Wine or Grape Juice?
There is the recorded 'first miracle' of Christ where he turned water into wine, but was it wine as we know it or was it grape juice?
There is a definite distinction in the scriptures;
1. On one hand drunkeness is considered to be an evil, a negative, a sign of wickedness...
2. Drinking of the juice of the grape was also a time of happiness, and celebration...
So the question is... did the early Saints drink fermented grape?
Have you ever heard the expression "you can't put new wine in old bottles" Does that sound funny to you? How would a bottle break by putting new wine in it?
The answer is easy, a bottle at the time of Christ was made of camels skins. It was filled with wine, or grape juice if you want to call it that. If it ferminted, the skin would become fragile because of the firmintation. After the old wine (wine that has firmented) was emptied from the bottle made of camels skins, it would be impossible to fill it up again because it would break. So they could not put new wine in old bottles.
Now another interesting point, camels skins were expensive and it was more practical in those days to hurry and drink the "new wine" before it turned into "old wine" so that they could reuse the bottle. So most of the poor jews (the ones Jesus was found around most of the time) were more likely to be practicle and therefore non alcholic wine (grape juice)
I know what you mean SuzieSu. I think it's just because of the way modern church members view the word of wisdom, which actually is a view that comes from personal opinions of leaders who encouraged the prohibition movement in the US. Jesus does indeed drink alcoholic wine. We are told he will in fact drink it with us again. Just read the word of wisdom. Since GOD revealed the WoW in our modern language (at the time of JS that is), it must have this meaning. At Joseph Smith's time, it was far from customary to call Juice "wine." And even if that definition was used, than one would have to be consistent with the next verse, and say that it displeases the LORD to drink Welche's Grape Juice (or anyother for that matter).
Matter of fact, they could make quite intoxicating wine back then. It was actually meant to be intoxicating. I studied ancient philology, so of course I learned a lot about ancient Greek and Roman wines, which can be extended to early Hebrew studies. They made wine, and very intoxicating wine. It was on average stronger than modern wine, which is exactly why they had to add water to it. For sacrament though we are supposed to drink undiluted wine for symbolic reasons. Not so it is more intoxicating, but because it symbolizes the purity of the blood of Christ that was spilled. But back to ancient wines. Ancient wines had to have alcohol in them, because that was used to preserve it. It was also healthier often, because the acidity of the alcohol helped kill bacteria, and could be less dangerous than drinking water.
About the camel skin bottles: Wine was not kept in bottles, but in clay jars. Thus the wine could very well ferment. Wine never was intentionally fermented in camel skin, that is correct, but to say that the camel skins were used before wine was fermented is incorrect. Wine was kept in jars, and then poured from the jars into bottles for travelling or easier drinking. The skin only brickles if the wine is left there too long.
Alcoholic wine has always been an important and sacred beverage to the followers of Christ (even Noah used it, and in one case abused it). The Holy ordinances have always included alcoholic wine, and to say otherwise is simply incorrect. Therefore we should be careful about what we all spin and turn in order to make all positive wine references to mean grape juice. Here it would actually be interesting to read the Septuagint, for the Greeks actually had a word to denote "juice" and "wine", so we could expect the Rabbi's to have translated the instances accordingly (but not necessarily, for example Hebrew does not distinguish between man/husband and woman/wife, whereas the Greek language does, but not in the Greek scriptures...).
I do agree that the masses of wine made and the savior being there seem that people would not be drinking in excess. If that means the wine was intoxicating but the crowd so large that people cannot get drunk of the little they drank, or whether it was in fact not intoxicating, I cannot tell. I do note John 2:10, which clearly refers to intoxicating wine being normally used, suggesting that intoxicating wine was used here as well as it is used in comparison for otherwise why would it be so significant that the good wine was brought after people had already drank? Because now not everyone may enjoy it anymore perhaps.
Name: Brian
Comments: I will like to refer to the person who posted this: