With Jesus himself consuming wine, you would think the Bible supports
consuming alcohol. But, the truth could be otherwise, drinking could
well be a sin.
One look at the happenings of the New Testament is
sure to make you shout with joy. Assuming that, if Jesus himself shared
wine with his disciples, then drinking and consuming alcohol cannot be a
sin. While wine and other drinks are mentioned in the Bible, it is also
true that drunkenness has been condemned and considered a sin.
To
really know what the Bible says about drinking, we ought to be clear
what it meant by the word wine. Wine, for instance, was the common drink
in ancient times, and Biblical scholars are of the view that, the water
available for drinking contained pollutants and harmful microbes, which
made it unfit for consumption. From what is believed, the alcohol
content in wine was needed to kill these microbes, and also to keep
ailments and infections at bay.
If all this is to be believed,
then we need to consider another factor in analyzing the reference of
wine. The alcoholic content in wine back then, and now, is bound to
differ, solely because the process of distillation began only around
1000 A.D. To know the truth, let's try to decipher the actual messages
from the Bible.
Thus spoke the Lord
Drink no wine or strong
drink, you or your sons with you, when you go into the tent of meeting,
lest you die. It shall be a statute forever throughout your generations.
― Leviticus 10:9
In the Old Testament, we see the Lord speaking
to Aaron, the brother of Moses and the first High Priest, forbidding him
and his sons from indulging in alcohol. In Numbers 6:2-3, we see the
Lord speaking to Moses, asking him to tell the people that, whoever
wished to take the Nazirite vow had to stay away from wine and strong
drink.
Abstinence from wine, vinegar, and the fruit itself, here,
is of utmost importance for those who wished to be separated and
consecrated. During the conception of Samson, as given in Judges 13:4,
the Lord once again reminds us of the Nazirite vow, forbidding both
Manoah and his wife, from consuming any form of strong drink and wine,
and anything that would be unclean.
Wisdom lies in following ...
Wine is a mocker, strong drink a brawler, and whoever is led astray by it is not wise. ― Proverbs 20:1
Coming
to the Book of Proverbs, the central theme is to give instructions for
prudent behavior. Here, it's not just the Nazirites who are to abstain
from indulgence but also the wise, including leaders and rulers. In
Proverbs 31:4-5, King Lemuel explains that wine and strong drink is not
for rulers and kings, for it will take them away from what is
established.
Woe to those who rise early in the morning, that
they may run after strong drink, who tarry late into the evening as wine
inflames them! ― Isaiah 5:11
Misery, suffering, and punishment
seem to rule the day as Isaiah talks about judgment, and calls for
repentance and holiness. Which just means that indulging in the
pleasures of the senses was considered to be unholy, and eventually
called for the wrath and curse of God.
The lighter side of it
Go,
eat your bread with joy, and drink your wine with a merry heart, for
God has already approved what you do. ― Ecclesiastes 9:7
Indeed,
Solomon's words give us something to cheer about. Taken literally,
Solomon's words can be applicable to the present. What the verse
actually does is, calls us to trust God and His providence, not just
because all else is meaningless, but because it is the Cruz of all life.
Psalms 104:14-15 mentions that all things come from God, who joyfully
gives food to satisfy the soul and wine to gladden the heart.
What you need to remember ...
And do not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery, but be filled with the Spirit. ― Ephesians 5:18
The
Bible instructs us to avoid drunkenness and overindulgence, rather you
are called to be sober and filled with the Holy Spirit. We, as children
of God, are called to tread the path of wisdom and sanctity. In all
measures, we, as people, are called to tread with caution, and never let
the pleasures of life consume us in a fire.
What alcohol can do ...
Who
has woe? Who has sorrow? Who has strife? Who has complaining? Who has
wounds without cause? Who has redness of eyes? Those who tarry long over
wine; those who go to try mixed wine. Do not look at wine when it is
red, when it sparkles in the cup and goes down smoothly. In the end it
bites like a serpent and stings like an adder. Your eyes will see
strange things, and your heart utter perverse things. ― Proverbs
23:29-33
We do not need the Bible to be telling us this, most of
us have tried and tested ways to claim the same. Alcohol, in whatever
form, has at some point of time caused us to do things differently. In
the very essence of it, the Scripture does not encourage you to sin
against your conscience, thus, forbidding you from doing anything that
will offend yourself and your fellow beings, in particular.
Consuming
alcohol, on the whole, is not really condemned but letting yourself
give in to drunkenness, which will lead to a loss in sobriety, is
definitely looked down upon. Finally, what matters is not allowing
anything to overpower the mind and the body, for that which is
overpowered is enslaved.
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