How the religiously unaffiliated are finding meaning, purpose and spirituality in psychedelic churches

More and more surveys point to decreasing membership in religious institutions and a ." Many people might assume that this indicates the absence of belief or a lack of spirituality.
Particularly in the West, people tend to think about in a higher power, such as God. For many nones, however, spirituality does not need a god or the supernatural to address questions of purpose, meaning, belonging and .
While abandoning mainstream religious affiliation, many turn to alternative expressions, including secular, atheist and psychedelic churches.
For about a decade, who studies alternative expressions of spirituality, I have tracked these groups online, visited churches and interacted with attendees. At times, I have been able to attend services or simply visit locations. At other times, out of respect for participants, I have met members—but not during services and rituals.
These churches demonstrate not a rejection of religion, as surveys suggest, but continued interest in spiritual community, rituals and virtues.
Psychedelic churches
One such church is , in Salt Lake City, Utah. Founded in 2020 as "a magic mushroom church" by , a former , TDA that connects people without dogma or intermediaries. TDA is not atheistic but maintains an inclusive notion of belief regarding God or a higher power.
Where members depart from traditional notions of religion and church, however, is within their practices and aims. Through psychedelic drugs, members believe they can directly experience the divine—as they define it—while gaining insight into their own and others' well-being. Within the church, members participate in that fortify their everyday lives.
Distinctly, using psilocybin is not part of these activities, nor are instructions provided on conducting mushroom ceremonies. This is done on one's own time, according to individual practices.
Through the church, members participate in practices to help cultivate the value of psychedelic exploration. These include a range of activities, from ice baths to meditation in a room with flashing lights. TDA also offers courses on growing psilocybin through its educational initiative "."
To borrow from its , TDA works to connect "people to self, others and the Divine." It also seeks to "protect responsible and religious use of psilocybin, and cultivate health and healing." This mission does not deny the place of belief but highlights broader therapeutic concerns.
Through shared rituals, members cultivate community while .
Mushroom churches: An American tradition
Louisville, Kentucky's brings "people together for healing and connection to divine revelation through communion with sacred mushrooms." Nondenominational, Psanctuary defines itself as a "Constitutional Church."
Indicating their legal status as a a , . For Psanctuary and other psychedelic churches, the use of psychedelics is simultaneously a sacred right and .
As with many psychedelic churches, . It understands divinity as "pure consciousness" that "permeates all being." Positioned this way, religion moves away from .
Instead, it follows non-Western, indigenous and New Age understandings that view divinity as within everyone. It also reorients people from seeking salvation in a world to come by encouraging focus on the present.
Like TDA, religion for Psanctuary expresses the pursuit of "pure consciousness" as "the origin of health and well-being." By experiencing this origin through psychedelics, members are "empowered to discover our own divinity."
This dual emphasis on self-divinity and healing reflects common themes across psychedelic churches.
The Church of Ambrosia and Zide Door
Inspired by , a nondenominational, interfaith religion, in Oakland, California, supports "the safe access and use of ." Founded in 2019 by Dave Hodges, Zide Door affords space for members to "."
Commonly, mainstream religion requires believers to interact with the sacred through designated leaders or texts. At Zide Door and other psychedelic churches, the emphasis is on self-realization and interconnection through direct experience.
Psychedelics offer members to religious understanding. Church, accordingly, becomes a place to support individual awakening.
captures this shift. Also located in Oakland, SGC—as it announces on its website—is a ." Through psychedelic sacraments, SGC claims to facilitate "direct experience of and relationship to Divine presence for individuals and community."
Beyond the experience, SGC helps members integrate "the benefits" the "experience and relationship can bring" into everyday life. Like other psychedelic churches, how rejection of conventional religion is often accompanied by new avenues to pursue spirituality.
Ayahuasca churches and healing
Ayahuasca churches rely on , a plant-based psychedelic brew. For Indigenous people of South America, ayahuasca is a sacred rite based on local knowledge. They argue that .
Indigenous practitioners and scholars thus warn about both the and of indigenous practices. While such concerns should not be ignored, ayahuasca churches tell us much about contemporary religion.
The turn to ayahuasca rituals highlights the growing connection between spiritual needs and healing. The emergence of ayahuasca churches in the U.S. suggests that such healing requires the support of community.
California-based , for example, draws from to provide "participants with opportunities to recharge their body, mind and soul with ." Its "" emphasizes this commitment to holistic healing.
It also situates the divine in "earthly" terms. Members, they believe, "should seek within Nature that which is contributory to our health and well-being."
Located in Orlando, Florida, members of believe likewise. As members contend, "What is of the Earth is our holy sacrament." Like others, they position psychedelics "as tools" that benefit "physical health, spiritual growth, and personal evolution."
Through ayahuasca, as aiding in individual rejuvenation. Once rejuvenated, members believe they help restore nature or assist in another's healing.
Well-being as spirituality
Collectively, these churches demonstrate not a rejection of religion, as the term "none" might suggest, but an embrace of well-being as spirituality.
And while they are distinct in many ways, they also share some common goals: They seek to provide members and practitioners , and .
A key lesson members connect to psychedelics is the intrinsic sacredness of each person: The divine is not elsewhere but within everyone.
To be a none might reflect one's total rejection of supernatural belief. But as psychedelic churches illustrate, identifying that way can also indicate spiritual pursuits that refuse to fit nicely within traditional religious categories.
Provided by The Conversation
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .