I was battling with this question for quite a while since the recent study came out that red wine lowers the LDL and raises the HDL cholesterol levels.
We have heart attacks and high cholesterol all through the family and it seems each generation is worse than others.
Then I found
this web page.
My co-pastor claims that alcoholism isn't genetic. As much as I love my church, I have to disagree until I learn otherwise.
Yes, we can decide not to take the first drink...my husband made that decision, and if he HAD decided to drink, he'd be an alcoholic today.
His father, bless his heart, doesn't drink (I've never seen him drink) but he used to and when he did, he never knew when to say "no". He calls himself a recovering alcoholic. I found this out when I was talking to him last yer and brought up the discussion about red wine for the heart. Praise the Lord he uncovered this fact to me because all it would have taken for my husband was a drink.
I only drank twice when I was little. I remember my hands resting on a huge arm of a chair--that was above chin-level for me-- and watching this man in the chair drink something out of a can. I later found out it was my uncle. I recall him turning to me and asking if I wanted to taste it. I remember nodding, but women around me said, "no! Don't give her any!" I thought they said that because somehow I was bad and didn't deserve it. He chuckled and handed me the can. I took a sip and it tasted aweful. He laughed and took the can back. I didn't know at the time why he laughed.
I remember my father doing the same thing when I was 17, but this time it was in a glass and I didn't know what it was. Again, I drank it and this itme it burned all the way down my throat. My father laughed (which surprised me since he was very overprotective of me).
I've seen my parents drink twice in my life (each was on New Years Eve) and the remaining of the contents of the bottle-which was almost full-stayed in the refrigerator for months until my mother poured it out. I don't believe I'd be an alcoholic if I drank, but why take the chance?
Why drink at all? Forget the Christian thing. If we think it's ok to take a drink, why are we drinking? Is it to relieve stress? Is it peer pressure (at work or at a wedding...don't want to lose a job or feel left out...or hurt someone's feelings..or disclose the fact we are Christians)?
Is it because nothing else is cold in the refrigerator? I'm just wondering why drinking is an important issue. I'm asking a question..not trying to make a point.
It's only by the Grace of God that alcoholism is not in my family and my husband has never taken a drink. This isn't an "I'm better than you" post. In fact, my heart goes out to those who are struggling with alcoholism. My Father-in-Law told me that not a day goes by that he doesn't think about drinking...especially on a hot day. I'm sure beer commercials don't help. But I wouldn't have guessed he was a recovering alcoholic because I've never seen him drink. Instead of putting down alcoholics, we should be praying for them. We may be instrumental in sparing lives of an innocent family traveling to Grandmas one day.
Thank you, TexasSky for explaining the "recovering alcoholic" and why they hold on to the title when they don't drink. My husband and I just had this conversation yesterday and I thought "recovering alcoholic" was just a title to blame a sudden slip-up back to the bottle (like they refuse to accept that God can heal them completely from this "I'm an alcoholic...I can't help myself"). But it makes sense that it's a reminder NOT to take a drink.
I suppose we can call ourselves "recovering sinners"?
The reason I believe in the genetics is because our bodies react to different medicines differently. For instance, a stimulant normally makes people more active...yet it makes hyperactive people tired..calms them down.
Not that I'm hyper, but coffee normally keeps people awake. It makes me tired...as well as Tylenol and Advil (even though doctors keep telling me it shouldn't make me tired).
Carry this over into alcohol, and some people will drink themselves to death if they could (and some will eat and eat). Is it because the normal "side effects" of alcohol (headache, nausea, dizziness) is not present with genetic alcoholics? Is it because alcoholics get a big high that their brain remembers and craves more than one who occasionally drinks? I've never had enough to react either way, so I don't know. Again, I'm asking a question, not trying to make a point.
HOWEVER, I am a strong believer that unless we keep Lord in our lives and turn to Him for our decisions, we are constantly weighing penalty with reward. From sitting down in a specific chair to making decisions such as marriage and career. If the reward outweighs the penalty, we're going to opt for the rewarded decision...unless we are constantly close to the Lord. If so, then we will opt for what the Lord wants from us regardless of the outcome. So, for some reason, alcohol is a reward to alcoholics and the "side effects" are too high a penalty to those who seldom drink.
For me, I have no rewards for drinking since I didn't like it when offered to me. My satisfied curiosity is not reward enough for me to begin. Now that I know my husband (and kids) could be alcoholics, I have an added benefit of keeping alcohol out of the house.
[ June 23, 2005, 10:54 AM: Message edited by: Victory in Jesus ]