Sundayās Super Bowl was dubbed by some as the āpot bowl,ā as the Denver Broncos and Seattle Seahawks hail from the two states where fans will soon be able to get marijuana as easily as they can get pizza. As public opinion has shifted in support of legalized marijuana, religious leaders are wrestling over competing interests, including high prison rates and legislating morality.
According to a 2013 survey from the Public Religion Research Institute, 58 percent of white mainline Protestants and 54 percent of black Protestants favor legalizing the use of marijuana. On the other side, nearly seven in 10 (69 percent) white evangelical Protestants oppose it.
Catholics appear to be the most divided Christian group, with 48 percent favoring legalization and 50 percent opposing it. Opinions on how states should handle those who possess or sell marijuana varies among Christian leaders.
Caught in the middle of the debate are pastors, theologians, and other religious leaders torn over how to uphold traditional understandings of sin and morality amid a rapidly changing tide of public opinion.
Mark DeMoss, a spokesman for several prominent evangelicals including Franklin Graham and Hobby Lobby founder Steve Green, admits he takes a view that might not be held by most Christian leaders.
āWhen 50 percent of our prison beds are occupied by nonviolent offenders, we have prison overcrowding problems and violent offenders serving shortened sentences, I have a problem with incarceration for possession of marijuana,ā he said.
āNone of thatās to say I favor free and rampant marijuana use. I donāt think itās the most serious blight on America.ā
Alcohol abuse, he said, is a much more serious issue. President Obama suggested something similar to The New Yorker recently when he said that marijuana is less dangerous than alcohol.
But donāt expect pastors to start preaching in line with DeMoss, who said he has not seen much comment from religious leaders on the issue. āIf a pastor said some of what I said, there would be some who would feel the pastor was compromising on a moral issue,ā he said. āNo one wants to risk looking like theyāre in favor of marijuana. Iām not in favor, but I think we should address how high of a priority it should be.ā
Both Colorado and Washington states approved the recreational use of marijuana by adults in the 2012 elections. Even Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who found early support among some evangelicals during the 2012 presidential race, has come out supporting the decriminalization of marijuana.
Laws on marijuana have disproportionately impacted minorities, said the Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference.
āThere are community programs that can better engage young people than incarceration,ā he said. āMany black and brown lives are destroyed because of incarceration.ā
A majority of Americans now favor legalizing the use of marijuana, according to the most recent polling from the Pew Research Center. In 2013, 52 percent said that the use of marijuana should be made legal while 45 percent said it should not. Among millennials (adults born after 1980), 65 percent favor legalizing marijuana use, up from just 36 percent in 2008.
Most Christians are still reluctant to favor legalization, Rodriguez said, since the effects of marijuana arenāt much different from getting drunk, which is a biblical no-no.
āIt has the ability of diluting reason, behavior, putting your guard down,ā he said. āWe are temples of Godās Holy Spirit, and it has the ability of hindering a clear thought process.ā
Some who favor legalized marijuana liken the Christians who oppose it to be like the early 20th century evangelicals and fundamentalists who supported a federal prohibition on alcohol.
Part of a move in the Republican Party toward a loosening on marijuana legislation could be coming from people who also would sympathize with the Tea Party, said Russell Moore, head of the Southern Baptist Conventionās Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission.
āI definitely think thereās been a coalition of āleave us aloneā libertarians and Woodstock nation progressives on this issue of marijuana,ā Moore said.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has joined a growing group of states that have loosened restrictions on marijuana, planning to allow limited use of the drug by those with serious illnesses. Some leaders, including Focus on the Familyās Jim Daly, have suggested there are medical benefits but do not condone recreational use of marijuana.
Nine states and the District of Columbia have introduced legislation to legalize recreational marijuana use by adults, according to the Daily Beast. Twenty states have passed legislation to allow medical marijuana since 1996, while 16 states have begun to allow the possession of small amounts of marijuana.
But Moore said the analogy between alcohol and marijuana laws donāt hold up.
āAlcohol already had a ubiquitous presence in American society long before prohibition in ways marijuana has not,ā he said, suggesting he could find support for some medical marijuana. āIf there were studies demonstrating marijuana is the best treatment for a particular disease and the prescription was tightly regulated the way we do morphine and other mind-altering drugs, yes. Thatās not what we have happening in America right now.ā
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