Wednesday, July 29, 2009

The Bible on wine

NOW THAT I'M letting you peek at my emails to other folks ....

This is something I wrote several years ago to a minister who taught that imbibing alcohol is sinful.

Dear Sirs (and Madames),

[Y]our position on wine confuses me--frankly, because you seem to have arrived at your position by ignoring many scriptures which encourage the wise and moderate use of wine and other alcoholic drink.

In your article on Biblical health principles you say:

There is one word 'wine,' which either means the unfermented juice of the grape (non-alcoholic) or it means the fermented juice (alcoholic)."

Question: Accepting for the sake of argument that the above might be true, how does one determine which kind of juice is being referred to in a given scripture? Do you simply assume that all the positive references must be about unfermented juice, while all of the negative references are to fermented wine? On what would you base such an assumption?

But the Bible is clear; it says to drink the wine, the unfermented juice of the grape, when it's fresh in the cluster: "As the new wine is found in the cluster, And one says, 'Do not destroy it, For a blessing is in it'" (Isaiah 65:8). And concerning fermented juice: "Look not upon the wine..." (the fermented juice) "...when it is red "(Proverbs 23:31).

Is. 65:8 contains no command or even recommendation to drink only fresh grape juice and avoid wine. It simply says that men do not destroy a cluster of grapes because there is yet a "blessing" (or source of blessing, benefit, gift) in the "new wine" they produce. NIV says:

This is what the Lord says: "As when juice is still found in a cluster of grapes and men say, 'Don't destroy it, there is yet some good in it,' so will I do in behalf of my servants; I will not destroy them all.

In context, this would seem to indicate a cluster of grapes that remained unpressed after a wine pressing. Don't throw them out; there is still juice (i.e. "new wine") in them!

As for Proverbs 23:31, we must remember two things. First of all, the Proverbs are proverbs of a wise man, not commandments from the Eternal. Secondly, many of these proverbs utilize the literary device of hyperbole. For example:


Pr 23:1- When thou sittest to eat with a ruler, consider diligently what is before thee:
And put a knife to thy throat, if thou be a man given to appetite.

Thirdly, other verses from Proverbs and Ecclesiastes, written perhaps by the very same author, clearly portray wine in a positive light. In fact, wine and other fermented "strong drink" are mentioned from Genesis to Revelation--sometimes in a negative context, other times neutral or positive.

Wine was involved in the Temple worship (Lev. 23:13) and Yahweh even demanded "the best of the wine" (Num. 18:12); "plenty of corn and wine" was seen as a delightful blessing (Gen. 27:28).

Contrary to commanding abstinence, Yahweh recommends that His people buy "strong drink" on certain occasions--notably, during the Feast of Tabernacles! (Deut 14:26)

Too much wine is indeed a "mocker," but you ignore the scriptures that say that the right use of wine "maketh merry" (Ecc. 10:19). Again in Ecclesiastes, we are told: "Go thy way, eat thy bread with joy, and drink thy wine with a merry heart; for God now accepts thy works" (Ecc.9:7). And very revealingly, the Psalmist compares Yahweh himself to a "mighty man who shouteth by reason of wine!"

Grape juice does not make one "merry"--at least not any more so than does water or milk. And, while it may make children smile, I defy you to show me how it might cause mighty men to shout! The very idea is absurd.


Messiah's water-to-wine miracle: It stretches the bounds of credulity to imagine that the wedding guests were excited to get a new supply of grape juice. It also stretches the bounds of credulity to imagine that people present at the wedding would remark:

Every man at the beginning doth set forth good grape juice; and when men have well drunk, then that which is worse: but thou hast kept the good grape juice until now. (Joh 2:10).

Furthermore, Messiah tells us:
And no man putteth new wine into old bottles; else the new wine will burst the bottles, and be spilled, and the bottles shall perish (Lu 5:37).

Commentaries note that it is the process of fermentation which causes the old wineskin to burst when new wine is put into it. Messiah was clearly referring to real, fermented wine, and he assumed that his audience was very familiar with this product. For indeed, as he noted:

Lu 5:39
No man also having drunk old wine straightway desireth new: for he saith, The old is better.

Here, also, without even the slightest hint of condemnation, we find Messiah confirming that "old wine" is more enjoyable than new.

If anything is obvious in scripture, it is that wine enjoys an honored place as a blessing from our Creator, and that the Bible recommends total abstinence only in rare cases. (Biblical recommendations to abstain, or refererences to men who abstained such as John the Baptist, are the "exceptions that prove the rule" that alcohol was not only broadly permitted, but encouraged--within moderation.)

It is also obvious that when the Bible refers to wine, it is always, or nearly always, referring to wine, not raw grape juice--and when it refers to strong drink, it is *not* referring to milk!

While it is true that the abuse of alcohol destroys families, health, and lives, so does the abuse of food. In fact, the Bible condemns gluttony as soundly it condemns drunkenness. Should we take that as a command to abstain from eating?

Since you undoubtedly used a concordance to find the negative scriptures on drunkenness, the neutral and positive references to wine and "strong drink" cannot have escaped your attention. Unfortunately, for reasons known only to the Eternal and yourselves, you chose to emphasize the negative and ignore the neutral and positive. That sort of arbitrary interpretation of the Word of God does not inspire confidence in your exegetical skill or your intellectual honesty.

I hope you will revise your official doctrine to accurately reflect scripture. It is never righteous to distort scripture--not even in support of a seemingly noble cause. It is never acceptable to try to "improve upon" the commandments of the Eternal by concocting our own, the sin of the Pharisees (Mt 15:9, Mr 7:7, Col 2:22, Tit 1:14). For "there is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death" (Pr 14:12).

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