Did Jesus drink alcohol?

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.

Amanuensis

Well-known member
Jun 12, 2021
1,457
460
83
i think it's not plausible at all that Noah didn't know what he was doing.
he had to have taken the grapeseed with him.
winemaking isn't simple - he had to cultivate those grapes, harvest them, make a winepress, process them & tend to them from mash to straining several times and finally bottling. that's not all accomplished in a few days; that's at least a year's worth of investment.
also i don't know what your experience is with drinking wine but one doesn't just drink to passing out by accident, either. the effects are gradual and noticeable. Noah would have definitely known he was experiencing intoxicating effects long before he finished his wine and fell asleep. this is only wine; it's not shots of strong liquor you might be able to imbibe several of before you realize how strong they were.


concurrent with all this is that his whole family watched him carrying out his plan to make wine for at least a year. they knew what he was doing, and that he knew how to do it. they knew that after the horrendous catastrophe of the flood and Noah spending all this time making wine, he would drink it when he finally had a completed product. Ham knew this. Ham knew Noah would probably drink himself to sleep, enjoying the fruit of his labour.


the other thing i think is that if what Noah did was sinful it's awfully strange that Noah curses Canaan and God carries out that curse.
how often do we find someone wicked speaking curses that God agrees with and causes to come to pass, hmm?



fact is that the narrative doesn't portray Noah as being at fault at all, unless you approach it with the preconceived notion that drinking any alcohol in any amount is evil. if that's the case you project that onto the text. but the text itself doesn't have that present in it - it presents Noah as being attacked when he is not on his guard - asleep - and Ham as the one who did evil. and it curses Canaan.

why Canaan is cursed is something that really has to be understood to make sense of this. for that we have to remember what happened before the flood ((that's still the context)) and what was found in Canaan later when God had Joshua carry out judgement on the land, and we have to figure out what happened to Lot, and why, with his daughters - what the relationship to Sodom was. we have to have an idea of exactly what Ham did and why he did it.

it is a very complex story, that ultimately is portraying something of Christ to us. so #1 goal in understanding Noah & Ham is finding how it testifies of Christ. it is not a story about 'drinking is bad yo see what happened' -- it is a story about the Messiah, about love, salvation, life and death. about God and Satan and the redemption of our souls.


so, what i honestly think is that you're projecting a misguided teetotaling attitude on the story, and you are winding up with nothing more than a superficial gloss from it. i think if you set that aside and try to figure out how this account is speaking about Genesis 3:15 and about the cross and the victory of Christ over sin, then you will find it is a much deeper & richer section of scripture than you currently imagine. it is spiritual; it is not about mere carnal rules like 'touch not taste not handle not' or simple earthly things -- something very profound is happening there.
I think the main point has to do with the story of redemption, the need for a savior, and the promised seed still to come when this all went done. It set the path for that redemption lineage story.
 

Amanuensis

Well-known member
Jun 12, 2021
1,457
460
83
"Moderate alcohol consumption may provide some health benefits, such as: Reducing your risk of developing and dying of heart disease. Possibly reducing your risk of ischemic stroke (when the arteries to your brain become narrowed or blocked, causing severely reduced blood flow) Possibly reducing your risk of diabetes. "
https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/in-depth/alcohol/art-20044551#:~:text=Moderate alcohol consumption may provide,reducing your risk of diabetes

Prevents Kidney Stones
Helps Your Brain
Balances Blood Sugar
https://www.webmd.com/diet/ss/slideshow-alcohol-health-benefits
And yet there are additional recent studies that suggest that the toxic effects of acetaldehyde is worse than the benefits. I have been reading these as they come out. There are some Youtubes with a medical expertd who uses cadavers to show the exact path of the alcohol from tongue and mouth absorption through out the body, and all the points at which some alcohol is absorbed and enters into the blood and how it begins metabolizing before it gets to the liver and the damage acetaldehyde does before it is finally also metabolized by the liver.

There have been a lot of recent studies on acetaldehyde that are causing them to rewrite their opinions about any possible health benefits being not worth what the acetaldehyde does and also causing them to conclude that "no amount of alchohol is good for you" not even one glass. ESPECIALLY FOR WOMEN and the pancreas.

Of course, we are always learning and medical science is still so new.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
37,957
13,615
113
I think the main point has to do with the story of redemption, the need for a savior, and the promised seed still to come when this all went done. It set the path for that redemption lineage story.
perhaps it shows us the cursed line of the antichrist. because the story is about how Canaan came to be cursed.
who is blessed in this account? who is enjoying blessing from God?
remember, ultimately there is typology here of Christ & of salvation, which is contrasted with antichrist and damnation.

so where is the redemption and what part of the narrative is a symbol of Christ?


I can give my best guess. I can't prove it. I think that Noah did not have experience with fermentation. I think he did not see it coming. I don't think he was trying to get drunk.
so the moral of the story is don't try to harvest your own juice?
Noah should have bought some from the grocery store?
idiot 600 year old Noah doesn't even know how to properly squeeze a grape?
lived through all the evil before the flood but has no experience with any food or drink that can affect a person's mood?
:giggle: