AlanFromWichita:
Your question, frankly, sounds pretty scripted. I would ask the same question about a person who becomes angry easily. What about a priest who regularly gets very angry toward parishioners? OTOH, I think it is a good idea to examine our relationship with Christ, but I don’t see at all how a recommendation for doing so should be more or less triggered by the observance a person is taking certain drugs (not “taking drugs” but “taking certain drugs” unless you intend to lump aspirin into this category) than by any other act we deem to indicate possible sin.
If a person asks about masturbation, does that mean we should question their relationship with Christ? What if they ask about working on Sunday? How is it that a person’s Christianity is suspect because they ask about anything? Is it like, “if you have to ask then you can’t afford it?”
I used to become very emotional about things that didn’t make sense, and I was locked up against my will and given psychoactive drugs. My relationship with Christ was real, but very distorted and guess what? I hadn’t been smoking pot – if I had, I might have suffered fools more easily and not have gotten locked up.
Which do you think would be more disturbing to Christ? A tyrannical and oppressive leadership for a country/job/etc or the person who smokes some pot to escape some of the feelings of resentment? In previous jobs, I’ve known people who used pot to keep their anger in check when things got too disturbing at their job. To them it was like a cool glass of water to others, and yes – an escape from their emotional pain. After break, they came in and were productive again.
And that, is how liberals argue that smoking pot CAN be a good thing.
I have no idea what you mean by scripted response.
I write what flows from my heart.
Look upon the situation with a loving but strict attitude. Taking drugs, ILLEGAL or NOT, is and always will be wrong. It may not always be a mortal sin, but it is ONE MORE ATTACHMENT to the world that we need to sever.
If people use pot to calm down that is a choice, it doesnt make it right.
I could just as easily argue that masturbating calmed me down. No doubt we both agree that is always sinful.
And just because taking drugs to relax is something many many people do these days ,it never makes it right. Just THINK about the implications of such a statement on pro - choice abortion groups.
There is a big difference between what happens in the mind as a result of sinful inclinations and WHAT WE CAUSE by taking drugs.
I challenge you to find a person, who, having given their life up for God, would see the need for recreational drugs to “escape from life” so to speak.
I suggest doing some reading on the saints, (we are all called to be saints), St Francis reportedly floated, and was in regular ecstasy with Our Lord. He had no need of drugs, nor would he have ever needed them.
If Christ is so far that drugs seem like an option, then we have a problem.
I draw your attention to the Cure D’ Ars, who, though presented with tobacco, rejected it outright, though no effects on the health were known at such a time. We need only look back in history at the great saints of the faith to see what is right and wrong.
Recreational drugs are always wrong. (culpability depends)
Im sorry if you were locked up and thought it was wrong. However, here you are talking about someone with a strong relationship with Christ being given drugs AGAINST their will for the purpose of helping them. I would not doubt that your faith was present. However, this is entirely different with regards to those, of their own free will, taking recreational drugs.
Please dont tell me that one can have a strong relationship with Christ, and still want to ask if smoking pot is ok. We both know the answer.
Lord Have Mercy On My Soul.
May the Lord Bless You.
In Christ.
Andre.