SUBJECT: The Bible and Alcohol
QUESTION: What does the Bible say about Alcohol?
ANSWER:
The Biblical Data:
Wine and other Alcoholic
Beverages in the Bible
The following are some roughly random notes on wine and
other alcoholic beverages in the Bible. Even a casual look
at the scriptures reveals a much different perspective than
what most modern American Christians have about this topic.
In general, we can say that the Bible neither condemns
drinking per se nor promotes it. Drinking alcoholic
beverages is one of those gray areas that is a matter of
one’s personal conscience. But there is more in scripture
than just this individualistic approach.
Isn’t it Really Grape Juice?
Some take the words for wine to mean ‘grape juice.’ If this
were so, then why would there be prohibitions against
drunkenness? One cannot get drunk on grape juice. Further,
Jesus’ first miracle was changing the water into wine at the
wedding of Cana in Galilee. He made between 120 and 180
gallons of wine! Even if this had been grape juice, it would
soon turn to wine because the fermentation process would
immediately begin. But it most certainly was not grape
juice: the head waiter in John 2:10 said, “Every man sets
out the good wine first, then after the guests have drunk
freely, the poor wine. But you have kept the good wine until
now.” The verb translated ‘drunk freely’ is almost always
used of getting drunk (and
is so translated in the NRSV here). In the least,
the people at this wedding feast, if not drunk, would
certainly be drinking alcohol fairly freely (if
not, this verb means something here that is nowhere else
attested). And this makes perfect sense in the
context: The reason why a man brings out the poorer wine
later is because the good wine has numbed the senses a bit.
Grape juice would hardly mask anything. Note also Acts
2:13—”they are full of sweet wine”—an inaccurate comment
made about the apostles when they began speaking in tongues,
as though this explained their unusual behavior. The point
is: If they were full of grape juice would this comment even
have made any sense at all? That would be like saying,
“Well, they’re all acting strange and silly because they
have had too much orange juice this morning!”
There are other references to alcoholic beverages in the
Bible: Several times in the first books of the Bible, wine
and strong drink are prohibited to those who take a Nazarite
vow (cf. Numbers 6, Judges 13). Even grape juice and fresh
and dried grapes (i.e.,
raisins, as the NIV renders the word) are
prohibited to the Nazarite (Numbers 6:3). But that
restriction is only for those who make this vow. If someone
today wants to claim that believers do not have the right to
drink alcohol on the analogy of a Nazarite vow (as
some today are fond of doing), they also should
say that believers ought not to eat Raisin Bran!
Negative Statements about
Wine Indicate that it is not Grape Juice
Further, the Bible at times speaks very harshly about
becoming enslaved to drink or allowing it to control a
person, especially to the point of drunkenness. Proverbs
20:1—“Wine is a mocker, strong drink a brawler, And whoever
is intoxicated by it is not wise” (NASB). Cf. also Prov
21:17 (where heavy drinking
and gluttony are equally condemned); 1 Samuel
1:14; Isaiah 5:11, 22; 28:1 (drunkenness
is condemned); 28:7; 29:9; 56:12; Jeremiah 23:9;
51:7; Joel 3:3. In the New Testament notice: Ephesians 5:18
(“do not get drunk with
wine”); 1 Tim 3:3, 8; Titus 1:7 ([elders
and deacons ought not be] “addicted to wine or
strong drink”); Titus 2:3 (older
women, who would serve as role models to the younger ones,
must not be addicted to wine). As well, numerous
passages use wine or drunkenness in an analogy about God’s
wrath, immorality, etc. (cf. Revelation14:8, 10; 16:19;
17:2; 18:3).
The significance of these negative statements is just this:
If this were only grape juice, why would excess in drinking
it be condemned? If this were only grape juice, why are
certain mental effects attributed to it (cf., e.g., Psalm
60:3)? One can’t have it both ways. You can’t say that wine
is always grape juice, for then the negative statements in
scripture make no sense; those who say that it is only grape
juice tend to focus just on the neutral and positive
passages, conveniently allowing them to condemn the drinking
of real wine at all times. But even this position is not
logical: If the Bible only speaks of grape juice, then it
makes no comment about alcoholic wine. And if so, then it
does not directly prohibit it. And if we are going to
prohibit something that the Bible does not address, why stop
at wine? Why don’t we include the ballet, opera, football
games, country-western music (actually,
I might be in favor of banning this one!), salt
water fishing, zippers on clothes, etc. Once legalism
infests the soul it doesn’t know where to quit.
In sum, is wine the same as grape juice? No, for if it were,
the Bible would hardly condemn the abuse of such. Those who
argue that the two are identical simply cannot handle the
passages that speak about
excess.
Neutral and Positive
References to Alcoholic Beverages in the Bible
At the same time, there are several neutral, almost casual
references to alcoholic beverages. Genesis 14:18 refers to
Melchizedek, a type of Christ, as offering wine to Abram;
Nehemiah 2:1 refers to the king drinking wine (Nehemiah
was required to taste it first to make sure it was not
poisoned); Esther 5:6; 7:1-2 speaks of wine that
Esther (the godly Jewess)
drank with the king; Job 1:13 refers to righteous Job’s
family drinking wine; Daniel 10:3 speaks of drinking wine as
a blessing after a time of fasting. Some of Jesus’ parables
are about wine, wineskins, vineyards (cf.
Matthew 9:17; 21:33; even John 15 speaks of God the Father
as the vinedresser!). Paul tells Timothy to drink
some wine for his stomach’s sake and not just water (1
Timothy 5:23). The same Greek and Hebrew terms that were
used to speak of the abuses of wine are used in these
passages. One cannot argue, therefore, that alcoholic
beverages are in themselves proscribed, while grape juice is
permitted. The lexical data cannot be so twisted.
There are, as well, positive statements about alcoholic
beverages: Deuteronomy 14:26 implies that it is a good thing
to drink wine and strong drink to the Lord: “And you may
spend the money for whatever your heart desires, for oxen,
or sheep, or wine, or strong drink, or whatever your heart
desires; and there you shall eat in the presence of the LORD
your God and rejoice, you and your household” (NASB).
Psalm 4:7 compares joy in the Lord to the abundance of wine;
Psalm 104:14-15 credits God as the creator of wine that
“makes a man’s heart glad” (cf. also Hosea 2:8); honoring
the Lord with one’s wealth is rewarded with the blessings of
abundant stores of wine (Proverbs 3:10); love is compared to
wine repeatedly in the Song of Songs, as though good wine
were similarly sweet (Song of Songs 1:2, 4; 4:10; 7:9). The
Lord prepares a banquet with “well-aged wines... and fine,
well-aged wines” for his people (Isaiah 25:6) [obviously
this cannot be grape juice, for aging does nothing but
ferment it!].
The lack of wine is viewed as a judgment from God (Jeremiah
48:33; Lamentations 2:12; Hosea 2:9; Joel 1:10; Haggai
2:16); and, conversely, its provision is viewed as a
blessing from the Lord (cf. Genesis 27:28; Deuteronomy 7:13;
11:14; Joel 2:19, 24; 3:18; Amos 9:13-14). Cf. also Isaiah
55:1; Jeremiah 31:12; Zechariah 9:17.
Indeed, there was even the Passover tradition that went
beyond the biblical teaching: by the time of the first
century, every adult was obliged to have four glasses of
wine during the Passover celebration. Jesus and his
disciples did this in the Last Supper. The fact that the
wine of the Passover was a symbol the Lord used for his
blood and for the new covenant implicitly shows that our
Lord’s view of wine was quite different from that of many
modern Christians.
What is truly remarkable here are the many positive
statements made about wine and alcoholic beverages in the
Bible. Wine is so often connected with the blessings of God
that we are hard-pressed to figure out why so many modern
Christians view drink as the worst of all evils. Why, if one
didn’t know better, he might think that God actually wanted
us to enjoy life! Unfortunately, the only Bible most of our
pagan friends will read is the one written on our lives and
spoken from our lips. The Bible they know is a book of
‘Thou shalt nots,’ and the God they know is a cosmic
killjoy.
I think the best balance on this issue can be see in Luke
7:33-34: John the Baptist abstained from drinking wine;
Jesus did not abstain [indeed,
people called him a drunkard! Although certainly not true,
it would be difficult for this charge to have been made had
Jesus only drunk grape juice]. Both respected one
another and both recognized that their individual lifestyles
were not universal principles. One man may choose not to
drink; another may choose to drink. We ought not condemn
another servant of the Lord for his choice.
As well, Romans 14 is a key passage for gleaning principles
about how we ought to conduct ourselves in relation to one
another on this issue: weaker brothers ought not to judge
those whose freedom in Christ allows them to enjoy alcoholic
beverages; stronger brothers ought not to disdain weaker
brothers for their stance. Whether we drink or not, let us
do all things to the glory of God.
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