Grailhunter
Well-Known Member
If someone wants to obtain from alcohol, that their choice, but you really cannot make it into a religious argument. As far as the logical aspect, you do not want to tell someone to stop eating to keep from being a glutton.
We have talked about man-made sins on several threads. Over the years people have tried to make Christianity into a therapy group. The Bible tells you not to let anyone judge you on what you eat or drink. People do not study the culture of the time period, and I am talking about the Christian culture. The Jews drank and the Christians drank. The people that wrote the scriptures could have had a cup of wine next to them.
It was obvious that Christ drank and He spoke of parables about the vineyards. The ritual of the Last Supper involved wine and the symbolisms of wine and blood would follow Christianity. Christ turned water into wine for the enjoyment of the wedding party. Paul told timothy to drink a little wine for his stomach...this is common knowledge of the time period....if you traveled from area to area and drank from different wells...the flora of the wells could make you sick. It was common practice to mix some of the water with wine to help with that.
Early church services in what was called "house churches" included wine with the meals.
We can choose not to drink, or smoke, and we can choose to eat according to food pyramid, exercise regularly, and wear safety belts, but it is not a religion.
It important to know the difference between biblical sins and man-made sins...not just for ourselves but to prevent condemning people of things that are not sins.
We have talked about man-made sins on several threads. Over the years people have tried to make Christianity into a therapy group. The Bible tells you not to let anyone judge you on what you eat or drink. People do not study the culture of the time period, and I am talking about the Christian culture. The Jews drank and the Christians drank. The people that wrote the scriptures could have had a cup of wine next to them.
It was obvious that Christ drank and He spoke of parables about the vineyards. The ritual of the Last Supper involved wine and the symbolisms of wine and blood would follow Christianity. Christ turned water into wine for the enjoyment of the wedding party. Paul told timothy to drink a little wine for his stomach...this is common knowledge of the time period....if you traveled from area to area and drank from different wells...the flora of the wells could make you sick. It was common practice to mix some of the water with wine to help with that.
Early church services in what was called "house churches" included wine with the meals.
We can choose not to drink, or smoke, and we can choose to eat according to food pyramid, exercise regularly, and wear safety belts, but it is not a religion.
It important to know the difference between biblical sins and man-made sins...not just for ourselves but to prevent condemning people of things that are not sins.