Is it
biblically permissible for a Christian to drink alcohol? If so, how much?
This controversial subject has evoked many passionate opinions among
Christians. Why? Is God’s Word silent or in anyway unclear about alcohol? Among
Christians, there are two primary camps of thought on this sensitive topic. The
first group argues that Jesus Himself drank wine, and since a Christian is a
follower of Christ, how can it be forbidden? And generally, they add with a
moderate air: “but even so, drinking should not be done to excess.” Let’s begin
with a definition. There are many forms of this compound called alcohol.
However, there is no mistaking that all of them are classified as
poisons—toxins to the human body. The alcohol found in beverages such as beer,
wine, and brandy is ethanol (C2H5OH), a clear, highly flammable liquid that has
a burning taste and a characteristic odor. Two Types of Wine—Biblically Speaking
The word “wine” in the Bible sometimes refers to the new—or fresh juice
of the grape; other times it is used to describe the aged or fermented product
containing the drug alcohol. The translators never used the term “grape juice.”
In the Hebrew text, the writers use different words to distinguish between the
two. The word tîyrôsh is used for new unfermented wine, and yayin is generally
used for fermented wine, but there were some exceptions (Isaiah 16:10).
However, in the New Testament, only one Greek word is used to describe both
fermented and fresh grape juice: oinis . But this shouldn’t be a problem. By
simply understanding the context of the word in a passage, the appropriate
meaning will usually surface. So unless the passage says old or new wine (as in
Luke 5:37–39), the context will often tell us what kind of grape juice is being
described. The whole of Scripture is clearly and adamantly against the
consumption of alcohol, but human nature will look upon any textual ambiguity
as a “loophole" "FOR MORE READ BELOW"👇
An example of this reasoning is the wedding in Cana, where Jesus
turned water into wine. “When the master of the feast had tasted the water that
was made wine, and did not know where it came from (but the servants who had
drawn the water knew), the master of the feast called the bridegroom. And he said to him, ‘Every man at
the beginning sets out the good wine, and when the guests have well drunk, then
the inferior. You have kept the good wine until now!’” (John 2:9, 10). Those
who support the intake of alcohol suggest this must have been alcoholic
wine—after all, it was a wedding, and every wedding has wine—right? But let’s
pause to consider the implications. There were six pots for Jesus to fill, and
each of those would hold 20 to 30 gallons. That’s up to 180 gallons of
beverage!
Are we to believe that Jesus made 180 gallons of a destructive
drug—enough to get every guest drunk and launch this new marriage with slurring
lips and staggering feet? Indeed, He would have been acting against His own
Word! (Habakkuk 2:15; Luke 12:46; Ephesians 5:18). If we approach this passage
relying on the whole of Scripture, we must surely come to the conclusion that
Jesus made unfermented wine—and the governor of the feast complimented the
groom on its pure quality. (John 2:4, 6, 10. See also Mark 1:24, 2 Samuel
16:10).
Last Supper?
Some argue that if Jesus partook of wine at the Last Supper, and even
employed it as a symbol of His purifying blood, then how can drinking a little
wine—even just casually—be wrong? Indeed, the very seeds of the New Testament
were watered with wine from the Last Supper. There is no arguing that Jesus
used wine at the Last Supper, but it is a mistake to assume that the wine was
of the fermented variety.
“For this is My blood of the new covenant, which is shed for many for
the remission of sins. But I say to you, I will not drink of this fruit of the
vine from now on until that day when I drink it new with you in My Father's
kingdom” (Matthew 26: 28–29, emphasis mine). Indeed, here Jesus uses the
new wine as a symbol of His new covenant with His people. Jesus also calls wine
the “fruit of the vine.” However, after wine goes through the process of
fermentation, it is no more the fruit of the vine than yogurt is the fruit of a cow.
Furthermore, we also know that the Passover meal was to be free from
all forms of leaven (Exodus 12:19). Fermentation is the identical process of
leavening! If the bread was to be free from leaven, which is a type of sin,
then we can be sure that the wine, a symbol of Jesus blood, used at the Last
Supper would also be free from the poison of alcohol. The perfect, sinless
blood of Jesus would never be symbolized by corrupt and putrefying old
wine.
Jesus compared His pure teachings to wholesome new wine (Matthew
9:17). Indeed, all corrupted doctrines are likened to the fermented wine of
Babylon! Babylon was identified as a place “with whom the kings of the earth
committed fornication, and the inhabitants of the earth were made drunk with
the wine of her fornication” (Rev 17:2).
Another example: “But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not
defile himself with the portion of the king's delicacies, nor with the wine (Of
Babylon) which he drank” (Daniel 1:8).
Was Jesus a Drunkard?
Pharisees frequently accused Jesus of being a winebibber, drunkard and
glutton. They also said He had a devil and blasphemed God, among other things.
We know He wasn’t a glutton or demon-possessed blasphemer! So if these things are not true, why should we
assume that our Lord was a drinker as indicated by the Pharisees, a group of
Jesus’ most-outward adversaries well known for their questionable
theology?
They were merely contrasting His lifestyle with the austerity of John
the Baptist, a practicing Nazarite, who abstained from anything of the vine and
ate locusts and wild honey (Numbers 6:3; Luke 7:33–34, 1:15; John 8:48–52; Mark
2:7; Matthew 3:4).
When Jesus hung parched on the cross, Roman soldiers offered him
fermented wine mingled with myrrh. But as soon as Jesus tasted it and
recognized it was fermented, He refused it. If Jesus refused this beverage even
as His body was tormented with extraordinary thirst, why would He have drank
wine normally (Matthew 27:34)? (And more to the point, why then should we?)
Alcohol: The Bible Hall of Shame
The first reference to wine is found in Genesis when Noah, after the
flood, created the original fermented grape juice. “Then he drank of the wine
and was drunk, and became uncovered in his tent” (Genesis 9:21). The sad record
is that Noah drank and stumbled around naked and shamefully exposed himself to
his sons. This first experiment with a new drug ended with a scathing curse
falling on Noah’s posterity.
Lot also drank, and he was therefore easily seduced into having
incestuous relations with his daughters. “So they made their father drink wine
that night. And the firstborn went in and lay with her father, and he did not
know when she lay down or when she arose” (Genesis 19:33). The offspring of
this relationship became the nations of Moab and Ammon, the mortal enemies of
God’s people. And there is no shortage of evidence today that alcohol often
leads to sexual immorality—such as adultery, rape, and incest.
Then there is the infamous experience when the children of Israel
drank alcohol, stripped themselves naked and worshiped a golden calf (Exodus
32:6, 25). This fermented “church social” ended in a horrible massacre.
Amnon, another drinker and the son of David, raped his half-sister
Tamar. Because of this incestuous act, he lost his life at the hands of his
enraged brother while intoxicated (2 Samuel 13:28).
These are only a few examples. For more about the terrible repercussions involving alcohol in the Bible, look at 2 Samuel 13:28, Job 1:13–19. Truly, when one considers the Biblical record of fermented drink, you have to wonder why would any genuine Christian argue in its defense!
These are only a few examples. For more about the terrible repercussions involving alcohol in the Bible, look at 2 Samuel 13:28, Job 1:13–19. Truly, when one considers the Biblical record of fermented drink, you have to wonder why would any genuine Christian argue in its defense!
©Gospel Life ministry
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