swilow
Bluelight Crew
^Not sure if you are replying to me, but the period in which medieval cathedrals were constructed is not exactly early christianity....Just sayin'. 

Any idea why mushrooms would be on a cathedral door when the theory is it was witches rather than christian bishops using them? And if you look at that artwork from the cathedral door does it look like the two people on the right are naked? One looks like a man and the other like a woman? And the first mention of the fig tree in the bible is:
Adam and Eve used the leaves of the fig tree to sew garments for themselves after the Fall, when they realized that they were naked
I think things are coming a little clearer.
I do like figgy pudding.
Correction, you posted a picture that YOU think is shaped like a liberty cap. Why would the church do such a thing? They were, and are, opposed to drugs. In the medieval world, women could be punished for being "scolds" or talking shit. People were burned alive as away to test whether they deserved to die or. Do you think that there was much tolerance for having visions that could undermine their hierarchy? You may just be seeing what you want to see here. The church has only ever tried to (literally) demonise use of hallucinogens so it makes little sense that they would incorporate it into their architecture.
They [Religions] were, and are, opposed to drugs.
every religious artwork is similarly a reference to drugs and tripping
But in order to recognise and make sense of these references you need to equip yourself with the psychedelic interpretive lens
using your circular logic that if it's not psychedelic, it's not real religion.
The similarity between religious icons and symbolism and psychedelic states is because both come out of the same brain; psychedelics can make it more intense and consistent, but are not required by any means (especially if you're prepared to put in some discipline - like monks/religious devotees often are, compared to us lot).
What about Hildegard of Bingen - did she secretly take psychedelics (from the age of 3)? She had some well trippy symbolic visons, all in a conscious waking state according to her. (Add to that all the other trippy religious stuff that came/comes from people who didn't take any sort of drugs).
That was hundreds of years after that cathedral. Are you trying to tell me they're fig trees too? They were still trying to convert pagans at that time, rather than going on witch hunts to wipe the last few out.
Don't fall victim to the incorrect, oversimplistic and self-defeating narrative that the history of religion has nothing to do with drugs and tripping, and that the church's attitude towards drugs over the centuries is purely about prohibition and ignorance. On the contrary, religion is centrally *about* the magical life-changing experiences that are accessed by consuming the holy psychedelic sacraments, and some people have always known this.
all the worlds big religions, perhaps besides hinduism, proscribe the use of drugs.
^^
Isn't the fifth precept of Buddhism "Thou shall not be intoxicated"?
Wouldn't they include drugs along with alcohol?
Your ideas about Christianity and Buddhism being based on drugs and tripping are a fantasy.
I'm confused. Isn't that the 15th century Scottish Rosslyn chapel? Apparently its meant to depict maize. All I see is some stained glass and an arched window. Wheres this liberty cap?