for deception of magic spells.
 
In the Liddell and Scott New Edition (Oxford 1940) of their, A Greek-English Lexicon, they note:Pharmakeia – “the use of any kind of drugs, potions, or spells”, “use enchantments, practice sorcery”.
 
 Pharmakon – “enchanted potion, philter: hence, charm, spell”
 
 Pharmakos – “poisoner, sorcerer, magician”.  These entries were all found on page 1917 of Liddell and Scott.
Pharmakeia, “the use or administering of drugs . . . poisoning . . . sorcery, magical arts”.
 
 Pharmakeus, “one who prepares or uses magical remedies”
 
 Pharmakos, “pertaining to magical arts”.
 
To show why the use of “sorceries” in the Rev 18:23 passage refers to  activities involving certain kinds of drugs rather than figuratively for  mere deceptive practices, consider the classes of transgressors in Rev  21:8 who are consigned to “the lake which burns with fire and brimstone:  which is the second death”:  “the fearful, and unbelieving, and the  abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars”.  Sorcerers (from pharmakeus)  here specifically means one who administers or uses a certain class of  drugs to “enchant”, to cast a psychic spell upon by use of these drugs  and accompanying demonic power.  It doesn’t mean a deceiver – a liar –  generally or even figuratively, but specifically one who uses sorcerous  potions.  Liars / deceivers are already classed separately in this  listing.  Likewise in Rev 22:15 where a similar Greek word, pharmakos, is used for sorcerer, with the same meaning as pharmakeus in 21:8.  
 
Please remember again, when talking of “sorcerers” and “sorceries” we are not  talking of the vast mixed-up field of magicians, mysterious rites and  potions, wizards, the occult, voodoo, witchcraft, and Santeria rituals,  the paranormal, etc., all of which are rife with superstition,  slight-of-hand, and hoaxes (though there is some real stuff in the mix).   We are limiting this discussion strictly to Biblically-defined and authentic pharmakeia and its linguistic cognates.
 
Recalling what was said by Ruben above, “If the prohibitions of pharmakeia are prohibitions of substances then there must be some guidance in determining which those are.” 
 
The lexicons and the commentators hold that pharmakeia pertains to drugs used in the “magic arts”.  In fact, Kistemaker says of pharmakon (drugs) – appearing as a variant in Rev 9:21,[SIZE=+1]farmakwn[/SIZE] [pharmakon]—“magic potion . . .” [and refers] to the concept of drugs that induce magic spells. [Emphasis in original –SMR]. (Simon J. Kistemaker, New Testament Commentary:  Revelation, p. 302.)
 
Grant Osborne’s remarks re pharmakon in the same Rev 9:21 variant are edifying:[SIZE=+1]farmakon[/SIZE] (pharmakon,  magic) can mean “medicine” or even “poison” in certain contexts but  here refers to the use of “magic potions” in religious rites in the  Greco-Roman world.  It is interesting that John did not use the more  general term [SIZE=+1]farmakeia[/SIZE] (pharmakeia)  for “sorcery” or “magic” but rather chose the term that describes the  potions used in the rites.  John wants to condemn not just the general  practice of magic but everything involved in it (i.e., the paraphernalia  as well as the rite itself).  Magic was a major problem for early  Christianity.  One of the signs of victory over paganism occurred when  the sorcerers of Ephesus burned their magic scrolls in public (Acts  19:19).  Paul listed “idolatry and witchcraft” together as “acts of the  sinful nature” (Gal. 5:19-20), for most acts of “sorcery” occurred in  the atmosphere of idolatrous worship (note again the connection of  idolatry and demonic activity).  In the Apocalypse, using magic is how  Babylon “led the nations astray” (18:23), and all who practice it will  be cast into the lake of fire (21:8; cf. 22:15).  (Grant R. Osborne, Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament:  Revelation, p.387).
. . . pharmakos, magician (Rev. 22:15); pharmakeus, mixer of potions, magician (Rev. 21:8); pharmakeia, magic, sorcery (Gal. 5:20; Rev. 9:21; 18:23).  The basic word pharmakon   does not occur in the NT, but 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  (cf. possibly the final sentence of Ezek. 8:17:  “They put the branch  to their nose”).  Sorcery is classed among the works of the flesh in  Gal. 5:20. [underlined and last bold emphasis added –SMR]
“Ayahuasca is a  hallucinogenic tea made from Amazonian vines and leaves. Long used in  religious ceremonies and spiritual quests in South America . . .    
 
Overall, there is a sentiment that well-controlled use of hallucinogens  is basically harmless and protected by the First Amendment. It is as if  the country has grown up, as indeed it has. The baby boomer rebels of  the ’60s are now of retirement age, and hallucinogens no longer seem to  be common or much of a threat. As the director of the DEA told me in a  meeting at the Washington, DC headquarters, ‘Hallucinogens are not  really our concern … it’s not a problem, and just interferes with our  work on narcotics, meth and crack.’
 
Cultural and archeological investigations have convincingly shown that  hallucinogens were used as religious sacraments around the world, going  back as far as 10,000 years and perhaps much earlier. Indeed, many  scholars believe that the fundamental ideation of religious  transcendence is based on experiences of hallucinogenic drugs.” (From 
Catalyst: Healthy Living, Healthy Planet).
Entheogens: “An entheogen (‘God inside us,’ en 
εν- ‘in, within,’ theo 
θεος- ‘god, divine,’ -gen 
γενος  ‘creates, generates’), in the strict sense, is a psychoactive substance  used in a religious, psychotherapeutic, recreational, shamanic, or  spiritual context.” From, 
Entheogen - wiki.
 
 
A Christian’s online site astutely comments on this development:“Pharmakeia. The ultimate sorcery, because it uses mind-altering drugs in a search for God and, worse, 
replaces  God with the devil’s lie: that the divine is within us. Therefore, this  witchcraft activity also becomes idolatry and blasphemy in their worst  senses.”  From, 
The End Time: Pharmakeia: psychedelic drugs and spirituality
 
At any rate, we are confronted with a class of drugs that “induce magic  spells” or, to put it in other words, whose affect in the consciousness  enable the user to have profound mystical / spiritual experiences, as  well as to come into the presence of spirit beings.  This is not all of their possible effects, but enough to get us started in our examination.  This is Biblically-defined “sorcery” – pharmakeia – and not the “superstition-defined” stuff.  Please don’t dredge this latter garbage into the discussion!
 
So have we come across any “guidance in determining which substances are  prohibited”?  Is it not clear enough that drugs which induce spiritual /  religious states as well as enable communication with spirits are those  being spoken of?  The “entheogens” as some would call them?  And that  they are not medicines or poisons?
 
It is at this point that I expect you, Ruben, to object and repeat your saying, “But  it hasn't been explained how we know that some sort of heightened  occult contact is the right interpretation of those drug-induced  experiences.”
 
I’ve been pondering this remark of yours, and am amazed that one with no  idea whatsoever of what this psychedelic experience entails would have  the temerity to venture a rather dogmatic opinion on the  “interpretation” of this experience – what it is and what it is not.
 
Those who have no personal knowledge / experience of pharmakeia-class  drugs seem to want to weigh in on the question of what they are or  aren’t.  It is little wonder that they don’t believe the reports of  others who have, and minimize the danger, while denying the properties  reported of them.  When they ask for “evidence” of these drugs being  what is claimed for them, what can replace the first-hand knowledge of  their action?  Is the determination regarding this to be left to those  ignorant of the matter?  Not that ignorance of this is bad per se, for these people have remained apart from an unholy and forbidden practice!   Nonetheless, they shall be restricted to their own rationalistic  musings; if they will not take the word of those whom the Lord rescued  from this evil practice, and has given to the church to bear witness  regarding it, so be it.  Did all of Israel go into the promised land to  scout it out, or just the twelve appointed from the tribes?  And even of  those twelve, ten gave a false report, while two gave a faithful one.
 
The apostle Paul, in his pre-conversion years, was immersed in rabbinic  studies with the Pharisees – which teachings were hostile to the  doctrine of Christ – yet when he was saved he used what he had known  previously to highlight and contrast the true doctrine of God, and the  Gospel of His Christ.
 
Yet it is certainly not experience alone that shall determine this  matter, for we have the testimony of Scripture.  Those who think to deny  the “interpretation” posited here, what alternative do you offer?  And  let me ask this, have you bothered to do any research on the topic?   There is much written.  I will come back to you in a moment.
 
It is a prophecy in Revelation that there will come a time when severe – lethal – judgments afflict very many in the earth, and at that time those who survive these Biblical plagues  will still not repent of their murdering, stealing, sexual immorality,  idolatry, and using sorcerous drugs (Rev 9:21), and another prophecy  says that in the end of days – near to the very end – an entity  called “harlot Babylon” will deceive all the nations through her  psychedelic drug activities, and for this (among other great sins) will  be utterly destroyed (an extended discussion on this Babylon will  commence below).
 
There are some prophecies we do not understand until we see their fulfillment – discernment is in hindsight.
 
There is a lesson – a principle – to be learned from Geerhardus Vos, when he spoke concerning the prophecy of Antichrist, that it“belongs among the many prophecies, whose best and final exegete will be the eschatological fulfillment, and in regard to which it behooves the saints to exercise a peculiar kind of eschatological patience.” [emphasis added –SMR] (The Pauline Eschatology, p. 133)
 
I repeat again, for I must:  I am not talking of the vast field of superstition and magical folklore when I talk of pharmakeia  and its translation as “sorcery”, as it is quite certain the Bible is  not talking of that field, but of something concrete and definite.  Let  us have no obfuscation of this discussion with all sorts of extraneous  garbage from the heap of magical superstitions and lore!
 
 “The right interpretation of those drug-induced experiences”?   First, let me ask (rhetorically), has there been an “eschatological  fulfillment” of these Revelation prophecies, particularly the one in  18:23, “for by thy sorceries were all nations deceived” ?
 
It’s common knowledge that there has been an upsurge in psychedelic  drug use starting in the 1950s with the Beats, and in the ‘60s with the  counterculture (as well gov’t intelligence agencies, politicians,  practitioners in the therapeutic fields, artists, intellectuals, etc,  etc).  Seeing as this was such an open and widespread phenomenon very  few have made the connection with the topic of Biblical “sorcery”, a  topic commonly thought of as taboo and arcane.  To add to this, the fact  that many of those who used these drugs did so “recreationally” and not  for any sort of occult or spiritual purposes has given the impression  that these drugs were not necessarily “sorcerous” although they could be used for those ends.  This was the time when “sorcery” / pharmakeia became widely popular and supposedly both fun and enlightening.
 
It just goes to show how poorly thought-out and naïve our views on the  topic are!  People smoke or ingest marijuana to attain a psychological  or psychic “high” – an elevated and enhanced state of consciousness –  though some would deny calling this “high” as much a pharmakeia activity as more spiritual awareness.  It is to deny that pharmakeia can involve enhanced physical sensation and pleasure through this psychic “high” – to the exclusion of overt occultism – as well as  said occult activity.  We should recognize that to use sorcery to  voluptuously indulge in sensory pleasure is as much one of its  activities as the seeking of psychic, occult, and spiritual experience.
 
Not everyone who uses sorcerous / pharmakeia-class drugs is  interested in occultism or spiritual consciousness, but rather intense  pleasure through the various senses, or perhaps aesthetic and mental  acuity in their artistic or intellectual pursuits.
 
Does intended use make the drug work a certain way?  Change its effect  on the human body and psyche?  What kind of chemical is this whose  properties and effects change with intent?  No other pharmaceutical has  this characteristic.  What we see is that there are different “levels”  of Biblically-defined sorcery: occultic, spiritual, psychic high, and  sensual pleasure.  The enhancement by means of psychedelic agents  constitutes them all pharmakeia activities.
 
Before we look at the “Babylonian” aspect of this, I’d like to introduce some thoughts on the topic from Os Guinness’ The Dust of Death:  The Sixties Counterculture and How It Changed America Forever, chapter 7, “The Counterfeit Infinity”:A  third defining feature of the counterculture is its resort to drugs,  particularly the psychedelics to achieve a transcendental consciousness  and a true infinity.  Within the movement drugs attained an almost  sacramental importance.  They are virtually the bread and wine of the  new community.  But for many outside the movement they are a spectral  horror, a phobia almost on a par with communism. . . 
 
This sharp polarization of opinion, with its irrational emotionalism on  either side, hardly allows for calm consideration of the real  significance of drugs to the 1960s.  But the psychedelic movement  deserves serious attention.  It is both a feature of the counterculture  and the combination of two important trends—the perennial “taste for  infinity” (as Baudelaire described it) and the urgent modern search for a  new consciousness as a shortcut solution to human problems. . . 
 
This chapter will analyze the story and the claims surrounding the  psychedelics, delving beneath the unrestrained euphoria on the one hand  and the reactionary ignorance on the other.  I have no interest here in  their medical or pharmacological implications, but will examine them for  their philosophic and religious significance and for their place within  the counterculture.
 
Two preliminary qualifications must be made.  First, we are concerned  with the psychedelics and not the depressants or stimulants.  Many in  the sixties generation have taken speed, heroin, and opium; others have  resorted to nutmeg or airplane glue.  These drugs range from the trivial  to the terminal, but the former are hardly worthy of attention, and the  horror of the latter are well documented.  The psychedelic movement, on  the contrary, shows the resort to drugs at its highest and is close to  the nerve of the counterculture.
 
We are not using their former names, hallucinogenics or psychotomimetics, but rather psychedelics.   Humphrey Osmond coined this word in 1957 to describe their  mind-expanding qualities.  The common feature of all these drugs is well  known:  Their effect appears to trigger a release that slips the leash  of the normal, rational, waking mind.  That which reasons logically,  separates the self from the external world, and quantifies reality into  colors, shapes, smells, and sound is disinhibited.  A “transcending”  consciousness is achieved whereby identity is often submerged into a  feeling of oceanic unity; linear thinking gives way to a flooding  awareness; and patterns, colors, and sounds often take on an existence  for themselves, highly intensified.  Sometimes this produces synesthesia  or the crossover of sensations.
 
The explosive possibilities of the transcendence were glimpsed early by  William Blake:  “If the doors of perception were cleansed everything  would appear to man as it is, infinite.”  But nearer our own time  William James developed an understanding of its scientific possibility.   After experimenting with nitrous oxide, he wrote in 1902 a passage that  has become classic:  “One conclusion was forced upon my mind at that  time, and my impression of its truth has ever since remained unshaken.   It is that our normal waking consciousness, rational consciousness as we  call it, is but one special type of consciousness, whilst all about it,  parted from it by the flimsiest of screens*,  there lie potential forms of consciousness entirely different.  We may  go through life without suspecting their existence; but apply the  requisite stimulus, and at a touch they are there in all their  completeness. . . . No account of the universe in its totality can be  final which leaves these other forms of consciousness quite disregarded.  . . . Looking back on my own experiences, they all converge toward a  kind of insight to which I cannot help ascribing some metaphysical  significance.”
 
Recently the doors of perception have not just been glimpsed but blasted  open with chemicals.  So more recent writers are hotly impatient with  normal perceptions.  Colin McGlashan writes about dreams as “a file  smuggled into the space-time cell where man lies captive; a cell whose  walls and ceilings are our five senses, and whose warders are the  inflexible concepts of logic.”  But in all these understandings the  psychedelic drugs are related to the mind as the microscope is to the  eye; both expand the powers of apprehension, vision, and awareness.
 
A second preliminary qualification is that we must interpret any general  conclusions about the psychedelic drugs in light of the set and the  setting of the users, their character, and the circumstances under which  they take the drug.  There will be widely differing reactions to the  same drug.  A paid research volunteer experiences one thing, a curious  artist quite another, a status seeker still another, while someone using  drugs to search for God may have quite a different experience again.   (pp. 236, 238, 239)
 
Guinness proceeds into a decent examination and analysis of the claims,  the drugs themselves, their histories, and different aspects of their  spiritual, philosophical, and cultural impact.  The next chapter  appropriately follows this one:  “Encircling Eyes”, on the occult:It  should be obvious by now that the counterculture is not a monolithic  unity.  Compelling in its comprehensiveness but contradictory in its  complexity, it rolls on like a relentless river of amorphous people,  trends, fashions, ideals, and aspirations.  At any moment there are a  hundred eddies, crosscurrents, and whirlpools, and it is easy to be  preoccupied with the inconsequential.  But developing alongside the  psychedelic movement and related to the logic of its failure is a  further trend.  It is a real defining feature of the movement.  It will  probably outlast the counterculture and go far beyond to be a profound  influence in the closing years of the twentieth century.  I am speaking  here of the resurgent trend toward the occult.
 
 The Fire Burns Low
 
Early hunters on safari in Africa used to build their fires high at  night in order to keep away the wild animals.  But when the fires burned  low in the early hours of the morning, the hunters would see all around  them the approaching outlined shapes of animals and a ring of  encircling eyes in the darkness.
 
As we have witnessed the erosion and breakdown of the Christian culture  of the West, so we have seen the vacuum filled by an upsurge of ideas  that would have been unthinkable when the fires of the Christian culture  were high.  But this last trend is the most sinister of all.  The  occult is not just another compulsive spiral down which many have  plunged, caught by the current of fascination with the weird and the  wonderful.  The trend is difficult to chart except the points that are  spectacular, silly, or sinister and thus basically irrelevant to its  deeper reality.  At this deeper level the occult needs to be felt to be  understood.  So far as its future is concerned, only the grey outlines  have emerged.  But these are enough to quicken an appreciation of the  horror of great darkness sweeping over the West, inexorably rolling  inward like a swelling black tide or approaching with its encircling  eyes.
 
In many ways this trend is the most surprising of all.  Only a short  time back any belief in such a world as the astral, the supernatural,  the occult would have been relegated to the ridiculous.  Spine-tingling  stories and horror films were the modern surrogates for the modern loss  of belief in Hell.  They were anything but real.  Perhaps stories of the  occult were to be expected as part of the Middle Ages or the missionary  world, but certainly they had little to do with the twentieth-century  West and still less to do with the avant garde and the young.  But the  occult can no longer be relegated in time or distance.  Yesterday’s  skeptics are some of today’s firmest believers. (pp. 276, 277)
Reality is not to be mistaken  for legitimacy.  In a day of contentless religious experiences, the  appeal of powerful spiritual phenomena is far wider than their  legitimacy.
 
Interestingly, the word used for sorcery predicted in this context in Revelation is the word farmakeia, from which we get our word pharmacy or drugs.   It is far from fanciful to interpret this as a prediction of the  prevalence of drug-inspired sorcery at the end times.  The Apostle John  warns in his letter that we must test the spirits to see whether or not  they are truly from God.  In our day, when healing, fortunetelling, and  speaking in tongues are so in vogue, there must be neither naiveté nor  total skepticism, but a critical discernment made possible within the  Christian framework. (pp. 309, 310).
 
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With regard to Babylon in the book of Revelation – which topic I broached in the threads, Are We Babylon?, and the earlier, Thoughts on Babylon the Great in Revelation – please be aware that I am speaking from the amil or present millennium (aka realized millennium) viewpoint, which will be partially compatible with the historic premil view, but certainly not with the postmil. 
 
We now in the year 2011 find ourselves in the unusual position of being  able to observe – in hindsight – “the eschatological fulfillment” of a  portion of the Babylon prophecy, that being the section ending Rev  18:23, “for by thy sorceries (pharmakeia) were all nations deceived”, and for which she would later be judged.
 
There was an event (the term now used for military-scale biological, chemical, or nuclear events)  that befell the entire world through the drug-energized sixties  generation in America, as this potent counterculture permeated the  nations of the world through its music, literature, art, film, and other  culture-bearing vehicles.  These nations and cultures of the world were  leavened from within by the exciting new consciousness of the sixties  and the Woodstock spirit exported into them, but it was a Trojan Horse  filled with the denizens of Hell.  Its impact was, in the psychic realm,  the equivalent of a massive nuclear detonation.  The fallout of this  “detonation” was the presence of malign spirits and their influence upon  the new thinking:  it became (seemingly) obvious to all that real  vitality was not to be found in the Christian faith but in the relativity of postmodernism – the validation of everyone’s subjective truths and beliefs – and thus was the world made ripe for satanic deception on an unprecedented scale.
 
It was obvious now – at least to “enlightened” people – that the  Christian worldview was a relentless cultural and spiritual imperialism,  evil in that it denied the validity of all thought and cultural  development contrary to itself and, for the sake of humankind’s health,  urgently needed to be eliminated.  We see, with the progressive  delegitimizing of Christianity, the rise of fundamentalism in pagan  religions such as Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism showing murderous  hostility to Christians.  Communism also attacked “Christian  imperialism” with new rigor, as seen in North Korea, China, Eritrea,  etc.  And it will eventually give rise to the final deception and  manifestation of satanic power in the last and worst antichrist figure  and the beast government that shall institute the “final solution” for  God’s people – the followers of Christ.
 
The damage done is irreversible.  The timetable of the Sovereign God is  counting down.  Across the non-Western world Christians are already  under severe duress, persecution increasing daily.  And the signs are  that a groundswell is building up in the West – the mystery of iniquity  and lawlessness – and that He who restrains it will not restrain it for  long (2 Thess 2:6 ff.).
 
In the West many professing followers of Christ are awash in the wine of  great whore Babylon, rooting in pleasure and in her entertainments,  worse off spiritually than their brethren in other lands being  persecuted, for at least the latter are awake, if bleeding.
 
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I would like to take a look at a scene in Revelation 9, which is a  chapter about satanic deception pouring into the world in a sudden and  great influx, with consequent destruction and violence – the fifth and  sixth trumpets.  My comments are not to be taken as dogmatic statements,  but as attempts to understand in light of major historical happenings.   Before that a few excerpts from commentators.  From the beginning of  Revelation 9:And the fifth angel sounded, and  I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth:  and to him was given the  key to the bottomless pit.  And he opened the bottomless pit; and there  arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace; and the  sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit.  And  there came out of the smoke locusts upon the earth:  and unto them was  given power, as the scorpions of the earth have power. And it was  commanded them that they should not hurt the grass of the earth, neither  any green thing, neither any tree; but only those men which have not  the seal of God in their foreheads (Rev 9:1-4).
“In the vision the apostle now observes that the prince of darkness  receives the key of the shaft of the abyss.  In other words, he receives  the power to open the abyss and let the demons out.  The abyss  indicates hell before the final judgment (Lk. 8:31; Rev. 20:1,3).  After  the judgment, hell is called ‘the lake of fire’ (20:14,15).  When we  read that Satan opens the shaft of the abyss, the meaning is that he  incites to evil; he fills the world with demons and with their wicked  influences and operations.  John sees that the shaft, as soon as it is  unlocked, begins to belch forth smoke just like the smoke of a great  furnace.  It is the smoke of deception and delusion, of sin and  sorrow, of moral darkness and degradation that is constantly belching up  out of hell.  So thick and murky is that smoke that it blots out the  light of the sun and darkens the air [footnote: . . . the picture, taken  as a whole, symbolizes a very grievous moral and spiritual darkening by  the forces of evil] . . .
 
“Now, out of the smoke, locusts descend on earth.  A more terrible  plague than that of locusts is hardly conceivable. . .  The destruction,  the utter ruin, the desolation and despondency caused by a locust storm  can be understood only by the person who has seen and experienced it.   These locusts, unbelievably terrible in their destructive power, are a  fit symbol of the far more terrible and destructive hellish  locusts which the apostle is about to picture.  Under the symbolism of a  locust plague John describes the powers and influences of hell  operating in the heart and lives of wicked men.” [underlined emphasis  added] (–Wm. Hendriksen, More Than Conquerors, pp. 120, 121.)
 
 Kistemaker:
“The expression Abyss in the New Testament refers to the abode of  the evil spirits with the exception of Romans 10:6-7, where Paul uses  the concept for the abode of the dead. . .  The Abyss has a shaft that  leads to the so-called bottomless pit.  Out of this shaft fumes arise  like smoke out of a great furnace.  The picture John presents is that of  thick smoke which obscures the light of day, obstructs breathing,  contributes to illness, produces unbearable stench, and besmirches  everything on which it descends.  It is as if hell itself breaks loose  to mar, pollute, and defile God’s creation.  This enormous furnace  serves to portray hell itself from which clouds of smoke ascend to  darken the light of the sun and pollute the air, making breathing nearly  impossible.  Evil is like a dense cloud that turns the world into darkness  and suffocates all those who are breathing its polluted air.  But evil  functions only with divine permission. . .  the context itself forces  the interpreter to explain the word locusts not literally but  figuratively.  These creatures coming forth from hell are demonic in  appearance and action.” [emphasis added] (–Simon J. Kistemaker, New Testament Commentary:  Revelation, pp.286, 287.)
 
 Dennis E. Johnson:
“The locust army of the fifth trumpet symbolizes demonic torment  inflicted on the minds and souls of “those who  dwell on the earth,” who  lack the seal of God’s name on their thoughts and lives. . . (–Dennis  E. Johnson, Triumph of the Lamb, p. 148.)
 
“Though limited in duration and severity, this outbreak of demonic  activity carries the expression of God’s wrath to a new level, a first  woe.  The terrors and anxieties during a civilization’s dissolution,  such as Rome would undergo in the coming centuries, epitomize but do not  exhaust the torments of heart and mind symbolized by the army of the  fifth trumpet. (Ibid. p. 149.)
 
“As the sixth seal provided a preview of the traumas that will  characterize the dissolution of the first heavens and earth, so the  sixth trumpet previews an increase of satanic deception that  precipitates growing violence, death, and despair.  Such a crumbling of  law, order, and safety should shake idolaters’ confidence in ‘the works  of their hands’ and cure their desire to ‘worship demons, and the idols  of gold and of silver and brass and of stone and of wood, which can  neither see nor hear nor walk’ (Rev. 9:20) . . . Yet, even as demons  destroy their own worshippers in despair and violent conflict, the  survivors of God’s warning blasts of judgment do not repent of their  murders, sorceries, immorality, and thefts.  These six warning notes,  the overture of wrath to come, fall on deaf ears.” [emphasis added]  (Ibid. p. 152.)
 
And last but surely not least of the commentators on this passage, 
 
 G.K. Beale:
“These woes are also worse than the initial four in that they directly  strike the wicked.  The wicked are directly affected because the first  four judgments, those against the environment that supported their  lives, have not led them to repentance.   The spiritual nature of the  judgments now becomes more explicit. ‘God is using, to expose the true  character of the wicked, the same method which in the case of Job was  used to expose the true character of the righteous’ [fn. 44: Wilcock, I Saw Heaven Opened, 96].  The spiritual heightening of the last three trumpets is indicated by the presence of demons.’ (G.K. Beale, The Book of Revelation:  A Commentary on the Greek Text, 1999, Eerdmans, pp. 489, 490)
 
“The precise form of judgment anticipated in 9:2 is explained beginning  in v 3.  It partly involves deception (vv 3-6), which is metaphorically  anticipated by the darkness caused by the smoke.  Throughout the NT, and  especially in the Johannine corpus, darkness symbolizes spiritual  blindness.  (Ibid. p. 494)
 
“. . . And Just as the frogs of the third exodus plague symbolize demons  in Rev 16:13, so here the locusts that physically plagued the Egyptians  now represent demonic forces. (Ibid. p. 495)
 
“The devilish beings of the fifth trumpet may be the spiritual forces of the 
Antichrist, of the devil, or of both, which vv 1 and 11 confirm (cf. 1  John 2:18-26; 4:1-3, where the spirit of Antichrist works through  deception brought by false teachers in the church). (Ibid. p. 502)
 
“In contrast to the fifth trumpet, the sixth includes death together  with deception.  Therefore, the sixth trumpet intensifies and develops  further the woe of the fifth.  The intensification is signaled by the  fact that, whereas smoke affects people in the fifth trumpet, in the  next trumpet they are affected by smoke together with the fire from  which it comes . . .
 
“This means that these demons both torment, at least partly by  deception, and then make certain the spiritual fate of their victims by  imposing physical death.  The smoke and resulting darkness are  metaphorical for a punishment of deception (see on 8:12; 9:2-3), and the  fire is metaphorical for lethal judgment (see on 9:18 and below) . . .  This deception is an essential aspect of the torment . . .
 
“The deception manifests itself partly through false teachers affirming  the legitimacy of some form of idolatry for Christians (cf., e.g., 2:6,  14-15, 20-21). (Ibid. p. 513)
 
“. . . That deception along with spiritual and physical death is implied  [by the attack of the demonic creatures of 9:15-19 –SMR] is suggested  by the fact that the saints cannot be harmed by these plagues.  The  essence of the saints’ seal is not immunity from physical death but  protection against being deceived and losing the covenantal relationship  with God.” (Ibid. p. 515)
 
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I would suggest an interpretation of this prophesied opening of the  abyss derived from hindsight, looking back on historical events.  You  will no doubt – those who have been following my tack in these writings –  understand I am referring to the great psychedelic explosion that  slowly began in the 1950s and mushroomed into a worldwide phenomenon in  the 60s and early 70s.  Of course there was evil and deception in the  world prior to that time – great evil and deception – simply witness the  emergence of antichristian philosophies and religions through the  centuries, and the wars of the last century, yet this in the 60s was, as  it were, gasoline thrown on the wickedness of the human heart, though  at first it was said – by those who were promoting and doing it, at any  rate – not to be an evil but a profound good, and which would benefit  humankind.  For so those who pushed the psychedelic drugs of the  counterculture said:  this will bring spiritual enlightenment, resulting  in peace for the world, and the bettering of relationships.  They lied.   They were deceived and deceiving.
 
What this psychic / spiritual event actually accomplished, however, was a  new state of mind that went far beyond the beats and hippies, for the  drugs of that time were taken and experienced by the military  intelligence services, politicians, academics, artists, psychiatrists  and others in the medical and therapeutic professions, as well as  teachers, lawyers and others.  The ultimate message of LSD, psilocybin,  mescaline, marijuana et al was truth resides within man and not outside; whatever deity is to be known likewise resides in man and not in some external “God”.  This understanding came into human consciousness with power, for it was experienced  by vast multitudes (whether they took the drugs or not, for the  evangelists of this revelation were many, and spoke, wrote, and sang  with power), and it eventually became the reigning paradigm of the  world, crowding out the exclusivist religions; it became the new  zeitgeist. 
 
Christianity still existed, but it was now déclassé, increasingly marginalized as an untrue, primitive, and dangerous  thought-form, one that was injurious to society.  And in the wake of  this change in thinking came the emergence of ethnic, religious, and  cultural renewals – with fierce passions and conflicts, fanned into  flaming enthusiasm by the one cast down to the earth, and having great  wrath for the shortness of his time (Rev 12:11-13).  From the deception  came wars, with their attending famines, disease, and death.
 
My take on this section of Revelation may certainly be contested, but I  think it can be agreed on that at least both trumpets show a massive  invasion of evil spirits and their influence upon the collective  consciousness of humankind.  Whether they are so closely aligned as I  think is not certain.
 
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To interact a bit with discussion from the previous thread, here is an exchange from post #93 regarding synecdoche:
 
Steve in post #82 said,  “The prohibition against pharmakeia  forbids the magic arts absolutely, both as regards the generally  essential component of drug use, as well as by synecdoche the entire  enterprise.”
 
And Ruben (in post #93) responded, “I think the  difficulty I have here is that it appears to me that you are  understanding the word both as a synecdoche and according to its  etymology. That strikes me as being an instance of an equivocal  definition of a term. However, if you have examples from Biblical or  other literature of the use of a synecdoche where the term  simultaneously functions according to its etymological and figurative  use I would be very interested to see them.”
 
This is not an unusual phenomenon in Scripture, Ruben.
 
(Romans 1:16) “Greek” means Greeks and Gentiles – simultaneously 
 
(Matthew 6:11) “Give us our daily bread” means the necessities of life and (in that culture) the food staple bread – simultaneously 
 
(Romans 13:4) “the sword” (in Paul’s day) means the actual sword and the punitive authority and power of the state – simultaneously
 
(Jeremiah 29:17, 18) “I will send upon them the sword” means actual swords and all the weapons and killing methods of warfare – simultaneously 
 
(Malachi 3:5) “sorcerer” [pharmakos LXX] means sorcerers and soothsayers, false prophets, diviners – simultaneously, Calvin concurring.
 
(Matthew 12:7 / Hosea 6:6) “I will have mercy, and not sacrifice” –  “This word ‘mercy’ signifies by synecdoche the duties of love, just as  the outward cult of the Law is comprehended under ‘sacrifices’.” –John  Calvin on Matt 12:7.
 
E.W. Bullinger in his, Figures of Speech Used in the Bible, has a large section on Synecdoche starting on page 613.
 
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So there is a narrow (you called it “etymological”) definition of pharmakeia  which pertains to the actual use of drugs – the meaning inherent in the  word – and then there is the more general definition which pertains to  the various activities engaged in while under the influence of said  drugs, as well as the influence effected on other parties by this  demonic activity, i.e., “deceived by her sorceries” (cf. Rev 18:23).    Or one could also put it:  sorcery specifically involving “drugs that  induce magic spells”, and activity involving intercourse with demons or demonically enhanced states of awareness.
 
Although it is beyond the scope of my present concern, I would venture to say that all  the genuine magic arts (even those entered into apart from drug use)  are comprehended in the NT terms “sorcery” and “witchcraft” even though  they are both translated from the Greek pharmakeia.  But please, I do not want to pursue this or go off on a hundred rabbit trails on this topic, as it is not germane to the point I wish to establish.
 
I would think it valid to say that the primary (satanic) purpose of “sorcery” / pharmakeia  is deception, though of course it is not the only means of fostering  deception.  False teaching, for example, is a great means for this.  
 
Sometimes false “teaching” (loosely speaking) – promoting “doctrines of devils” 1 Tim 4:1 – is combined with pharmakeia.   Think of the Beatles, the Grateful Dead, Rolling Stones, even some  stages of Dylan.   Or the poets and writers, Lawrence Ferlinghetti,  Allan Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Henry Miller, Herman  Hesse – one could go on and on.  Many of the New Age (now often called  New Spirituality) adherents were first “hooked” while using pharmakeia-class drugs, while now they are sufficiently established in satanic power and consciousness so that they may disdain drugs.
 
We see in Revelation 18:23, where it is said to Babylon that “by thy  sorceries were all nations deceived”, deception may be on a world-wide  scale.  Yet there are degrees of deception, as well as varieties.   There is the primary deception of simple spiritual blindness, which is  the condition of unregenerate humankind.  Then there is additional – or  intensified – deception from sorcery / pharmakeia, which  confirms souls in “strong delusion” as a judgment on their idolatrous  wickedness, and there is even further deception which sees the children  of God as evil and to be persecuted and destroyed.  There is also the  blindness of ethnic and religious hatred, where various people groups  seek to dominate or destroy one another.  Although these have all been  active during the church age, they are intensifying.
 
Deception is also aimed at God’s people.  Concerning the saints, even in  (or against from without) the early church there were false teachers –  John in Rev 13:11 called these corporately the beast from the earth (aka  “the false prophet” Rev 16:13; 19:20), though there could be an  individual so named, as with the antichrist, at the end.
 
As noted above, some of these false teachers were in the church  (in Pergamos Rev 2:14, and in Thyatira 2:20 ff.), and some of them  encouraged the saints to participate in idolatrous activities, saying it  would not be sin to them.  The form it took then was allowing them to  join the pagan trade guilds and to participate in their orgiastic  (though in some cases tamer) rites while worshipping the patron deities  of those guilds.  They said, But you know there are no real  deities other than the true God and so you are not really worshipping  anything; it is not sin or idolatry to you to join the guilds.  The Lord  strongly reproved such in His messages to those churches.
 
Other major deceptions were the rise of the Roman Catholic organization, and Islam, both still active today.
 
Today we have a raging mighty torrent of false teaching seeking to drown  the church in darkness, which many amil commentators say is shown in  Rev 12:15:  “And the serpent cast out of his mouth water as a flood  after the woman, that he might cause her to be carried away of the  flood.”  Perhaps the earth which “opened her mouth, and swallowed up the  flood” (12:16) to help the woman is the wilderness of her separation  from the world and its evil influences, as the commentators opine.
 
As the church then, in John’s day, was under this attack, even so are we  in the 21st century.  Here at PB there are very sharp discerners of  false teachings, and there is safety in the multitude of wise  counselors.  But it is my view – and others’ – that soundness in  doctrine is not enough; we must be pure in our practices as well, and  this will come from sound exposition of the word of God.  I see this  drug issue as a breach in the wall of holiness, so to speak, endangering  the people of God.  It’s a small breach for now, but we all know about  the tiny hole in a dike which quickly turns into a wide opening and  floods the entire land.
 
And there are the equivalents today of those teachers who encouraged the  saints to commit spiritual fornication with the world and the beast  from the land.  If indeed I am correct about the import of pharmakeia-class  drugs being agents inducing spiritual fornication, one would hope folks  would think twice before leaping in to defend their use or deny they  are identifiable and prohibited.
 
Given the potency of these pharmakeia-class drugs, it amazes me,  Ruben, that you could go on and on about what they are and are not  without having an  inkling as to their reality.  It’s sort of an  academic subject to you – even  though you are ignorant of the reality  of it – while to me it is something I know all too well, and have strong  reasons for my views on their danger.  When I read the Biblical data on  these drugs I realize what depths the Lord drew me and many others out  of.  And you actually have the nerve to belittle my experience as a  valid factor in how I apply the Biblical criteria to these substances  and activities!
 
Reflecting on an exchange of ours in post #96 of the previous thread:
 
 “I deny that a pharmakeia class of drugs is taught in Scripture, or can be derived therefrom  (a). Some  may be convinced by appeals to experience or discernment, but my own  discernment tells me that this procedure is insufficiently Berean (b) . Scripture doesn't identify the constituent drugs in this class  (c) , or describe the parameters of the class  (d) , so their identification is arbitrary” (e).  –To respond point by point:  (a).  You don’t even know what pharmakeia  actually is, or what action that class of drugs actually has upon the  human system, and yet you opine boldly as though you had an idea of what  you are denying.  How preposterous!  It is clear that when Scripture  uses the term pharmakeia it is using a word associated with magic, witchcraft, sorcery, drugs,  and the demonic; this is the testimony of both the NT and the LXX OT,  and of numerous lexicographers, commentators, and translators.   Kistemaker says of them they are “drugs that induce magic spells”.
 
(b).  Your “own discernment” tells you the procedure I follow to  identify them is “insufficiently Berean”?  By what knowledge of this  field, pray tell, is your discernment informed?  You have said you had  no “hands on” experience, but have you studied any of the literature –  of which there is much – on the topic?  
And Luke defines “Berean” as those who “searched the Scriptures . . .  [to see] whether those things were so” (Acts 17:11).  What more  searching would you have me do than I have done?  And what have you  done?  You have brought nothing more to this table than a sharp but  uninformed intellect, and no Scripture whatsoever!  Your denials are  based on nothing more than human reasoning.  This is a case of the pot  calling the shiny silver tea kettle black!
 
(c). The reason the drugs were not named and specified in the Scriptures  is because the someof the drugs as well as the names of the drugs  change over the centuries and in various cultures.  In the 1st century  AD drugs such as LSD and mescaline were not yet invented / synthesized,  but the principle of pharmakeia-class substances – knowledge of their properties and effects – were.  And so the general term was used.  
 
LSD was not invented till 1938 (nor used by the inventor till a few  years later), and the names peyote (from which mescaline is derived),  psilocybin mushrooms, hashish, marijuana etc. were not in the vocabulary  of the Greeks or Hebrews of Biblical times, though likely they were  known by other names.  So some pharmakeia substances were yet to  be discovered, and the changing nature of nomenclature was dealt with by  an etymological-based understanding of their properties, or as you say, “parameters”.
 
But (d), the “parameters” of the class of drugs Biblically known as pharmakon – and producing the activity known as pharmakeia (sorcery) – were  known.  As Kistemaker says, they were those drugs known to “induce  magic spells”!  And “also for encouraging the presence of spirits” for  those who used them! (The New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology, Vol 2, p. 558.)  You may deny this all you want, but your denials are what are “insufficiently Berean”!
 
(e).  Thus, the identification of drugs in this class is not arbitrary,  but derived from the word of God, all protestations to the contrary  notwithstanding!
 
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You say, Ruben, “The question is not whether sorcery  is demonic: certainly I don't deny that it is. And the question is not  whether becoming involved with demons is acceptable, or trivial (no and  no).
 
So the question returns to this: does Scripture identify the administration or ingestion of certain substances as being intrinsically sorcerous. This is what I deny.” [emphasis added –SMR]
 
According to the lexicographers, commentators, and translators the Bible  clearly states there are substances which – by “inducing magic spells”  and “encouraging the  present of spirits” – are intrinsically sorcerous  and thus prohibited.  This has been sufficiently discussed above.
 
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Also from post #96:
 
 “The upshot is then, that to the question of whether Scripture prohibits administration or ingestion of a certain class of drugs (a) as intrinsically sorcerous (b), the answer is no.  – To recap:  (a)  You deny there is such a class simply on the basis,  it surely seems, of your own uninformed bias.  You respond not with  Scripture, nor with studies on the topic, but your own isolated  ideation.  You wax eloquent, but it is an eloquence that clouds with all  sorts of meandering extraneous possibilities, making the easy to  understand needlessly complicated.  Politicians and lawyers would call  it a gift!  (b)  “Intrinsically sorcerous” – basically what those two  words signify are drugs which so alter the consciousness as to induce  entrance into a realm of spiritual activity not effected by the Spirit  of Christ. You simply deny it despite not knowing anything about it,  this “sorcery” you go on about with great naïveté, a naïveté quite  destructive in its spreading of disinformation. 
 
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 And so, again, the  identification of a pharmakeia class of drugs is not drawn from  Scripture, but rather from experience or from research. In the same  vein, people hallucinate from causes other than drug use: if  hallucinogenics are sorcerous, is any hallucination sorcery? –  Come on, Ruben, this is silly!  Some rhetorical questions – as this –  are meant to cloud the issue with useless words!  Obviously some  hallucinations bespeak illness and a malfunctioning mind.
 
 And  this is why I still can't get away from the thought of superstition.  Anyone who has ever had a high fever with delirium knows that the mind  can do strange things; attributing  strange-things-the-mind-does-under-the-influence-of-drugs to demons with  only the warrant that has been suggested appears to be a classic  example of attributing spiritual properties to material substances, and  appealing to malevolent supernaturalism to explain a straightforward  phenomenon. Before it is urged again that I have no personal experience,  let me point out that others who share my views do, and that drugs are  not the only means of having strange experiences. – That is quite  convoluted an attempt to disprove a thing you are ignorant of!  And  perhaps this is the only way you are able to go about it, bringing in  examples of other mental phenomena which do not in any way disprove what  I am saying, but cloud the air with imagined possibilities, to which  you add your usual charge of “superstition”.    Of course the mind can  do strange things, be it under sleep deprivation, stress, sensory  deprivation, fever (as you note), etc., but you are trying to impugn the  presentation of a phenomenon – and a Biblical teaching – with phantom  phenomena spun so as to sound reasonable.  But it is not reasonable, for  you suggest all sorts of alternative possibilities to explain what you  don’t know.
 
And those who share your views who have had some experience with  psychedelic drugs, as you assert – please don’t just leave us with that  empty sound bite but provide their evidences to the contrary.  I think they will be found wanting upon examination, as they have been previously.
 
 For  this reason I would urge readers, before leaving a church that doesn't  share your discernment on the matter, before dismissing as deceived by  Babylon's sorceries the brothers who disagree, before supporting a  political posture that has provided cover for brutality and hypocrisy  abroad, consider that Satan disguises himself as an angel of light, and  reflect on what the Bible identifies as demonic, such as sorcery,  idolatry, improper asceticism, false teaching, statism, a culture of  self-gratification, and make sure you are disputing the dominion of  darkness with the right weapons (prayer, the word of God and the armor  of righteousness), and in the right places.
 
You would urge readers not to leave a church that condones the use of  marijuana – given its legality, and its “responsible” use?  I ask, what  of the pastor, say in Colorado or California where medicinal grass is  legal under prescription for pain, or Holland where it is simply legal,  who, having smoked before the service, ministers while stoned?  Or where  a number in the church are (legally) stoned in the service?  Would you  assert that, if they’ve done it in moderation (or for pain relief), this  is not in accord with the RPW?
 
If someone says the smoking of marijuana doesn’t necessarily  bring in demonic influence, and that such a thing is unprovable, does  that mean it’s okay sometimes – and in areas or situations where it’s  legal – then it’s alright if our teenagers smoke it in moderation? Or if  the assistant pastor – who teaches the teenage Bible study – has pain  from a sports injury, and smokes (with a script) beforehand, that’s  okay? 
 
And what about the young children of these people, who see them partaking and accepted by the church?   In the rush to seem “open minded” and enlightened beyond the pall of  “superstition” we are conditioning others to tolerate and accept an evil  thing.
 
I put  this question to you in the previous thread and you didn’t  answer; would you please answer it now (I shouldn’t be the only one  answering questions!):
 
What do you say to someone who comes to you for counsel, having looked in on the earlier thread, and asks you, “Ruben,  I have access to some great and potent marijuana, and I’m a Christian  living in Amsterdam where it’s perfectly legal, and I’ve been reading  your posts and I get the view that if partake of this weed in moderation  and with regard to safety (i.e., not driving or operating machinery)  I’m not in violation of the Bible. Is that right?”  What will you say by way of counsel to this person? That you’re not sure? Or yes it’s okay?
 
Buit getting back to your statement, have you anywhere heard me say that those who disagree with the view I present are “deceived by Babylon's sorceries”?   That applies to “the nations” (Rev 18:23), not disagreeing brethren.   Though yes, they would be deceived as regards the Scriptural  prohibition.  That’s the issue of this thread!  And what is it you are  saying with the words “supporting a political posture that has provided cover for brutality and hypocrisy abroad”?  Do you imply I do this with my focus on pharmakeia? What can you be saying here? I have dealt with this sloppy thinking earlier. Is your exhortation to “consider  that Satan disguises himself as an angel of light, and reflect on what  the Bible identifies as demonic, such as sorcery, idolatry, improper  asceticism, false teaching, statism, a culture of self-gratification,  and make sure you are disputing the dominion of darkness with the right  weapons (prayer, the word of God and the armor of righteousness), and in  the right places” meant to imply that I do not – or that I urge  others to not – rightly consider such things?  You include so much  extraneous stuff – beside the point of the discussion – that you really  do cloud the issues.  I’m not saying you do it deliberately, but you  sure do do it!
 
If you choose to continue discussing with me, would you please not do this?
 
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I’d like to present some brief (really brief!) articles by The Christian Institute  in England on what marijuana has done to the youth in that country  after they liberalized the classification of that drug – for a while –  till, some years later they saw the public health disaster they’d  unleashed and tightened them up again.  But the damage was done, and the  drug had already made great inroads into the culture, especially the  youth.  The Christian Institute is a stand-up ministry that focuses on  and exposes the marginalization of Christians in the UK and provides  legal help to many Christians drawn into a legal system increasingly  penalizing them for their faith.  I will comment after the articles.
 
 Nine-year-old kids caught dealing cannabis at school
 
 Cannabis will be restored to class B, says Home Secretary
 
 Surge in mental illness linked to relaxation of cannabis laws
 
 Skunk increases psychosis risk seven-fold, says study
 
 Cannabis blamed for rise in mental cases
 
 Cannabis could raise the risk of cancer
 
 UK teenagers are worst in Europe for cannabis abuse
 
 Coroner links teen’s suicide to cannabis
 
(This pdf document is rather long): Going soft on cannabis:  Demolishing 15 key arguments for the downgrading of the cannabis laws.pdf (Christian Institute, UK)
 
 And here's a very recent one: Hundreds of children caught dealing cannabis
 
 
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You will note the strong stand The Christian Institute (TCI) takes completely apart from the issue of pharmakeia  involving the demonic realm.  Is the increasing mental illness of those  children who use marijuana merely a “mental health” issue apart from the spiritual  health aspect?  From the Biblical point of view there is no doubt that  opening these children’s hearts and minds to the spiritual realm by  means of pharmakeia-class agents has allowed demonic influence to ravage a great multitude of them.
 
In our own country it’s now been made known that Jared L. Loughner, the Tucson killer, used such agents, albeit legally: Shooting Suspect Had Been Known to Use Potent, and Legal, Hallucinogen (Salvia divinorum).  From the article:“Salvia  is a potent but legal drug marketed with promises of producing a  transcendental spiritual journey: out-of-body experiences, existence in  multiple realities, the revelation of secret knowledge and, according to  one online seller, ‘permanent mind-altering change in perception.’ ”
 
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This post has gone on quite long.  If there are responses, please  understand that I may not get to them quickly, as I need to be packing  and preparing to return back to the states, on top of my pastoral duties  while still here.  But I will get to them.