First - that is not totally accurate.[
If you understood allegory, you would know it is accurate.
We have no real history for many Biblical characters.
The Bible is real history and you have no real history than any Bible characteristic was not a real person.
And also, why could not those stories have come about by ingesting some mushrooms, or smoking some weed?
Silly statements are just that, silly
We know the Hebrew Priests were using it for YHVH contact. It is in the list for the Temple.
Exo 30:23 Take thou also unto thee principal spices, of pure myrrh five hundred shekels, and of sweet cinnamon half so much, even two hundred and fifty shekels, and of sweet calamus (qaneh bosem cannabis) two hundred and fifty shekels,
Surely you read better than too think that was mixture was to be taken internally. To understand it, read 30:25. What was sweet was cinnamon ,
We also know from the Bible that it was used for trade. I’m going to guess “weed” is better for trade then “reed.”
Guess again. It was not used for trade and calamus means reed or branch, not weed.
"KINEBOISIN, according to the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, is the old name for cannabis -- it was also spelt 'kannabosm'. They claim it was mis-translated in the King James' version of the bible, as 'calamus'."
Calamus is only used once in the Bible, Song of Solomon 4:14 and again it is an ingredient in an ointment, not something to be smoked or taken internally.
Webster's New World Hebrew Dictionary by Hayim Baltsan published in 1992. The ISBN number is 0-671-88991-5.
On page 650 there is the definition of 'marijuana'. It says 'kanabos'.
Together, these dictionaries help to prove that cannabis - kanebosm - kanabos - is the missing ingredient in the holy anointing oil of Moses.
First, it is not missing, it is stated plainly. It is cinnamon. Second, the holy ANOINTING oil was not to be taken internally. It might help if you get a good dictionary and look up the meaning of ANOINTING.
“In 1936, Sara Benetowa, later Known as Sula Benet, an etymologist from the Institute of Anthropological Sciences, in Warsaw wrote a treatise, "Tracing One Word Through Different Languages." This was a study on the word Cannabis, based on a study of the oldest Hebrew texts. Although the word cannabis was thought to be of Scythian origin, Benet's research showed it had an earlier root in the Semitic Languages such as Hebrew. Benet demonstrated that the ancient Hebrew word for Cannabis is Kaneh -Bosem.”
If she was trying to prove what you are trying to prove, she wasted her time. Canabus does not describe somethng to be smokked or drunk.
And other hallucinogens are mentioned in the Bible as well.
*
Where?
It is amusing that you are trying to use something you don't believe in to prove something you do believe in.