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The Psychedelic Temple : Re-imagining ancient Jewish Temple Space through Psychedelic Aesthetics

Bloch, Natalie LU orcid (2026) Psychedelic Intersections In Psychedelic Intersections
Abstract
In the Hebrew Bible and related literature, the Jerusalem temple(s) served as the dwelling place of the deity and a focal point for human-divine relations and ritual life. Ancient Jewish literature documents the temple’s sacred architecture, rituals, and social practices in great detail, providing a foundation for Jewish engagement with temple aesthetics over millennia.

Today, a diverse and growing number of Jewish individuals and communities explore traditional temple traditions through psychedelic exploration. By applying a spatial gaze, this paper attempts to articulate a Jewish psychedelic aesthetic inspired by the temple tradition. The overall aim is to explore the spatial re-imagining of temple traditions through... (More)
In the Hebrew Bible and related literature, the Jerusalem temple(s) served as the dwelling place of the deity and a focal point for human-divine relations and ritual life. Ancient Jewish literature documents the temple’s sacred architecture, rituals, and social practices in great detail, providing a foundation for Jewish engagement with temple aesthetics over millennia.

Today, a diverse and growing number of Jewish individuals and communities explore traditional temple traditions through psychedelic exploration. By applying a spatial gaze, this paper attempts to articulate a Jewish psychedelic aesthetic inspired by the temple tradition. The overall aim is to explore the spatial re-imagining of temple traditions through psychedelic aesthetics—tapping into the experiences of a body and mind on psychedelics. The paper proceeds in three parts: first, it considers how temple spaces function as arenas for social critique, from the Dead Sea Scrolls to contemporary psychedelic re-visions of Jerusalem; second, it explores the internalization of the temple as a catalyst for messianic activism, where temple space is relocated into the body and activated through altered states of consciousness; and third, it discusses the framing of psychedelic experiences as spiritual journeys inspired by historical Jewish ascent narratives. Taken together, these examples demonstrate that the recurring engagement with temple motifs plays a significant role in the development of Jewish psychedelic aesthetics, providing symbolic architectures through which psychedelic experiences are imagined, interpreted, and given meaning. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
psychedelics, Judaism, temple, spatiality, aesthetics
host publication
Psychedelic Intersections: 2025 Conference Anthology : Betwixt & Between Chaplaincy, Plant Medicine, and Aesthetics - Betwixt & Between Chaplaincy, Plant Medicine, and Aesthetics
series title
Psychedelic Intersections
editor
Breau, Jeffrey and Gillis-Smith, Paul
publisher
Center for the Study of World Religions, Harvard Divinity School
conference name
Psychedelic Intersections
conference location
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
conference dates
2025-02-15 - 2025-02-15
ISSN
3066-3490
3066-5469
DOI
10.70423/0004.02
project
At the End of the World: A Transdisciplinary Approach to the Apocalyptic Imaginary in the Past and Present
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4ac143a3-feb9-481f-88cf-9db4c8562484
date added to LUP
2026-04-15 12:24:35
date last changed
2026-05-21 16:07:25
@inbook{4ac143a3-feb9-481f-88cf-9db4c8562484,
  abstract     = {{In the Hebrew Bible and related literature, the Jerusalem temple(s) served as the dwelling place of the deity and a focal point for human-divine relations and ritual life. Ancient Jewish literature documents the temple’s sacred architecture, rituals, and social practices in great detail, providing a foundation for Jewish engagement with temple aesthetics over millennia.  <br/><br/>Today, a diverse and growing number of Jewish individuals and communities explore traditional temple traditions through psychedelic exploration. By applying a spatial gaze, this paper attempts to articulate a Jewish psychedelic aesthetic inspired by the temple tradition. The overall aim is to explore the spatial re-imagining of temple traditions through psychedelic aesthetics—tapping into the experiences of a body and mind on psychedelics. The paper proceeds in three parts: first, it considers how temple spaces function as arenas for social critique, from the Dead Sea Scrolls to contemporary psychedelic re-visions of Jerusalem; second, it explores the internalization of the temple as a catalyst for messianic activism, where temple space is relocated into the body and activated through altered states of consciousness; and third, it discusses the framing of psychedelic experiences as spiritual journeys inspired by historical Jewish ascent narratives. Taken together, these examples demonstrate that the recurring engagement with temple motifs plays a significant role in the development of Jewish psychedelic aesthetics, providing symbolic architectures through which psychedelic experiences are imagined, interpreted, and given meaning.}},
  author       = {{Bloch, Natalie}},
  booktitle    = {{Psychedelic Intersections: 2025 Conference Anthology : Betwixt & Between Chaplaincy, Plant Medicine, and Aesthetics}},
  editor       = {{Breau, Jeffrey and Gillis-Smith, Paul}},
  issn         = {{3066-3490}},
  keywords     = {{psychedelics; Judaism; temple; spatiality; aesthetics}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Center for the Study of World Religions, Harvard Divinity School}},
  series       = {{Psychedelic Intersections}},
  title        = {{The Psychedelic Temple : Re-imagining ancient Jewish Temple Space through Psychedelic Aesthetics}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.70423/0004.02}},
  doi          = {{10.70423/0004.02}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}