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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | making wine.Did Jesus make a mistake. | Bible general Archive 1 | jlpangilinan | 68656 | ||
You wrote"Regardless, there certainly isn't a clear Scripture either way about drinking or not drinking. My point in responding to these kinds of threads is simply to ensure that one position isn't arbritarily relegated to the 'stupid' argument category. ;-) I simply want to remind people that words are containers with which we pack a lot of meaning that may or may not have been intended originally." I believed that you can drink, but not to be drunk. My doctor advise me to take some red wine, because it is good for the heart and helps maintain blood colesterol. Even paul advise timothy to take some wine. 1Ti 5:23 Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake and thine often infirmities. so it is clear that drinking wine is not prohibited, but drunkeness did. God bless, Johnny |
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2 | making wine.Did Jesus make a mistake. | Bible general Archive 1 | Morant61 | 68658 | ||
Greetings Johnny! It is good to hear from you my friend! Your example of Paul and Timothy is an excellent example of the problem I have been trying to address. We read 'use a little wine' and we automatically assume that Paul was telling Timothy to mix alcohol and water, simply because that is the meaning 'wine' has for us today. However, there is very good historical evidence that in the area of the world where Timothy was ministering, people would keep bags of grape jam which they would use to put into their drinking water to remove the acid from the water. It seems quite clear that this is the practice to which Paul is referring. Even it weren't, naturally fermented wine (very weak in alcohol content anyway) mixed with a larger part of water would not compare in any way to the distilled alcoholic beverages of today which can literally poison a person to death with in a very short amount of time. My point, over and over again, has simply been that we must not assume that Biblical words meant exactly the same as they do today. Your Brother in Christ, Tim Moran |
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