Jesus and Wine
By: Chris
Wilhoit
Open the
Bible Question Form to send your own question.
Did Jesus
turn water into “alcoholic” wine at a party?
Did Jesus drink alcoholic wine? It is assumed
by a great many that He did. Let’s examine this for a moment. Do
you know how much wine Jesus made during His first miracle at the wedding
feast of Cana? He made 6 firkins, or about 150 gallons. Now, of course, the New
International Version (NIV), which never changes anything of significance
(yea, right), says by implication that Jesus did this “after the GUESTS
had too much to drink”. You do understand that Jesus was a GUEST
don't you??? So, let me understand this correctly, Jesus was at a party where the
guests were drinking to excess, Jesus was one of the guests, and He supplied
a few extra kegs to liven things up a bit after they had already drank
to excess. Is that your Jesus?
Jesus Sinned?
The King James Bible (KJB) rendering which states
they had "well drunken" (had plenty to drink) is the correct
one. The New American Standard Version and other literal modern
versions agree with the KJB here, leaving the NIV alone in its radically
liberal paraphrase. Even if you take the rendering in the KJB,
which I do, you have to conclude the guests had drank their fill of wine. If
this wine was alcoholic then it is likely that they would not be ready
for another 150 gallons of alcoholic wine. Think about it. How
many glass of wine would this be? If you figure 4 ounces to a glass,
128 ounces to a gallon, you get 32 glasses of wine per gallon and a grand
total of 4,800 glasses of wine. Now I do not know how many
people were at this feast, but surely 500 would be a large number for
such an event at this time. If this wine was alcoholic then Jesus
did cause all who were there to drink to excess. This is clearly
a sin in the Old Testament. Not only would His excessive drinking
have been a sin, but causing others to do so is also a sin. Every
Jew present at this wedding, and they were undoubtedly all Jews, would
have known Him to be a sinner because of this verse, and many others:
Habakkuk
2:15 Woe unto him that giveth his neighbour drink, that puttest thy bottle
to him, and makest him drunken also,.......
Now my liberal (apostate) friends are quick to assert
that Jesus drank alcoholic wine, as a tea totaler of course, but are
often shocked by the implication this has in John 2. Some have
suggested that Jesus didn't drink any, and that the guests did not have
to drink all that he made. These are interesting thoughts, but
I think it is clear from context that the guests had drank their fill
and were now given a great deal more to drink. I think it is also
abundantly clear from context this was not alcoholic wine.
Biblical
Word Wine and Its Usage
The
word "wine" is mentioned 231 times in the King James Bible.
In the Old Testament there are 3 Hebrew words that are all translated
as “wine”.
-
YAYIN:
Intoxicating, fermented wine (Genesis 9:21).
-
TIROSH:
Fresh grape juice (Proverbs 3:10).
-
SHAKAR:
Intoxicating, intensely alcoholic, strong drink (often referred
to other intoxicants than wine) (Numbers 28:7).
The
New Testament, translated from Greek, uses the word
“wine” for both fermented and unfermented drink. There are 2 Greek words
for wine the New Testament.
-
OINOS: Wine
(generic) - Matthew 9:17 -- unfermented, Ephesians 5:18 -- fermented.
-
GLEUKOS: Sweet
wine, fresh juice (Acts 2:13).
The
context reveals the type of wine as in Proverbs 20:1,
”Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever is deceived
thereby is not wise”. If grape juice is substituted for the word
wine, the verse doesn't make sense.
The
Bible is full of prohibitions about using alcoholic wine. It was forbidden
for priests and for those who took the Nazarite vow. It was forbidden
for kings and princes (Proverbs 31:4-6) and pronounced woe upon anyone
who provided his neighbor alcoholic wine and made him drunk (Habakkuk
2:15). It would be inconsistent for the Bible to speak against alcoholic
wine and then have Jesus ignore it.
Relevant Questions to the Discussion
Didn't they use fermentation to preserve wine? How
much alcohol content does naturally fermented wine have? Did they
ever water it down? Is granulated sugar important to fermentation
and alcoholic content? Was fermentation the only way to preserve grape
juice?
Fermentation,
Preservation and Alcoholic Content
One must have a clear understanding of fermentation
to see the unlikelihood of the above contention. First, naturally
(no additives) fermented wine has a low alcoholic content. Until
the advent of widely available granulated sugar, strongly alcoholic wine
was rare. To make wine strongly alcoholic like what we have today
(10%-15%) you must add a lot of sugar and yeast. These are the
two key components to fermentation, and they are not present in large
enough quantities naturally to create the strong wine we have today. Alcoholic
wine during biblical times, which was much weaker than the wine of today,
was often watered down for drinking. They basically only had water and wine. Like Pepsi or Coke today,
wine was consumed by adults and children alike as a tasty substitute
for water. Watering down wine was something they did and they drank it this way
regularly. Also, boiling it down to a syrup was frequently done
for preservation. This boiling killed the yeast that would cause
fermentation. The syrup could easily be reconstituted later for drinking purposes.
A third form of preservation was by straining out the yeast to prevent
fermentation.
The Myth of Natural Fermentation
Nature NEVER forms spiritous liquors. The fruit
(grape) may rot and turn sour but it takes ART to convert juice to alcohol.
The indispensable conditions for vinous fermentation are exact proportions
of sugar, yeast or gluten and water with air temperature between 50 and
75 degrees. Chemical science forbids vinous fermentation when heat exceeds
75 degrees and assures the acetous (vinegar). Since the Middle
East is well above that even at night most of the year, something had
to be done to preserve the juice (wine) for the year, or else it would
all turn to vinegar! To assume it was all turned to alcoholic wine
is a ridiculous assertion and flies in the face of historical fact. Josephus,
famous Jewish historian declares that he has seen provisions at the Jewish
fortress Massada including grapes and fruits, kept fresh to last for
100 years!!!! Pliny the Roman historian confirms this. Don't let anyone tell
you that grapes have to be kept by making alcoholic wine so they can
last the year!!
So we see that the portrayal that grape juice was
only preserved by fermentation is utterly false. Unfermented wine was
the most common wine in biblical times. It was not what we know as wine
today which is always alcoholic. You cannot defend wine drinking today
on the basis of biblical times because the two are totally different.
Argument from
the Passover
Some will still say that Jesus Christ indeed drank
alcoholic wine and we know this by the passover (which was the last supper
- Mark 14:14-17). There is a difference of seven months grapes
between the harvest and passover. They will say “they didn't have refrigerators,
so to keep the grapes from souring, they were fermented”. As we
have shown above, the seven month time span would not have been a problem
due to the multitude of frequently used preservation methods, all of
which easier than fermentation, available to the people at that time.
Furthermore, in Matthew 26 it was "the fruit
of the vine” (verse 29) they drank. This is also in Mark 14, Luke
22, and 1Corinthians 11. The “fruit of the vine” would be grapes,
and when the grapes are crushed they do not make alcoholic wine. You
do know that God calls it wine while the juice is still in the grape
don't you?
Isaiah
65:8 Thus saith the LORD, As the new wine is found in the cluster....
Argument from
the Good Samaritan
Another contention about Jesus drinking
alcoholic wine stems from the story of the Good Samaritan. The
Greek word for wine used here is oinos. The claim is that it
is alcoholic here because the Good Samaritan used it as an antiseptic. This
is the same Greek word used in John 2, so it is contended that Jesus
did turn the water into alcoholic wine.
If
you know anything at all about Greek you know that oinos can refer
to fermented or unfermented grape juice. The word oinos is used at
least 33 times in the LXX to translate tirosh the Hebrew word for grape
juice. The word “wine” not only in Greek, but in Old English, in Latin,
and in Hebrew is a generic term including all kinds of wine, unfermented
and fermented.
In
the 1828 Webster’s dictionary wine is defined as unfermented and fermented
juice. Only by context can one know whether the wine in question is
fermented or not. Thus, the fact the wine made by Christ at Cana is
called oinos offers no grounds for concluding hat it was fermented
wine.
It
is interesting that the new versions, which claim to have up-to-date
language, still translate all these original language words as wine
since the definition of the English word "wine" has changed
in the last 100 years. Where the KJB is accurate in its translation
given the definition of the word in 1611, the new versions misrepresent
the true meaning of these Hebrew and Greek words when they translate
what is by definition juice in the Old Testament (tirosh) and clearly
presented as such in context in the New Testament.
It
is a false private interpretation of these passages in the NIV that
the guests, including Jesus, were drunken and then Jesus made more
to further the intoxication. The fact is that the context tells us
otherwise. By the simple fact that the governor of the feast noted
that He had saved the good wine until last. If they had been intoxicated
the governor would not have been able to tell it was the best because
his senses would be dulled. The argument from the Greek word oinos
is completely invalid.
Argument from
the Pharisee's Accusation
Another contention about Jesus drinking
alcoholic wine comes from what our Lord said about the Pharisees. The
Lord was demonstrating how it was impossible to please these arrogant
theological intellectuals. No matter what you did they could
find it to be wrong somehow. Jesus gives the illustration like
this:
Matthew
11:18-19
18 For John came neither eating nor drinking, and they say, He hath a
devil.
19 The Son of man came eating and drinking, and they say, Behold a man
gluttonous, and a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners. But
wisdom is justified of her children.
The argument from this passage
goes like this: "Jesus must have drank alcoholic wine or they
would not have made the accusation". That is an interesting
comment, one that I considered very closely. However, if this
argumentation is correct it must be applicable to the former comment
about John the Baptist. For them to accuse him he must have been
possessed by a devil (maybe just a little one and only infrequently). The
obvious implication of this analogy is that neither is true. John
was not possessed of a devil, and Jesus did not drink alcoholic wine
and therefore could not have been a winebibber. It also bears
mention that the Pharisees also accused him of breaking the sabbath
by healing the sick, and of blaspheming God by making Himself equal
with God. Neither of these accusations were true since helping
the sick on the sabbath does not fall under the category of work (Mark
3:3-5), and He was equal and co-eternal with the Father (John 1:1-18).
What
Does the Bible Say About Drinking?
Proverbs
23:29-35
29 Who hath woe? who hath sorrow? who hath contentions? who hath babbling?
who hath wounds without cause? who hath redness of eyes?
30 They that tarry long at the wine; they that go to seek mixed wine.
31 Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth his colour
in the cup, when it moveth itself aright.
32 At the last it biteth like a serpent, and stingeth like an adder.
33 Thine eyes shall behold strange women, and thine heart shall utter
perverse things.
34 Yea, thou shalt be as he that lieth down in the midst of the sea,
or as he that lieth upon the top of a mast.
35 They have stricken me, shalt thou say, and I was not sick; they have
beaten me, and I felt it not: when shall I awake? I will seek it yet
again.
I
know, I know, you guys that drink alcohol never drink too much do you? Sure
you don't. I was around people who drank this stuff a lot before
I was saved and I know from experience that someone who drinks almost
always does it to get a buzz from it. Do your eyes behold
strange women when you drink? Do you utter perverse things, like
curse words, or dirty jokes when you drink? I am convinced that
most of the fornication going on out there is at least partially attributable
to alcohol consumption. Even the most worldly people consider
it a sin product. Keep justifying it in your mind, but remember
this verse:
Proverbs
14:12 There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof
are the ways of death.
Is Wine Destructive?
As
I have demonstrated, nowhere in scripture do we find Jesus drinking
alcoholic wine. Alcohol is destructive and addictive. It is a
depressant drug that actually attacks the brain cells and destroys
them. Twenty percent of all patients admitted into mental hospitals
have a problem with alcohol. Alcohol has caused numerous health and
social problems. In addition to this a majority of traffic fatalities
and accidents can be directly attributive to alcohol. Drunkenness destroys
lives and relationships. It is not just a disease. It is a sin.
Notice
the damage alcohol did in the lives of these Bible characters:
-
Noah
- It brought shame (Genesis 9:21).
-
Lot
- His daughters committed incest (Genesis 19:30-36).
-
Nabal
- God killed him (1Samuel 25:36-37).
-
Elah
- Was murdered by Zimri (1Kings 16:9-10).
-
Belshazzar
- The Assyrians take his kingdom (Daniel 5)
-
The
Corinthians - During the Lord's Super God kills some (1Corinthians
11).
Where
Do You Get Your Joy?
Some
people seek their happiness, comfort and peace in a bottle. The Lord
will always be the Christian's source of joy. Jesus said in John 15:11, "These
things have I spoken unto you that my joy might remain in you, and
that your joy might be full". 1John 1:4 reminds us, "And
these things write we unto you, that your joy may be full".
God
has given us His Word to provide comfort and to maintain joy in our
lives. The Christian's happiness does not come in a bottle. It comes
in a book -- the Bible! Consider that others are watching our
example. What example are we setting? 1Thessalonians 5:22 warns us,
“Abstain from all appearance of evil”.
|