Wine
- God's Truth
About
Alcohol

a
study is by Bruce
Lackey
"Pastor, I'm confused
about the use of the word "wine" in the Bible. Sometimes it seems to be
referring to alcohol, and sometimes not.
Did Jesus make alcohol for the wedding at Cana
or not?"
1. The word wine in the Bible is a
generic term; sometimes it means grape juice; sometimes it means
alcoholic beverages. The following verses prove that the word
"wine" can mean fresh grape juice, the fruit of the vine: De.
11:14; 2 Ch. 31:5; Ne. 13:15; Pr. 3:10; Is. 16:10; 65:8; 1 Ti. 5:23.
2. The context will always show when
"wine" refers to alcoholic beverages. In such cases, God
discusses the bad effects of it and warns against it. An example would
be Ge. 9, Noah's experience after the Flood. Verse 21, "and he
drank of the wine, and was drunken," clearly refers to alcoholic
beverage. Pr. 20:1 speaks of the same thing when it warns us, "Wine
is a mocker, strong drink is raging; and whosoever is deceived thereby
is not wise." Alcoholic wine is deceptive; but how? In the very way
that people are advocating today, by saying that drinking a little bit
will not hurt. Everyone admits that drinking too much is bad; even the
liquor companies tell us not to drive and drink, but they insist that a
small amount is all right. However, that is the very thing that is
deceptive. Who knows how little to drink? Experts tell us that each
person is different. It takes an ounce to affect one, while more is
necessary for another. The same person will react to alcohol
differently, depending on the amount of food he has had, among other
things. So, the idea that "a little bit won't hurt" is
deceptive, and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise!
Pr. 23:30-31 refers to alcoholic wine,
because it tells us in the previous verse that those who drink it have
woe, sorrow, contentions, babbling, wounds without cause, and redness of
eyes. What a graphic description of those who "tarry long" at
alcoholism. Verses 32-35 continue the same description; context always
makes it clear when alcohol is meant.
If "wine" may mean fresh grape
juice or alcohol, how can we know which is intended? The context
determines the meaning. We can tell when "wine" means fresh
grape juice and when it means alcoholic beverage by reading the context,
just as we have done in the previous paragraphs.
3. Scripture warns against the drinking
of alcoholic wine. The Bible is consistent on this, both in the Old
and New Testaments. The two previously quoted passages, Pr. 20:1 and
23:29-35, are good examples of scriptural warnings against consuming
alcohol. Pr. 23:32 says "at the last it biteth like a serpent, and
stingeth like an adder." Verse 33 shows that it will cause one to
look at strange women (that is, not one's wife) and to say perverse
things, or things which he would not say if he were sober. Verse 34
predicts that it will cause death, such as drowning, or loneliness, such
as lying upon the top of a mast. Verse 35 warns against numbness
("they have beaten me and I felt it not") and "addiction
("when shall I awake? I will seek it yet again").
Pr. 31:4-5 teaches, "It is not for
kings, O Lemuel, it is not for kings to drink wine; nor for princes
strong drink: lest they drink and forget the law, and pervert the
judgment of any of the afflicted." The danger is obvious.
By the way, Pr. 31:6,7 give us the only
legitimate use of alcoholic wine in Scripture. "Give strong drink
unto him that is ready to perish, and wine unto those that be of heavy
hearts. Let him drink, and forget his poverty, and remember his misery
no more." This would be using it as an anesthetic; a pain killer.
But this is not for everyone; he says in v. 6, "unto him that is
ready to perish." Of course, they did not have all the pain killers
that we have today. In our time, it would not be necessary to do this.
We have many anesthetics available for those who are dying. Then, about
the only thing available to the average person would have been some kind
of alcohol. Alcohol is a depressant; it is not a stimulant, as some
think. After several drinks, one gets dizzy; then he will pass out. So
this passage teaches that alcoholic beverage would be only for the
person who is ready to die; there would be no hope for his life. All
that would be possible would be to ease his pain and help him forget his
misery.
Another passage is Is. 5:11. "Woe unto
them that rise up early in the morning, that they may follow strong
drink; that continue until night, till wine inflame them!"
Obviously this is alcoholic, because it inflames. Why does he say,
"Woe unto them"? Verse 12 answers, "...they regard not
the work of the Lord, neither consider the operation of his hands."
Everyone knows that when one gives himself to the drinking of alcoholic
beverage, he will not be more spiritual, more desirous of learning the
Word of God. To the contrary, it causes a person to ignore the Lord.
Verses 13-14 reveal two other serious results: people go into captivity
(become slaves to something or someone) and Hell enlarges itself! The
drinking of alcoholic wine has caused Hell to be enlarged! God does not
want anyone to go to Hell; He has given the greatest, dearest gift that
He possibly could, to rescue sinners from it. He never made Hell for
people. The Lord Jesus Christ said that Hell was prepared for the devil
and his angels (Mt. 25:41). However, because of evil alcohol, Hell has
had an enlargement campaign. Here, then, is a clear warning against
drinking alcohol, because God does not want anyone to go to Hell.
Is. 28:7,8 continues the warning. "But
they also have erred through wine, and through strong drink are out of
the way; the priest and the prophet have erred through strong drink,
they are swallowed up of wine, they are out of the way through strong
drink; they err in vision, they stumble in judgment. For all tables are
full of vomit and filthiness, so that there is no place clean."
What a tragic thing, that even in the days
of Isaiah, the priests and prophets were engaged in the drinking of
alcoholic wine! Thus we see that the problem of preachers recommending
alcohol is not new. Six hundred years before Christ, demon alcohol had
worked its way into religion.
4. The making of alcoholic beverages is
not a strictly natural process. Years ago I took for granted that if
you took the juice of a grape and let it alone, not refrigerating it, it
would automatically, in time, turn into alcoholic wine. There are
several reasons why this is not true. It takes more than time to make
wine. Sometimes people try to defend its use by saying that it must be
good because God made it. But, the fact is, God did not make it. Man has
learned how to make alcoholic liquors through processes that he has
invented. Wine-makers know that one must have the correct amount of
water, sugar, and temperature to make wine. Keeping grape juice in a
refrigerator would prevent if from fermenting, because the temperature
is not right. Likewise, hot, tropical temperature would prevent
fermentation.
In ancient days, before we had
refrigeration and vacuum-sealing ability, people learned to preserve the
juice of the grape without turning it into alcoholic wine. Many people
boiled it down into a thick syrup. By doing so, they could preserve it
for long periods of time. When they got ready to drink it, they would
simply add the water to the consistency desired, in much the same way
that we take frozen concentrates and add water. In Bible days, contrary
to what many believe, it was not necessary for everyone to drink
alcoholic wine as a table beverage.
I recommend the book entitled Bible Wines
and the Laws of Fermentation by William Patton (Challenge Press, Little
Rock, Arkansas). More than a hundred years ago, this preacher was the
only one in his town who believed in total abstinence. He saw that it
was necessary to make an extensive study to see what scripture taught.
This book is the result of that labor and is the very best thing I have
read on the subject.
[Editor: One point of Patton's book is that
the making of alcoholic wine requires input from man. It requires the
addition of certain additives (though it might be something as simple as
sugar) and the control of temperature, etc. The natural processes alone
will produce fermentation under certain conditions, but these natural
processes, if unaided by man, rapidly move to a vinegar state.The
alcoholic beverages industry is very much a man-made thing. Natural
process are PERVERTED by man.]
Now we come to the longest point in this
entire study, but one which is most important, chiefly because so many
insist that Jesus made and drank alcoholic wine.
5. Jesus did not drink or make alcoholic
wine. Here are ten proofs from Scripture. The first reason is
because of His holy nature. In He. 7:26, we read that the Lord Jesus is
"holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners." No doubt,
the Saviour, being God in the flesh, had an air of holiness about
Himself that could be seen by even the most casual observer. For
instance, the profane soldiers, who were sent to arrest Him, gave as
their reason for returning without Him, that "never a man spake
like this man." (John 7:46) The words of Jesus were different; He,
no doubt, had a very holy appearance, character, and speech.
Why is this so important? Consider this
illustration. The word "cider" may mean an alcoholic beverage,
or plain apple juice. Suppose we lived during the 1920s, prohibition
days, and were approached by two people offering us a drink of cider.
One of the persons, we knew to be one of the holiest men in town,
faithful to the house of God, separated from the world, diligent in
prayers, always witnessing to others; the other was a known liquor
dealer. If each one offered us a drink of "his very own
cider," we would assume that the holy person's was no more than
apple juice, but there would be no doubt about our opinion regarding the
liquor dealer's cider! Obviously, the character of a person influences
what that one does.
Since the Lord Jesus Christ was "holy,
harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners," we may safely assume
that He would not make that which is called in Scripture a mocker and
deceiver of man, causing untold misery.
A second reason: He would not
contradict scripture. In Mt. 5:17- 18, Christ made this clear, saying,
"Think not that I am come to destroy, but to fulfill. For verily I
say unto you Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in
no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled." Therefore,
Christ could not have contradicted Hab. 2:15, "Woe unto him that
giveth his neighbor drink, that puttest thy bottle to him, and makest
him drunken also, that thou mayest look on their nakedness!"
Certainly, Jesus knew that this verse was
in the Bible; He was well-acquainted with Scripture, since it is His
Word and was written about Him. He did not come to violate Scripture,
but to fulfill it. He could not have done so, if He had made alcoholic
wine and had given it to his neighbor.
Some people object to the use of this verse
by saying that it would apply only to one who would give his neighbor
drink for the purpose of looking on his nakedness. But we must remember:
when one gives his neighbor something which will make him drunk, he is
putting himself in the very class of those who do so in order to look on
their nakedness. And since the Scripture commands us to "abstain
from all appearance of evil" (1 Th. 5:22), we can be sure that the
Lord Jesus would not have done something that would have been associated
with such an evil practice as that described in Hab. 2:15. For the same
reason, no Christian should be engaged in the selling of alcoholic
beverage.
The third reason is that Le. 10:9-11
commands the priest of God, "Do not drink wine nor strong drink ...
that ye may put difference between holy and unholy, and between unclean
and clean; and that ye may teach the children of Israel all the statues
which the Lord hath spoken..." Now, since He. 2:17 calls Christ
"a merciful and faithful high priest," we would expect Him to
obey all Scriptures pertaining to that office. If He had made or drunk
alcoholic wine, He would have disobeyed these verses and would have been
disqualified from teaching the children of Israel the statues of the
Lord.
The fourth reason is found in a
passage which we have already considered: Pr. 31:4-5 prohibits kings and
princes from drinking alcoholic wine or any other strong drink. If they
had done so, their judgment would have been perverted. It was necessary
for Christ to obey these verses also, since He was Prince of Peace (Is.
9:6) and King of Kings (Re. 19:16). In Mt. 27:11, He admitted to being
the King of the Jews. He rode into Jerusalem on a donkey's colt, to
fulfill Zec. 9:9, which prophesied that Israel's king would enter the
city in just that way. Undoubtedly, He was king, and as such, would have
had to obey Pr. 31:4-5.
Reason five: Christ did not come to
mock or deceive people, yet Pr. 20:1 says that wine does both. Rather
than coming to mock or deceive he came to save!
Reason six: He did not come to send
people to Hell. We have already seen that Is. 5:11-14 teaches that Hell
had to be enlarged because of the drinking of alcoholic beverage. Christ
did not come to send people to Hell; listen to Jn. 3:17: "For God
sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world
through him might be saved."
Reason seven: Christ did not come to
cast a stumblingblock before anyone; yet, Ro. 14:21 teaches that a
person who gives another alcoholic wine does just that. "It is good
neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor any thing whereby thy
brother stumbleth, or is offended, or is made weak." Everyone who
has studied the problem of alcoholism has learned that some people
cannot handle any amount of alcohol, while others may drink one or two
"social" drinks and stop. Experts do not know why this is
true; various theories have been propounded, but nothing has been proved
to be true regarding every person. Some say it is chemical; others
insist that it must be psychological. The fact is, we do not know for
certain. In any given group of people, there would be several potential
alcoholics. What a shame it would be for a person, who is a potential
slave to it, to get his first taste at the Lord's table in church, then
proceed down the road of misery to an alcoholic's grave!
I certainly would not want my children to
get their first taste of alcohol at the family meal; nor would I want
them to get it at church. One or more of them could well be potential
alcoholics. As evidence that this is possible, we should consider that
some denominations which serve alcoholic wine in their religious
services also operate homes for alcoholic priests!
But we can be absolutely sure that Christ
did not come to cause others to stumble!
The eighth reason: John 2, the
miracle of turning water into wine, does not require that it be
alcoholic. Many insist that it was, on the basis of verse 10, which
says, "Every man at the beginning doth set forth good wine; and
when men have well drunk, then that which is worse; but thou hast kept
the good wine until now." They would say that, in those days, it
was common to serve the best alcoholic wine at first, saving the worst
until later, when men's tastes have been dulled by much drinking. But
the point is just the opposite here! These people could definitely
recognize that the wine which Jesus made was much better than what they
had been served at first. This could not have been possible if they were
already well on their way to becoming intoxicated! The fact is, neither
the wine which they had at first, nor that which Christ made, was
alcoholic.
Reason nine is found in the same
passage: the Lord Jesus Christ would not have gotten glory from making
drunk people drunker. Verse 11 is most important when it states that, by
this miracle, Jesus "manifested forth his glory." Verse 10
indicates that the people had drunk quite a bit of whatever kind of wine
they were drinking. If it had been alcoholic, they would have been
intoxicated, or nearly so. Had Christ made alcoholic wine, He would have
made drunk people drunker, or almost-drunk people completely drunk! Such
a deed would certainly not have manifested any glory to Him!
This chapter also gives us the tenth
reason: making drunk people drunker would not have caused his
disciples to believe more strongly on him, yet verse 11 says that, as a
result of what He did in turning the water into wine, "his
disciples believed on him." Jn. 1:41 shows that they had already
believed on Him as Messiah; this was a deepening of their faith and a
proof that they had not been wrong. Would making drunk people drunker
inspire such faith? The opposite would be likely! They were not looking
for a Messiah who would pass out free booze! Thus, because of the
description of this miracle and its result, we can not conclude
otherwise than that this wine was non-alcoholic.
In closing, we must consider two things.
One passage, we have already seen. Ro. 14:21 clearly teaches that
Christians should totally abstain, the reason being that it is good
"neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor any thing whereby thy
brother stumbleth, or is offended, or is made weak." We have
already seen that people may be potential alcoholics. By the social
drinking of alcohol, one might encourage a person to start drinking, who
would not be able to stop. Missionaries and tourists to foreign
countries, where alcohol is a common table beverage, should remember
this. We should also wake up and realize that, in such countries,
alcoholism is also rampant. Let us totally abstain, so that we might not
encourage someone to drink and go down the road to alcoholism.
The last consideration is 1 Co. 6:9-10.
Here, the Bible teaches that drunkenness will send a person to hell.
"Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of
God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor
adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor
thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners,
shall inherit the kingdom of God."
This does not mean that a drunkard can
never be saved, because the next verse says that some of the Corinthians
committed these very acts before they were converted. A person can be
gloriously set free from drunkenness, by receiving Jesus Christ as Lord
and Saviour and by following His teachings. Many people have experienced
such a release! But the tragedy is that if a person continues in
drunkenness, refusing to let Jesus be the Lord, preferring rather to let
king alcohol rule, that one can look for nothing but a drunkard's grave
and eternity in the lake of fire. "Be not deceived," the Bible
says "the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God."
If you are having trouble with this sin,
let me encourage you to realize that you can ask Jesus Christ to be the
Lord of your life and Saviour from all your sins, and to set you free.
You can know what it means to be free in Christ! The Bible says,
"If the Son shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed" (Jn.
8:36). Realize that you are a sinner in God's sight, "For all have
sinned and come short of the glory of God" (Ro. 3:23). Repent of
your rebellion against God, surrendering to His authority. "Except
ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish" (Lk. 13:3). Receive Christ
as your Lord and Saviour. "As many as received him, to them gave he
the power to become the sons of God" (Jn. 1:12).
WHAT ABOUT 1 TIMOTHY 5:23?
"...drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy
stomach's sake and thine often infirmities." Many insist that here
the Bible gives the privilege, if not a command, of using alcoholic wine
as a medicine. However, this cannot possibly be referring to alcoholic
wine, because he specifically says that it is to be taken for Timothy's
stomach. He obviously had some kind of stomach disease and any doctor
will tell you that such a person must abstain from alcoholic beverage.
This author has had much stomach trouble through the years and has
consulted various doctors, observing various dietary restrictions. In
every case, they warned against drinking any alcoholic beverage
whatsoever. If we know that today, surely the Holy Spirit of God knew
that when He inspired this verse! We do not know what Timothy's specific
infirmities were, nor do we know what kind of healing properties there
were in grape juice. Maybe Paul was saying that Timothy should not drink
the water, since in many parts of the world it is not pure and would
cause a healthy person to have trouble from amoebas, etc. One who
already had stomach problems would only multiply them by drinking impure
water. Paul might have been recommending that Timothy drink grape juice
only. In any case, we can be positive that he was not telling him to put
alcohol in a bad stomach!
IS IT ALRIGHT FOR A CHRISTIAN TO DRINK
MODERATELY?
(1) No, even slight drinking impairs one's thinking and lowers
alertness to spiritual danger (1 Pe. 5:8,9). (2) No, Christians are not
to be controlled by liquor (Ep. 5:18). (3) No, Christians are priests,
and the Bible forbids priests to drink (1 Pe. 2:9; Le. 10:8,11). (4) No,
Christians are not to touch the unclean thing (2 Co. 6:17--7:1). (5) No,
Christians are to abstain from every form of evil (1 Th. 5:22). (6) No,
Christians who drink cause others to stumble (Ro. 14:21). (7) No, wine
is a mocker and a deceiver (Pr. 20:1). No man who takes an alcoholic
beverage to his lips knows exactly where it will lead.