Marijuana will remain a sin in the eyes of the Church, Canada’s bishops have said, after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that recreational use of the drug would cease to be a crime.
With the exception of cannabis use for medicinal purposes, consuming marijuana violates the virtue of temperance and should be avoided, said Mgr Frank Leo, general secretary of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.
“The virtue of temperance, as explained in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, ‘disposes us to avoid every kind of excess: the abuse of food, alcohol, tobacco or medicine,'” said Mgr Leo. “In a particular way, the Catechism underscores that the use of any drug, except on strictly therapeutic grounds, is also a ‘grave offence’ – for the use of drugs inflicts very grave damage on human health and life.”
After the Canadian government’s Cannabis Act received royal assent in the Senate on June 21, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the recreational use of marijuana would cease to be a crime on October 17. Canada is the second country in the world, following Uruguay, to legalise the drug nationwide.
Under the law, adults can possess up to 30 grams of cannabis, cultivate up to four marijuana plants per household and can use cannabis to prepare edible products. People 12-18 are prohibited from possessing more than five grams (about 7 to 10 marijuana cigarettes). It will be sold in regulated outlets.
Terrence Prendergast, Archbishop of Ottawa, said: “Recreational use of substances – whether marijuana, other drugs and opioids – is part of a continuum of consumption of substances that allow people to escape what they regard as the burdens and challenges of life.”
“Bishops, priests, catechists, youth and pastoral care workers will need to give teaching on temperance and how it comes into play in the decisions we take,” he said.
“Guidelines for confessors should help them assist penitents with wise guidance in this matter,” he added, comparing it to “addressing other contemporary problems such as the plague of pornography”.
The archbishop stressed that parents play an important role in steering children away from the drug.
“Parents try and discourage their teens from smoking and underage drinking, so how is marijuana use different? They also counsel young adults about overindulging in alcohol, drinking to get drunk or binge drinking.
“Our bodies are ours to use, but we have to account one day to the Lord as to how we took care of them and what we did with them,” he said. “Is it a good idea to knowingly use a substance that produces harmful effects? Is this wise stewardship?”
In 2017, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a statement on the opioid crisis; it called the intent to legalise marijuana “unwise” and “potentially dangerous”.
“The very significant health risks associated with the use of cannabis are widely recognised, particularly in young people,” the statement said. “They include the heightened risk of heart attack, stroke, all of the respiratory and carcinogenic pathologies associated with tobacco smoke, and a multitude of psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia.
The Catechism calls the production and trafficking of drugs scandalous practices which “constitute direct cooperation in evil, since they encourage people to practices gravely contrary to the moral law,” Mgr Leo said. “To this latter point might be added the legalisation of drugs for recreational purposes, for this legalisation risks being another way to proliferate seriously addictive substances as well as to condone practices which harm individuals and society.”
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