Pastors and priests are taking drugs – but it's all in the name of science.
Scientists at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore have enlisted two dozen religious leaders for a study in which they are given two doses of psilocybin, the active ingredient in 'magic mushrooms'.
The idea is to see how a transcendental experience affects religious thinking and whether it makes them more effective in their work, according to The Guardian.
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Speaking at the Breaking Convention conference in London earlier this month, psychologist Dr William Richards said: 'With psilocybin these profound mystical experiences are quite common. It seemed like a no-brainer that they might be of interest, if not valuable, to clergy.'
He told The Guardian after presenting his research: 'Their instruction is to go within and collect experiences. So far everyone incredibly values their experience. No one has been confused or upset or regrets doing it.'
He added: 'It is too early to talk about results, but generally people seem to be getting a deeper appreciation of their own religious heritage.
'The dead dogma comes alive for them in a meaningful way. They discover they really believe this stuff they're talking about.'
Among those recruited for the experiment were Catholic and Orthodox priests and Presbyterian ministers, a Zen Buddhist and several rabbis.
Christian Today first wrote about the experiment in 2015: 'Ministers and magic mushrooms: Why religion is about more than mysticism'.