Psychedelics and Religion with Hunt Priest, MDiv

In this episode, Hunt Priest joins to discuss the intersection of psychedelic experiences and religion. Hunt is the founder of Ligare: A Christian Psychedelic Society and was a participant in the Johns Hopkins/NYU Psilocybin Study for Religious Leaders in 2016. The epiphanies he had at Hopkins forever changed the trajectory of his work and led him to start Ligare in 2021.

In this conversation, Hunt Priest reflects on how participating in the Johns Hopkins study reshaped his understanding of Christianity, embodiment, and spiritual experience. Drawing on his background as an Episcopal priest, he explores the deep resonance between psychedelic experiences and Christianity, arguing that non-ordinary states of consciousness have always been central to religious life, even if institutional churches have often marginalized them. The discussion ranges from spiritual emergence and theological disruption to healing, discernment, and the role clergy can play in preparation and integration. Hunt also shares his own profound embodied experience during the study where he encountered Vedic and Upanishadic concepts firsthand. He explains how it ultimately led him to found Ligare, a Christian psychedelic society aimed at bridging psychedelics, healing, and the Christian mystical tradition.

In this episode, you'll hear:

  • Hunt’s ideas of how psychedelic experiences connect with Christian sacraments and liturgical practices

  • How psychedelics connect with understandings of religious pluralism and the diversity of spiritual experiences

  • Resources for working through ideas that psychedelic experiences could be sinful or demonic

  • Hunt’s thoughts on navigating theological disruption, spiritual emergence, and expanded images of God

  • Why embodiment and bodily wisdom are central to spiritual insight and healing

  • The vital opportunity institutional religion risks missing in the current psychedelic renaissance

Quotes:

“I think there's a lot of us [clergy] out there that understand that the spiritual issues that come up with psychedelics are important and need to be tended to in a sensitive way—in an open minded way, an open hearted way.” [14:36]

“The Church has, over time, taught people to not trust their minds or their bodies. And that's a huge mistake because our bodies keep the score and they also are one of the places we hold wisdom—which was the biggest lesson I got from the first experience I had at Hopkins.” [17:39]

“That's why the spiritual care professionals could be so important: when these issues, these spirit big spiritual questions or even a collapse of your own theological framework happens, you need help to put it back together. And just like therapy helps us put our emotional life back together, I think a good spiritual director or spiritual advisor—one-on-one or small group work—can help us put our theology back together.” [21:47]

Links:

Ligare website

Ligare on Instagram

Hunt on Instagram

Hunt on LinkedIn

Center for Action and Contemplation website

Previous episode: Avoiding the Pitfalls of Psychedelic Medicine with Matthew Johnson, PhD

Psychedelic Medicine Association

Porangui

Plant Medicine.org