Why Religion Was Never Sober: Lessons from Gary Laderman’s ‘Sacred Drugs’

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Religion lives in practice, not only in pews. In “Sacred Drugs,” scholar Gary Laderman maps how psychoactive substances move through ritual, identity, and meaning. The canvas is wide. Coffee and wine at the table. Cannabis in ceremony. Peyote, psilocybin, and LSD in spiritual quests. Pharmaceuticals as faith for a modern age. The question is simple. What do people do with drugs when they seek something larger than themselves?

Laderman writes with steady hands. No mystic fluff. No clinical coldness. He treats drugs as part of how people build the sacred. History shows the paths. Colonial trade spreads new stimulants. Ancient rites leave traces of plant power. Contemporary scenes remix it all into churches, circles, and clinics. The throughline is practice. Humans set the container, take the substance, tell the story, and call it holy.

For High Times readers, the payoff is clarity. The book sets cannabis inside a bigger field of ritual use. It shows how set, setting, and story shape outcomes. It draws a line from prayer halls to integration circles to the waiting room at a ketamine clinic. The language stays accessible. The claims stay cautious. The point is not to sell a miracle. The point is to show how people make meaning with what they ingest.

The strongest chapters track everyday substances and the so-called psychedelic renaissance. Everyday use is not small. It is where culture breathes. A morning cup. A glass at dusk. A joint to mark a moment or soften a boundary. The renaissance chapter, on the other hand, catches the present tense. Guides, clinicians, facilitators. New myths. Old patterns. Hope and hype in the same room.

Limits exist. This is a survey, not an ethnography. You will not get field-note grit from a Mazatec ceremony or a multi-night dieta. You will not get a policy manual either. You get a clean frame. You get terms that help you read the world. You get context for a conversation that often swings between marketing and moral panic.

Should you read it? If you care about the sacred side of psychoactives, yes. If you work in the space and need language that respects both tradition and modern medicine, yes. If you want a silver bullet, no. The book resists that. It gives a map. You still have to walk.

Verdict: Recommended. Smart, grounded, useful for readers who move between culture, ceremony, and clinical settings.

Photo: Shutterstock

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