Can psychoactive drugs help ministers be more effective? University researchers aim to find out

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.

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'.

News
Prince and Princess of Wales visit Lambeth Palace to meet new Archbishop of Canterbury
Prince and Princess of Wales visit Lambeth Palace to meet new Archbishop of Canterbury

The Prince and Princess of Wales have paid an official visit to Lambeth Palace.

Pastor, daughter and son-in-law slain in Plateau state, Nigeria
Pastor, daughter and son-in-law slain in Plateau state, Nigeria

Fulani herdsmen last month killed a pastor, his daughter and her husband, leaving the couple’s 3-month-old baby with a machete wound, in Plateau state, Nigeria.

Christian group welcomes British sanctions on Iranians
Christian group welcomes British sanctions on Iranians

Britain stopped shot of designating the Revolutionary Guard a terrorist organisation.

2,000-year-old 'Pilgrim's Path' opens in Jerusalem
2,000-year-old 'Pilgrim's Path' opens in Jerusalem

An ancient road that may have been built in the days of Jesus and led up to the Jerusalem Temple Mount has been opened to the public for the first time.