Soul Tribes

Phone: 313.777.SOUL (7685)
Email: sacrament@soultribes.org
Address: 15000 Southfield Fwy, Detroit MI, 48223

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Soul Tribe International Ministries Legal Notice

The founder and ministers of Soul Tribes Ministries study and utilize the indigenous traditions associated with the sacred plant.

Soul Tribe International Ministries is a lawfully incorporated 508(c)(1)(a) Faith Based Organization operating. The Church affirms the legal rights of the Church and its adult members, under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993, 42 USC § 2000bb, et seq. (“RFRA”), and other applicable state laws and religious freedom protections available under the Michigan constitution and other Michigan statutes and laws—to responsibly use sacraments in bona fide religious ceremony pursuant to sincerely held religious beliefs. This includes sacraments that are scheduled under federal and state law. 

For purposes of the Church, there is one sacrament: the sacred mix of natural substances found in certain mushrooms, specifically, psilocybin and psilocyn, which have been used in religious ceremonies around the world for hundreds (if not thousands) of years (“Sacrament”). The Church and its members affirm their right to responsibly use the Sacrament in ways that are exempted from the federal Controlled Substances Act, 21 U.S.C. § 801, et seq. (“CSA”), and applicable state Controlled Substances Acts. 

The right to use entheogens, in furtherance of the sincere exercise of religion, is inherent in state and federal constitutions and amendments relating thereto, including the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. It has been further recognized and advanced by statute, including federal and state religious freedom protection acts. The right has been declared valid by courts across this nation, including the United States Supreme Court, which have recognized the right of churches and church representatives to responsibly use entheogenic sacraments in furtherance of sincerely held religious beliefs. See, e.g., Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficente Uniao do Vegetal, 546 U.S. 418, 126 S. Ct. 1211, 163 L. Ed. 2d 1017 (2006) (“UDV Decision” recognizing the religious right of the church and its members to use formulations of DMT-containing ayahuasca); Church of the Holy Light of the Queens v. Mukasey, 615 F.Supp.2d 1210 (D. Or. 2009) (“Santo Daime Decision” recognizing the religious right of the church and its members to use formulations of DMT-containing ayahuasca); State v. Mack, 2020 N.H. Lexis 206 (New Hamp. Dec. 22, 2020) (New Hampshire Supreme Court vacating order denying motion to dismiss prosecution for possession and sacramental use of psilocyn and/or psilocybin in furtherance of sincerely held religious beliefs). 

The Church, respectfully, asserts its rights to seek attorney’s fees and other damages to the extent any private or government actor impinges on the rights of the Church or adult Church members to safely and responsibly practice their religion. See generally, 43 U.S.C. § 1988(b).

A key mission of Soul Tribe  is to build, grow and sustain a non-denominational, international faith-based religious community premised on and constructed around the safe and responsible religious use of the Sacrament in sacred ceremonies to facilitate (a) the personal growth and religious healing of church members, (b) the building of a transformative church community, and (c) the ushering forth of community and global healing through the work of the Church and its members. The Church respects the historical and time-honored religious traditions that exist concerning the Sacrament.  The Sacrament has been used in spiritual and religious ceremonies for centuries in North America and in other parts of the world. Many formal churches exist in the United States that are safely and effectively using the Sacrament as part of their religions, including churches that have operated in the United States for decades. 

To be clear, the Church honors and respects all entheogens. Embedded in Church doctrine is the recognition that God has provided humans with many types of plants, fungi and other natural substances that can support spiritual growth and religious transformations.  The Church recognizes that many other established churches, as well as individuals, have found religious healing through customs, practices and ceremonies that involve the intentional, religious use of entheogens. This includes but is not limited to the Native American Church and its many affiliates, which assert the right to use all entheogens as sacraments; the UDV church referenced in the UDV Decision, Santo Daime Church referenced in the Santo Daime Decision, and the Soul Quest church in Florida, all of which have long asserted the right to use ayahuasca as a sacrament; and other single and multi-sacrament churches that presently exist, or are in the process of forming, in Michigan and elsewhere. Reverence for Nature, as the manifestation of our Creator, is foundational to Soul Tribe ’s practices and beliefs. While sacred mushrooms are our Sacrament, we believe that all of nature is an expression of God’s love and is to be respected and honored. 

The Church embraces a non-denominational approach that honors and draws from the customs and beliefs of other religions that respect and value life, including Christianity. The Church believes that all religions contain elements of the Universal Truth:  that God—or, as referred to within the Church, Universal Consciousness—is Love and that Love is the foundation of manifested creation and individual and communal healing. Within this framework, the Church believes that the Sacrament is nature’s greatest and primary gift to facilitate transformative connections with the spiritual world and deeper connections with self. The Church believes that Sacrament can assist those who consume it intentionally, in ceremonies conducted pursuant to Church doctrine and procedures, in accessing personal Divinity, Healing, Spiritual Enlightenment and connection with Universal Consciousness. 

The Church has dedicated itself to ensuring that religious practices conducted pursuant to the sincerely held beliefs of the Church and its members do not disturb, or disrupt the peace, of others in the local communities where Soul Tribe  has a presence. Church doctrines preclude anyone from engaging with Sacrament unless (a) they are motivated by sincere religious beliefs, and (b) they are engaging with Sacrament as part of a Church-sanctioned religious ritual or ceremony. The Church has strict rules concerning the preparing of, handling, and consumption of the Sacrament, which among other things must be done with reverence of the Sacrament, which must be distributed only by ordained officials of the Church and only in official healing services of The Church. Only ordained officials, who have received appropriate approvals by the Church, are permitted to grow, prepare and serve the Sacrament in accordance with the Church’s rules.  

No official will be ordained unless they have demonstrated an understanding of Church policies and procedures, including strict procedures that ensure there is no diversion of Sacrament to others. Soul Tribe  has developed practices for storing, quantifying and utilizing sacrament and protecting it from misappropriation, and the Church commits to revisiting and enhancing its practices, as needed and as appropriate, subject to the Church reserving and affirming its right to use the sacrament without government interference consistent with the U.S. Constitution, the RFRA and applicable federal and state law, including the UDV Decision and the Santo Daime Decision.

To the extent practicable, and with full reservation of its right to exercise its religion, the Church seeks to build bridges with other members of the local and national community that foster community, health, healing and transparency. The Church believes that we—not just members of the Church, but all people throughout the world—are all members of a single human race, that in a very real way we are all part of a broader spiritual family without racial distinction, and that every human deserves the same respect and rights regardless of ethnicity, sexual preference, socioeconomic status or any other categorical distinction that has been used historically or in today’s world to foster separateness or, at times, oppression. All people from any walk of life that respects the Sacrament and Church doctrine are welcomed into our peace-loving community. The Church welcomes as members those who are called to the Sacrament in the name of religious and spiritual growth and healing, and who also respect and embrace the tenets of the Church.  

Soul Tribe  recognizes that, presently, there is a shift occurring across the nation with regard to entheogens, generally, and the mushrooms that constitute the Sacrament of the Church, specifically. As time goes on, more people and communities in the United States are recognizing that responsible adults have been able to develop healing relationships with entheogens, such as psilocybin-containing mushrooms, within and outside of religious and therapy settings. Moreover, each year additional institutions are performing medical and other scientific research exploring the possible physical and mental health benefits associated with the safe, intentional and responsible use of entheogens.  As a 508 organization, the Church expects to contribute its voice to the unfolding political and legislative dialogue in the United States concerning safe access to entheogens, including psilocybin-containing mushrooms and, where appropriate, to offer support to decriminalization initiatives. Several pro-entheogen initiatives that have unfolded in recent years, or are presently unfolding, are identified below. Soul Tribe  also offers its voice and support to other churches or church members who are contributing to this important dialogue, or who find themselves confronting institutions that challenge their lawful right to responsibly use entheogens. Soul Tribe  also is a supporter of ongoing and future medical research on entheogens.** Examples of prior and current entheogenic research is identified below.  

With that said, the Church, as an organization, is primarily focused on ensuring that anyone associated with the Church, including its members and leaders, are respecting the Sacrament consistent with Church doctrine. In other words, while the Church is supportive of the right of individuals and groups, in general, to use entheogens in safe and responsible manners within religious and medical/mental health contexts or outside of them, the Church’s doctrines, practices, and religion are focused on the use of the Sacrament within the Church’s structure, consistent with the sincerely held religious beliefs held by the Church and its members, in furtherance of their bona fide exercise of religion. 

Soul Tribe  encourages any member contemplating sitting with Sacrament to have relationships with medical and mental health providers, as they offer professional services that are distinct from the religious support offered through Soul Tribe  and the Soul Tribe  religious community.  Soul Tribe  is not a medical provider and does not provide medical or mental health advice. Although Soul Tribe  may reference medical and mental health research and literature, as well as publications that may contain various people’s anecdotal experiences with entheogens, and while it is possible that Soul Tribe  members may speak publicly about their experiences with Sacrament, Soul Tribe  cannot (and does not) make any representations about the medical or mental health benefits of any entheogen.  

Initiatives in the United States Impacting Psilocybin-Containing Mushrooms

    • In May 2019, Denver, Colorado, became the first city in the United States to decriminalize psilocybin mushrooms after a ballot initiative narrowly won with 50.6% of the vote. The initiative did not legalize mushrooms, but prohibited Denver from spending any resources to prosecute people for their use or possession. The law applies to adults over the age of 21, and psilocybin remains illegal in Colorado.[15][16][5]
    • The following month in June 2019, thirty individuals testified to the city council in Oakland, California, about their prior experiences with psilocybin. Following the testimonies, the city council unanimously voted to decriminalize the drug, along with peyote.[14]
    • In January 2020, Santa Cruz, California, voted unanimously to decriminalize the adult possession and cultivation of psilocybin.[17] Commercial sale of psilocybin is still illegal.[10]
    • In September 2020, the City Council of Ann Arbor, Michigan, voted unanimously in favor of a resolution declaring the investigation or arrest of anyone for planting, cultivating, purchasing, transporting, distributing, engaging in practices with or possessing entheogenic plants or plant compounds to be the city’s lowest law enforcement priority.[18][19]
    • In November 2020, the state of Oregon became the first U.S. state to both decriminalize psilocybin and also legalize it for supervised non-medical use after the Ballot Measure 109 passed.[1]
    • In November 2020, the District of Columbia passed initiative 81; the short title of the initiative was the Entheogenic Plant and Fungus Policy Act of 2020 and it came into effect on March 15, 2021. It decriminalizes psilocybin drugs, which are psychedelics including magic mushrooms, ayahuasca, and mescaline, making arrests for their possession or use the lowest priority for DC police.[20][21]
    • In January 2021, Washtenaw County, Michigan, followed suit.[22] That same month, the City Council of Somerville, Massachusetts voted unanimously to decriminalize the possession of entheogenic plants, including psilocybin mushrooms and ibogaine.[23][24]
    • In February 2021, after continuous outreach by Bay Staters for Natural Medicine, the City Council of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and in March 2021, Northampton, Massachusetts followed.[25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32]
    • In October 2021, the City Council of Seattle, Washington, and Arcata, California, voted unanimously to deprioritize enforcing entheogen prohibition.[33][34][35][36]
    • On October 20, 2021, the City Council of Easthampton, Massachusetts, voted 7–0 on a non-binding resolution[37] to support ending arrests for the growing of entheogenic plants and fungi, as well as to support decriminalization of the possession of most controlled substances.[38]
    • On November 3, 2021, Detroit voters approved Proposal E, making Detroit the latest city to “decriminalize nature”, as supporters call it.[39] Proposal E, a ballot initiative, passed with 61% of voters supporting a law that will, “to the fullest extent permitted under Michigan law”, make “the personal possession and therapeutic use of entheogenic plants by adults the city’s lowest law-enforcement priority”.[40]
    • On December 20, 2021, the city of Port Townsend, Washington, adopted a resolution requesting that “investigating, arrest, and prosecution of adults engaging in entheogen-related activities, included but not limited to… should be a City of Port Townsend law enforcement priority when done in a nonpublic place”.[41]
    • On March 22, 2022, Hazel Park became the third Michigan city to decriminalize natural psychedelics.[42]
    • On September 7, 2022, San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a measure calling for the decriminalization of the use of entheogenic plants.[43][44]
    • In March 2022, Colorado activists picked a psychedelic reform initiative (Proposition 122) out of three other similar initiatives and started a signature campaign to place the measure on the state’s 2022 election ballot. By July 2022, the reform initiative made the Colorado ballot for the 2022 midterm elections.[45] The ballot initiative was passed in November 2022 by over 50% of those who voted. It decriminalizes the possession, growing, and sharing of five psychedelics for personal use: psilocybin, psilocyn, dimethyltryptamine (DMT), ibogaine, and mescaline, for those aged 21-years-old and over. The initiative will also legalize “healing centers” that are licensed by the state’s Department of Regulatory Agencies, where those aged 21 and over can buy, consume, and take psychedelics under supervision. This healing center programme is expected to begin in 2024. It will at first only include psilocybin but allows for expansion to include DMT, ibogaine, and mescaline in 2026.[46][47]
    • In May 2023, Jefferson County, Washington, decriminalized the use of entheogenic plants and fungi.[48]
(Source: Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybin_decriminalization_in_the_United_States ) Last updated: 10/02/2023