And you know brothers don't lie.Brother Bob said:A brother was seen with a gallon of moonshine and he said it was for medicipal purposes.
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And you know brothers don't lie.Brother Bob said:A brother was seen with a gallon of moonshine and he said it was for medicipal purposes.
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Tom Butler said:I have a friend who drinks a little wine for municipal purposes.
If that avatar is your image, maybe you should try some. You are not looking so well.Sober_Baptist said:Seeing as you're in Kentucky, your friend could be a Boone
Boones Farm, ?
My point is quite simple. The Bible strongly encourages people not to drink. How is that for wording? If you add life experience like I have seen, plus common sense, there is nothing good about the subject, nothing. I would be for abstaining if I never had opened a Bible. :BangHead:annsni said:We no longer drink for various reasons (but still love to cook with alcohol) but no where in Scripture does it say to NOT drink. I'm sorry but it just doesn't.
The admonition is not to drink the wine while it is ruddy and moving, that is while it is still in the state of fermentation and it is still cloudy and bubbling.It is amazing how you did not comment on verse 31.
Look not upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth his colour in the cup, when it moveth itself aright.
That word 'Look' in the Hebrew is the word 'ra'ah'. It means 'Do not consider, have no experience with, approve not'.
If one takes even a sip of fermented beverage, one is experiencing it... which this verse clearly forbids
HankD said:The admonition is not to drink the wine while it is ruddy and moving, that is while it is still in the state of fermentation and it is still cloudy and bubbling.
Why?
Growing up in an old world Italian enivornment I can tell you why...
Because it is so deceptive, it still has the fruity sweet blush of grapejuce and is delicious (which masks the alcohol taste) and it is so very easy to drink to much and fall down drunk.
Mature naturally fermented wine with no grain alcohol or sugar fortification is tart, somewhat bitter and that normally is disciplining in and of itself (unless one is after the consciousness altering and people will put themselves through all kinds of hell to achieve it).
I am an abstainer now but not because of the concept that alcohol is intrinsically evil but that it is so offensive to so many Baptist Christians.
In another issue: Surprisingly (to me anyway) some Baptists are offended by the typical Baptist Welch's Grape Juice of communion and will only ever use fermented alcoholic wine for the Lord's Table.
HankD
I don't need to try again.Then how do you explain the many people who buy beer and wine and get drunk after it has already been fermented?
People talk about how much they like the taste of their wines and beers that have gone through the fermentation process. The deception is not just during the fermentation, but after fermentation as well.
Try again.
Just to set the record staight it is not the alcoholic beverage that is evil:The passage in Romans 14 is not the only clear command for abstinence. There are at least 4 others that tell us to abstain.
The Christian reads the Old Testament. He finds that wine intoxicated Noah and Lot, (Gen. 9, 19) and that it afterwards afforded occasion for frequent and solemn remonstrance. (Prov. 20, 23 Isa. 5, 28, etc.) Again, he finds wine brought as a natural comfort to Abraham and Isaac, (Gen. 14, 27) and often so treated, literally as well as figuratively. (Deut. 14, Ps. 104. Prov. 9: 31: 6. Cant. passim, etc.) He sees in the New Testament neither contradiction nor difficulty. The Lord commenced His miracles by making water into wine, (John 2) was invidiously compared with His forerunner because He abstained not, (Luke 7) and made bread and wine (which John the Baptist never used)* to be the chosen, constant memorial of His dying love till He come again, the symbol also of our communion with each other. Finally, the Holy Ghost more than once dwells on the end of the drunkard, (1 Cor. 6, Gal. 5) corrects the unhallowed licence of the Corinthian church at the Lord's Supper, (1 Cor. 11) and warns believers, especially such as were prominent, against excess in daily life. (Eph. 5, 1 Tim. 3 Titus 2) At the same time, He takes pains (1 Tim. 5: 23.) to remove the scrupulousness of a devoted young servant of Christ, and en joins the use of a little wine, rather than water, for his stomach's sake and often infirmities. So graciously does God deign to interest Himself even in the bodily weakness and wants of those who love Him! The conclusion is irresistible. Total abstinence, as a general rule, has not, nor ever had, divine sanction. It is a device at issue with the plain facts and doctrine of Scripture, and this as to Christians no less than as to Jews. In the Old Testament yayin and in the New Testament οἶνος — that is, the ordinary words for "wine" in the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures — are used both in a good and in a bad connection; because the moral evil lay not in the thing itself, nor in its use, but in its abuse. There were different kinds of wine then, (Neh. 5: 18,) as there are now. But not a single text intimates a particular sort of yayin which could not inebriate. Nay, more: what Scripture does say, disproves the fancy, as the sequel abundantly shows. Thus, Num. 6: 3 plainly marks off yayin as fermented grape-juice, and that in the vinous as distinguished from the acetous stage; excluding other fermented drinks, vinegar, unfermented grape-liquors, as well as the solid fruit of the vine. We who adhere to the regular sense of the word are not bound to produce specific proofs; we are entitled to take it in the same sense everywhere, unless positive cause be shown to the contrary. But those who affirm that in certain places the word has a different meaning, are, in each instance, bound to give Scriptural reasons adequate to produce conviction. This they can never do. We deny their affirmation: upon them falls the burden of proof.†
rbell said:![]()
Hey, another alcohol thread...
"There's a 'liquor front' moving through the BB. I'm forecasting a 90% chance of conflict, with the slight chance of severe brouhaha's near the front. Stay tuned to your local moderator's bulletin for up-to-date information."
saturneptune said:How silly is the comparison of losing oneself in alcohol and sports. Sports never killed someone on the highways, caused the breakup of a marriage, or destroyed lives beyond hope.
I would say that an overindulgence in sports has caused many a woman to depart from her man.saturneptune said:How silly is the comparison of losing oneself in alcohol and sports. Sports never killed someone on the highways, caused the breakup of a marriage, or destroyed lives beyond hope.