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Koey
5th February 2008, 10:47 PM
For a very long time in our local church I and a few others have been quite uncomfortable. Thomas Welch's modern invention of grape juice was shoved down our throats each Sunday, and we wanted wine like Christ instituted.

The Churches of Christ have no creed but Christ theoretically, but in practice, they have no creed but Churches of Christ traditions, which include no tolerance for anything but immersion baptism and being a teetotaler.

So, about 6 months ago, some of us requested a choice for communion, wine for some and juice for others, so that everyone's faith could be accomodated. For a long time this decision was put off and in the end I just gave up and decided no longer to take part because of the mandatory grape juice. It just did not represent my faith.

Then, a miracle occurred. One elder who is a firm grape juicer, teetotaler and vehemently anti-alcohol, said we ought to consider the faith of others. It was put to a vote and we now accomodate the faith of others in this area.

Yahoooooo! I feel so much better now! About half of us take the wine and the other half take the grape juice. It's just so wonderful! Yay!

HeyHomie
6th February 2008, 09:30 AM
That's an exciting development. It will never happen in my ICC congregation, but I've always thought it would be cool.

Let's face it: Christ could not have had grape juice at the last supper. It didn't exist until Dr. Welch invented it in 1860-something.

Koey
6th February 2008, 05:37 PM
Yes, Welch's son made big bucks by introducing it at the Chicago World's Fair.

Apollos1
7th February 2008, 12:21 AM
Hey Koey -

You said you wanted to have "wine like Christ instituted."

Which scripture/verse/passage is it that you think "instituted" wine in the Lord's supper???

I can not seem to find that.

The NT uses "fruit of the vine" as mentioned for the Lord's Supper, and uses "wine" elsewhere - and even the expression "new wine" (do you know what that is?).

Please let me know...

ModestGirlsRock
8th February 2008, 08:08 AM
grape juice is from the "fruit of vine" so you were following scripture all along. I wonder if your elders know that there are many greek terms for english word "wine", and that it depends on how long it's been fermenting, how it was grown, etc, that determines what kind of wine it is whether alcoholic, non-alcholic, really rich in flavor, bitter, (etc on that too!). The wine not told be drunk in the old testament was talking about alcoholic wine, but a different term for wine is used in the Greek language when Jesus made water into wine. Now, I don't rememeber what those terms are, but it shouldn't take away from any credibility of what I am saying for I was told this by my own teachers, and all the Baptist ministers I've encountered have told me the same thing. In fact, there's a book on the many different kinds of wines there are. So, yes, you can have wine, but someone might want to question of how much it's been sitting out in the sun?

Koey
8th February 2008, 05:24 PM
Hey Koey -

You said you wanted to have "wine like Christ instituted."

Which scripture/verse/passage is it that you think "instituted" wine in the Lord's supper???

I can not seem to find that.

The NT uses "fruit of the vine" as mentioned for the Lord's Supper, and uses "wine" elsewhere - and even the expression "new wine" (do you know what that is?).

Please let me know...
Some people believe that the “fruit of the vine” described in the Bible was unfermented grape juice. But this is a misunderstanding of history and science. Until pasteurization and refrigeration, fresh squeezed grape juice always fermented within a very few days. Certainly "new wine" placed in wineskins is almost totally unfermented. However, this differs from today’s processed grape juice. It has not been killed by pasteurization, and within a short time takes on that characteristic tang of alcohol production. You may have tasted that same zest when you sugared sliced peaches and left them in the refrigerator a day or so. Fresh apple cider will also begin to get tangy or “hard” within a few days.

The idea that some have of ancient peoples keeping bunches of grapes for six months from the autumn harvest to the spring Passover festival so that they could squeeze out grape juice is naïve. Not only is it a preposterous misrepresentation of ancient culture, but grapes would surely have rotted or turned to raisins by that time.

The expression "fruit of the vine" was "employed by the Jews from time immemorial for the wine partaken of on sacred occasions, as at the Passover and on the evening of the Sabbath” (The New Westminster Dictionary of the Bible).

Koey
8th February 2008, 06:20 PM
grape juice is from the "fruit of vine" so you were following scripture all along. I wonder if your elders know that there are many greek terms for english word "wine", and that it depends on how long it's been fermenting, how it was grown, etc, that determines what kind of wine it is whether alcoholic, non-alcholic, really rich in flavor, bitter, (etc on that too!). The wine not told be drunk in the old testament was talking about alcoholic wine, but a different term for wine is used in the Greek language when Jesus made water into wine. Now, I don't rememeber what those terms are, but it shouldn't take away from any credibility of what I am saying for I was told this by my own teachers, and all the Baptist ministers I've encountered have told me the same thing. In fact, there's a book on the many different kinds of wines there are. So, yes, you can have wine, but someone might want to question of how much it's been sitting out in the sun?
Louw-Nida Greek Lexicon: oinos, a fermented beverage made from the juice of grapes - 'wine.'


Friberg Greek Lexicon: wine; lit. of the juice of grapes usu. fermented

Grape juice was not used for communion until Tommy Welch applied pasteurization to grape juice to stop the fermentation process (Reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_and_alcohol).

Splayd
8th February 2008, 08:19 PM
That's great news Koey. These issues simply shouldn't be divisive, so the fact that your congregation has found a way to accomodate everyone without compromising is wonderful.

It's kinda funny that this thread is already heading towards a discussion about whether or not "fruit of the vine" is alcoholic or not. Regardless - I think your congregation has addressed the issue beautifully. At the most basic level it's clear that both wine and unfermented grape juice are fruit of the vine. To allow inidividuals to act on their convictions regarding the matter without judging the others is a great example.

Thanks for sharing this :)

Koey
9th February 2008, 03:57 AM
That's great news Koey. These issues simply shouldn't be divisive, so the fact that your congregation has found a way to accomodate everyone without compromising is wonderful.

It's kinda funny that this thread is already heading towards a discussion about whether or not "fruit of the vine" is alcoholic or not. Regardless - I think your congregation has addressed the issue beautifully. At the most basic level it's clear that both wine and unfermented grape juice are fruit of the vine. To allow inidividuals to act on their convictions regarding the matter without judging the others is a great example.

Thanks for sharing this :)
Thanks for bringing this back to the topic so tactfully. Yes, there will probably always be Christians who want to insist upon Tommy Welch's grape juice as being the same that Jesus used. But, as you said, it is so good that both are now accomodated in our local church.

I hear that more and more churches are doing this too. Isn't that just fantastic!

Apollos1
9th February 2008, 01:56 PM
Koey –
Thanks for your reply. It was disappointing to see that you did not offer ONE scripture in support of your position. I guess you know what that tellsme, huh? And instead, you chose rather to support your position with “reasoning” from science and history. So let’s look at that…
You said - Some people believe that the “fruit of the vine” described in the Bible was unfermented grape juice. But this is a misunderstanding of history and science. Until pasteurization and refrigeration, fresh squeezed grape juice always fermented within a very few days.
So would you say that if the grapes were freshly squeezed or crushed within, say 48 - 72 hours or less, there would be no alcoholic content as yet, correct? How would this be a misunderstanding of science as I believe that “fruit of the vine” is the unfermented juice of the grape?
You said - Certainly "new wine" placed in wineskins is almost totally unfermented.
I would say so – if any at all.
You said - However, this differs from today’s processed grape juice. It has not been killed by pasteurization, and within a short time takes on that characteristic tang of alcohol production.
Any grape juice, today or yesteryear, will ferment. How fast depends upon many factors. I do not believe we have any disagreement on this point.

You said - The idea that some have of ancient peoples keeping bunches of grapes for six months from the autumn harvest to the spring Passover festival so that they could squeeze out grape juice is naïve. Not only is it a preposterous misrepresentation of ancient culture, but grapes would surely have rotted or turned to raisins by that time.
Your comment here presumes an “autumn harvest” only. Given the varied growing regions (Sharon, Galilee, Judean Hills, and the Golan Heights), grapes are grown virtually year around in Israel. Did your sources of ancient culture mention this?
Summary so far: No scripture has been given at this point to sustain any position about whether or not the “fruit of the vine” used in the Lord’s supper was fermented. Grape juice can exist with or without fermentation and to believe such does not violate any any understandings of science. Nothing of historical import was given in support any position.
--------------
Word study – Let’s look at how the Bible uses words in relation to WINE, what they mean, and what we can learn from them…
OT:
Hebrew – yayin
From an unused root meaning to effervesce; wine (as fermented); [also]
by implication intoxication: - banqueting, wine, wine [-bibber].

Used in Gen. 9:21, Lev. 10:9, as well as Nehemiah, Esther, Job, Psalms, Ecc., Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekeiel, Daniel, Hosea, Joel, and others.

The Israelites knew what wine was.
------------
Hebrew - tiyrosh
New wine - in the sense of expulsion; must or fresh grape juice (as just squeezed out); by implication (rarely) fermented wine: - (new, sweet) wine.

Used in Neh. 13:5,12, Prov. 3:10, Isa. 24:7, Hosea 9:2, Joel 1:10, Hag. 1:11, Zec. 9:17,and others.

This expression “new wine” is used in many passages of the OT. Welch did not invent grape juice without alcohol content.
-------------
Hebrew - shêkâr
“Strong drink” - an intoxicant, that is, intensely alcoholic liquor: - strong drink, + drunkard, strong wine. See Lev. 10:9, Num. 6:3 and others. Origin of the Greek word “sikera” below.
-------------
NT:
Greek -sikera
Of Hebrew origin; an intoxicant, that is, intensely fermented liquor: - strong drink.
See only at Luke 1:15.
Read also Luke 5:38&39.
-------------
Greek - gleukos
…sweet wine, that is, (properly) must (fresh juice), but used of the more saccharine (and therefore highly inebriating) fermented wine [but not in NT writings]: - new wine.
See Acts 2:13.
-----------------
BUT…

None of the above words, their roots, or derivations are used in connection with the “instituting” of the Lord’s supper or its performance! In reference to the “Lord’s Supper”, we find this expression used:

“…fruit of the vine…” as found in Matt 26:29, Mark 14:25, and Luke 22:18.

So what does the use of this particular expression mean?

First, no implication can be made to “fruit of the vine” from any of the previous “wine” words. There is no connection.

Second, we know that Jesus uses a term never before used in scripture to convey the thought of what they were drinking.

“I shall not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine, until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father's kingdom…”

If we can figure out what “fruit of the vine” is, we can know what they were drinking. At this point, anyone who can see through a ladder realizes that “fruit of the vine” means grapes, and because they were drinking it, we can know it was grape juice !

There were many earlier words that could have been used to implicate an alcoholic drink was being used in the Supper, but none of them were used by Jesus. History and science can’t change the meaning of these 4 simple words – “fruit of the vine”. All the rationalization you can muster can not get any “fermentation” into these words.

Third, because His supper was instituted after the PASSOVER supper, we know NO leavening (ei. fermentation) of any kind was allowed for the seven days of the feast – see Exodus 12 and compare with Leviticus 2. Both the bread and the drink had to be in harmony with this Passover requirement.

Now Koey, if you still disagree, please tell me why. Otherwise admit you see what the scriptures teach and stop your unauthorized practice of using alcoholic wine in the Lord’s Supper.

I look forward to your response.

crawfish
9th February 2008, 08:53 PM
I really wasn't sure as to this issue, so I did some study. I come to the same conclusion as Apollos1; the last supper was with unfermented wine.

As to what we should take from this - it was the yeast that was prohibited during this time, not some statement against alcohol itself, which can be produced through other processes. Considering that today's grape juice resembles the original 'fruit of the vine" less than the fermented wine of the time (just check the ingredients), I'm not sure we're following the letter of the law any closer by using Welch's.

But, then again, I believe that in this case it's the spirit that is important. If I was somewhere where grape juice was unavailable I would have no problem substituting alcoholic wine.

And, for the record, I'm almost certain that the wine that Jesus made from water WAS alcoholic wine. The word "oinos" refers to both alcoholic and nonalcoholic wines; however, when used in the latter term, it typically described wine that was intended to become fermented, NOT wine that was intended to be consumed beforehand.

Koey
10th February 2008, 03:11 AM
This post is not about arguing over wine or grape juice, but about choice. I don't believe your argument. It is not my faith. Would YOUR church change to accomodate MY FAITH?

Apollos1
11th February 2008, 12:53 PM
Koey –

I will have a few things to say about you below when I am talking to Slayd, but for now I want to deal with your last comment…

Koey said - This post is not about arguing over wine or grape juice, but about choice. I don't believe your argument. It is not my faith. Would YOUR church change to accomodate MY FAITH?

YOUR faith? Your faith in what? Romans 10:17 says faith comes from God’s word. As yet you haven’t given ONE – not ONE scripture to support your alcoholic view of “fruit of the vine”. WHERE IS the SCRIPTURE???

Whatever your original intent, this discussion is no longer about YOU! It is about what GOD WANTS and what GOD AUTHORIZED for use in the Lord’s supper! The choice is not up to you - it is God's CHOICE !!!

Let me ask you Koey – WHAT have YOU done to accommodate the faith of those in the congregation where you attend? The way I see it all you have done is complain and throw a tantrum! You have nothing to support your position on alcoholic wine, yet you expect everyone to change for you!

Grow up! And then repent! I have seen attitudes like yours before, it stinks, and it needs to change!

Apollos1
11th February 2008, 01:06 PM
Slayd –

I want to tell you that I very much appreciate your attitude. You have one of the best attitudes that I pick up on here at the Forums. But I must question your thinking – do you ever think critically about what other people are saying?

I don’t mean to pick on you, but I do not believe you are thinking through what Koey is saying and I don’t think you have realized what his attitude is. Please examine that attitude with me, along with some of his comments. When I am done, if you disagree, let me know.

Attitude 101:
1.)
Koey said - Thomas Welch's modern invention of grape juice was shoved down our throats each Sunday, and we wanted wine like Christ instituted.

Do you really think this was “shoved” down his throat? I believe this exaggeration only displays his discontent because he was not getting what he wanted. He follows this complaint with his justification for saying it… “we wanted wine” like Christ instituted, yet Koey can not produce ONE scripture for such!

The “tantrum” … I just gave up and decided no longer to take part because of the mandatory grape juice. It just did not represent my faith.

Are you getting this? Getting his wine became more important to him that communing with the Lord! Koey is throwing a tantrum because he was not getting his way. I bet he stuck out his bottom lip and folded his arms across his chest. Koey doesn’t think “grape juice” is wrong in the Lord’s Supper – he just wants an alcoholic wine. Koey has no scripture but wants what he wants!
Slayd, how can you side with this????

2.)
Koey said – The Churches of Christ have no creed but Christ theoretically, but in practice, they have no creed but Churches of Christ traditions, which include no tolerance for anything but immersion baptism and being a teetotaler.

More complaints – this time about immersion and alcohol abstention. How long will it be before Koey wants to be “accommodated” in the area of baptism? As for coC “traditions”, allow me to refer you and him to 2 Thes. 3:15. Keep in mind because inspired teachers are long gone we get our “traditions” come from the WORD today!

3.)
Koey said - Some people believe that the “fruit of the vine” described in the Bible was unfermented grape juice. But this is a misunderstanding of history and science.

Here Koey attempts to claim both history and science is on his side in this discussion. I showed that it isn’t! But look at the total lack of substance he offered in support of his hollow claim….

A. Scientific – I guess he thinks that his mention of “pasteurization” proves that most, if not all, grape juice in the NT was fermented as opposed to today. It proves nothing of the sort. Grape “juice” without alcohol content existed in NT times - “sugared peaches” and “hard cider” not withstanding. So much for the “science” he presented.

B. History – Koey said - The idea that some have of ancient peoples keeping bunches of grapes for six months from the autumn harvest to the spring Passover festival so that they could squeeze out grape juice is naïve. Not only is it a preposterous misrepresentation of ancient culture, but grapes would surely have rotted or turned to raisins by that time.

This is but another exaggeration to bolster a point that Koey was misinformed on. Grapes are produced virtually year around in Israel, as they are in other countries such as Italy and France. So much for the “history” lesson.

It was bad enough Koey attempted to claim the “intellectual” high ground with nothing to offer, but Koey’s attitude jumped off the page in his last reply…

4.)
Koey said - This post is not about arguing over wine or grape juice, but about choice. I don't believe your argument. It is not my faith. Would YOUR church change to accommodate MY FAITH?

It is in this statement Koey shows what he is all about – HIMSELF! It is all ME-ME-ME ! He is saying change things for ME! He has no scripture, no science, and no history on his side, but he wants HIS way. And if he doesn’t get his way, he won’t “play”.

Slayd……….. it this type of behavior you want to support??? You better do some soul searching if it is.

In your amenable response to Koey you said…

Slayd - These issues simply shouldn't be divisive, so the fact that your congregation has found a way to accommodate everyone without compromising is wonderful.

It is the attitudes and wants of men that create “issues” and cause division. Koey’s attitude – which put simply, stinks – is causing division (see my response below about his attitude.) Because “wine” is simply not the same as “fruit of the vine”, it is GOD’s WORD that is compromised when attempts are made to accommodate everyone on such things that are not founded upon scripture!

Slayd - It's kinda funny that this thread is already heading towards a discussion about whether or not "fruit of the vine" is alcoholic or not.

Why is this odd to you? It is the logical migration of thought to find out if “wine” and “fruit of the vine” are the same AND/or if both are acceptable for use in the Lord’s Supper. At least it is to those who want to give “Bible” for all they teach and practice in religion! Koey says both items are acceptable gave NO scriptural support. I say that only “fruit of the vine” is acceptable and I gave what I believe the Bible teaches about both.

Slayd - Regardless - I think your congregation has addressed the issue beautifully.

Koey without any scriptural basis whatsoever pedantically forced his congregation to accommodate him! Where is the beauty in that Slayd?

crawfish
11th February 2008, 06:27 PM
Koey - a question.

Is it important to you to use unleavened bread - bread without yeast - in communion? It was unleavened because of a prohibition against yeast during Passover. In a similar vein, the "fruit of the vine" taken by Christ was also devoid of yeast, and therefore, unfermented.

I'm not one who believes in a blanket prohibition against alcohol. As I mentioned earlier in the thread, it's pretty clear that Jesus turned water to "good wine" - referring to alcoholic wine - in Cana. If you're searching for the true spirit of the Lord's Supper, however, to take it as Jesus did, then you'll abstain from the alcoholic variety.

Koey
11th February 2008, 06:33 PM
Koey –

I will have a few things to say about you below when I am talking to Slayd, but for now I want to deal with your last comment…

Koey said - This post is not about arguing over wine or grape juice, but about choice. I don't believe your argument. It is not my faith. Would YOUR church change to accomodate MY FAITH?

YOUR faith? Your faith in what? Romans 10:17 says faith comes from God’s word. As yet you haven’t given ONE – not ONE scripture to support your alcoholic view of “fruit of the vine”. WHERE IS the SCRIPTURE???

Whatever your original intent, this discussion is no longer about YOU! It is about what GOD WANTS and what GOD AUTHORIZED for use in the Lord’s supper! The choice is not up to you - it is God's CHOICE !!!

Let me ask you Koey – WHAT have YOU done to accommodate the faith of those in the congregation where you attend? The way I see it all you have done is complain and throw a tantrum! You have nothing to support your position on alcoholic wine, yet you expect everyone to change for you!

Grow up! And then repent! I have seen attitudes like yours before, it stinks, and it needs to change!
I find your post VERY offensive! You took the words "my faith" in a completely selfish direction. I could say that about "your" faith too. That is not the point. The point is that you are shoving YOUR faith down my throat. That is NOT my faith at all. I don't believe your anti-alcohol arguments. I believe that they are Pharisaism and NOT Christianity.

Now the point of this whole exercise is to accomodate each other's faith without pushing and shoving, but if YOU push, I will push back, and that just defeats the whole exercise doesn't it.

My dream is to see immersionists and sprinklers, rockers and hymn-lovers, grape-juicers and winebibbers, leavened and unleavened breaders united in faith. And by the way unity is in the bondage of peace (Eph 4:3), not uniformity of faith. So, I dream that YOU and I can be under the same roof, without this offensive nonsense you just spouted.

Koey
11th February 2008, 06:36 PM
Koey - a question.

Is it important to you to use unleavened bread - bread without yeast - in communion? It was unleavened because of a prohibition against yeast during Passover. In a similar vein, the "fruit of the vine" taken by Christ was also devoid of yeast, and therefore, unfermented.

I'm not one who believes in a blanket prohibition against alcohol. As I mentioned earlier in the thread, it's pretty clear that Jesus turned water to "good wine" - referring to alcoholic wine - in Cana. If you're searching for the true spirit of the Lord's Supper, however, to take it as Jesus did, then you'll abstain from the alcoholic variety.
I personally prefer unleavened bread, because it was an early Passover, but realize that in the case of the bread, Paul's later instructions merely use the word without adjective, and thus bread is what is mandated, not the leavening or not. Catholics prefer unleavened, but allow leavened, Orthodox only prefer leavened and have a good argument on their side too. Protestants are all over the map on that one.

crawfish
11th February 2008, 08:46 PM
I personally prefer unleavened bread, because it was an early Passover, but realize that in the case of the bread, Paul's later instructions merely use the word without adjective, and thus bread is what is mandated, not the leavening or not. Catholics prefer unleavened, but allow leavened, Orthodox only prefer leavened and have a good argument on their side too. Protestants are all over the map on that one.

Oh, I agree with you for the most part. I'm not a big supporter of the "implied law" from scripture. For instance, the command is "do this in remembrance of me", referring to the cup. The non-alcoholic fruit of the vine is implied later, but separate from the command. I cannot discern of the (lack of) yeast content is the important part or just a coincidence because of when the last supper took place, and it certainly doesn't clear that up later in scripture - only the original command is re-enforced.

However, if your goal is to emulate Christ in this and experience it as He did, there is no question you'd need to choose the non-alcoholic option. That was my point.

Apollos1
12th February 2008, 07:05 PM
To Koey –

Koey said - I find your post VERY offensive! You took the words "my faith" in a completely selfish direction. I could say that about "your" faith too. That is not the point. The point is that you are shoving YOUR faith down my throat. That is NOT my faith at all. I don't believe your anti-alcohol arguments. I believe that they are Pharisaism and NOT Christianity.

I am offended by your attitude, lack of scripture, and lack of intellectual support for your “faith”. You shoved this down the throats of others in your church, when in fact, you have NO BASIS to believe it. You have not presented any information to support your beliefs.

The direction I took with your “my faith” comment was supported by previous comments from your posts as well as the total lack of evidence not given for what you say you believe. The direction I took is justified – and supported!

If I have scripture and reason for my beliefs about “fruit of the vine” – and I do – then I am not “shoving” anything down YOUR throat. God is trying to tell you something – through His word. You are not listening. YOU are too busy acting childish and trying to have your way with the vino!

In short, your complaints above are the same arguments denominationalists offer when they refuse the plain truth of the gospel. “I don’t believe that!” “You are a Pharisee because you want me to BELIEVE the Bible and OBEY something.” Well boo-hoo for you Koey.

Koey complained - Now the point of this whole exercise is to accomodate each other's faith without pushing and shoving, but if YOU push, I will push back, and that just defeats the whole exercise doesn't it.
No Koey, I took this thread away from you. The above is what YOU want this thread to be about. I made this thread into a “give BOOK, CHAPTER, and VERSE” for all you teach and practice in relgion discussion.

You have NO book, chapter, and verse for what YOU want to practice. You are yet to offer even ONE scripture in support of what YOU want. This thread is no longer about what YOU want – it is now about what GOD WANTS !!! Colossians 3:17, 2 John 9.

Koey said - My dream is to see immersionists and sprinklers, rockers and hymn-lovers, grape-juicers and winebibbers, leavened and unleavened breaders united in faith. And by the way unity is in the bondage of peace (Eph 4:3), not uniformity of faith. So, I dream that YOU and I can be under the same roof, without this offensive nonsense you just spouted.

Wow – you actually used a scripture although it is slightly out of context. Further in that chapter Paul says to “speak the truth in love…”. You can not keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace… without speaking the TRUTH! (Remember John 4:23-24 above.)

You can not have unity in diversity! Unless we agree upon the TRUTH – which is God’s word, there will never be unity and God will not accept less. So for all of your desires above, I suggest you take the path that God tells us will unite man with man, God with man, and maintain the unity of the Spirit… TRUTH! When we are united with God, then and only then could we be united with each other!

Because you and I are NOT united in thought or upon truth, I await your scriptural rebuttal of what I have offered above in reference to the “fruit of the vine” so that you and I may be united in TRUTH.

Koey
12th February 2008, 07:25 PM
I can't be bothered having an argument about alcohol with you, nor supporting it scripturally. I've done that on other posts ad nauseum. My issue here is tolerance, not arguing over alcohol. Your attitude is what turns Christians and non-Christians alike off of the Church. It is highly offensive and judgmentalism in the extreme!

Nikanor
17th February 2008, 05:28 PM
grape juice is from the "fruit of vine" so you were following scripture all along. I wonder if your elders know that there are many greek terms for english word "wine", and that it depends on how long it's been fermenting, how it was grown, etc, that determines what kind of wine it is whether alcoholic, non-alcholic, really rich in flavor, bitter, (etc on that too!). The wine not told be drunk in the old testament was talking about alcoholic wine, but a different term for wine is used in the Greek language when Jesus made water into wine. Now, I don't rememeber what those terms are, but it shouldn't take away from any credibility of what I am saying for I was told this by my own teachers, and all the Baptist ministers I've encountered have told me the same thing. In fact, there's a book on the many different kinds of wines there are. So, yes, you can have wine, but someone might want to question of how much it's been sitting out in the sun?


Amen. It's kind of sad when churches get so bogges down in things like this.

Nikanor

Koey
17th February 2008, 08:00 PM
That's all BS. Oinos is the Greek word. Go to a bottle shop and ask for some Greek wine - read the label. Ask any Greek what oinos is and he won't tell you it's grape juice. You guys are reading your modern legalistic bigotry backwards into history.

Simple fact is, Jesus introduced wine for communion - Tom Welch introduced grape juice. You can do what you want and I'll honor your faith. Heck, I'll even share communion with you - you with your kiddie juice and me with my wine.

But, I won't honor your perversion of history, and I choose to follow Christ not Tom Welch or the WCTU's legalistic perversion of theology either.

Izdaari
17th February 2008, 09:16 PM
My preference is for wine in communion rather than grape juice. I don't care whether the bread is leavened or not. Neither is a matter of great importance to me, as I don't believe there is any rule in the matter that must be followed one way or the other, but merely a preference.

I have no quarrel at all with those who have a different preference, but I certainly have a problem with those who insist on arguing over it and demanding that their way be everyone's way. I think that's a very bad witness, as it gives the mistaken impression that Christians are still bound up with the Law rather than under Grace, something that Paul preached against all through Galatians, even rebuking Peter over it face to face... and Peter accepted the correction.

artogis
19th February 2008, 12:33 AM
How about we simplify our faith and recognize that it matters not one bit what we use to partake in communion as long as we are truly seeking Christ as we do so?

I once had a spontaneous communion at my house using potato chips and Coca Cola.

Just do it in remembrance of Him...and it doesn't particularly matter what the variables are. Ritual and faith are not the same thing.

artogis
19th February 2008, 12:38 AM
That's all BS. Oinos is the Greek word. Go to a bottle shop and ask for some Greek wine - read the label. Ask any Greek what oinos is and he won't tell you it's grape juice. You guys are reading your modern legalistic bigotry backwards into history.

Simple fact is, Jesus introduced wine for communion - Tom Welch introduced grape juice. You can do what you want and I'll honor your faith. Heck, I'll even share communion with you - you with your kiddie juice and me with my wine.

But, I won't honor your perversion of history, and I choose to follow Christ not Tom Welch or the WCTU's legalistic perversion of theology either.
Wow...just wow.

So much argument and apparent frustration with the "wine/no-wine" argument. This kind of stuff is what keeps Christians from being a cohesive community.

Settle down - Christ doesn't care what you use as long as you are honoring Him in doing so.

:D

Nikanor
19th February 2008, 01:25 PM
That's all BS. Oinos is the Greek word. Go to a bottle shop and ask for some Greek wine - read the label. Ask any Greek what oinos is and he won't tell you it's grape juice. You guys are reading your modern legalistic bigotry backwards into history.

Simple fact is, Jesus introduced wine for communion - Tom Welch introduced grape juice. You can do what you want and I'll honor your faith. Heck, I'll even share communion with you - you with your kiddie juice and me with my wine.

But, I won't honor your perversion of history, and I choose to follow Christ not Tom Welch or the WCTU's legalistic perversion of theology either.


I smell the leaven of the Pharisees.

Listen, sir, you are getting bogged down in carnal things. It does not matter whether one uses grape juice or wine. What does matter is that you are taking communion with a heart of repentence and humility.

I have been to inner-city churches filled with former alcoholics. To partake of communion wine would not be beneficial for them.

If you are really so concerned with doing things "by the book," then shouldn't you be celebrating your communion over a Passover supper, as Jesus did?
Note that I said passover supper, and not easter supper.

Nikanor

Nikanor
19th February 2008, 01:26 PM
How about we simplify our faith and recognize that it matters not one bit what we use to partake in communion as long as we are truly seeking Christ as we do so?

I once had a spontaneous communion at my house using potato chips and Coca Cola.

Just do it in remembrance of Him...and it doesn't particularly matter what the variables are. Ritual and faith are not the same thing.


Amen.

Nikanor

Nikanor
21st February 2008, 12:36 PM
Why is it the leaven of Pharisees to correct the Pharisees?

By the way, recent studies actually show that alcoholics who limit their intake of alcohol to a small amount per day actually recover better than those who totally abstain. Perhaps Jesus was too ignorant a Creator to know that by instituting wine.

By the way again, communion was a separate ceremony to Passover. Theologically, though one is an antecedent to the other, they are actually different.



With your judgemental attitude to others, I don't think you can even truly partake of communion.

Would I be too far off in thinking you have some sort of physical disease, or are weak and sick? Stop judging, confess your sin to the Church and you will be healed.

Nikanor

aggie03
29th February 2008, 02:19 AM
And I would pretty much suggest that we just go ahead and end this one...

jmacvols
29th February 2008, 05:22 PM
For a very long time in our local church I and a few others have been quite uncomfortable. Thomas Welch's modern invention of grape juice was shoved down our throats each Sunday, and we wanted wine like Christ instituted.

The Churches of Christ have no creed but Christ theoretically, but in practice, they have no creed but Churches of Christ traditions, which include no tolerance for anything but immersion baptism and being a teetotaler.

So, about 6 months ago, some of us requested a choice for communion, wine for some and juice for others, so that everyone's faith could be accomodated. For a long time this decision was put off and in the end I just gave up and decided no longer to take part because of the mandatory grape juice. It just did not represent my faith.

Then, a miracle occurred. One elder who is a firm grape juicer, teetotaler and vehemently anti-alcohol, said we ought to consider the faith of others. It was put to a vote and we now accomodate the faith of others in this area.

Yahoooooo! I feel so much better now! About half of us take the wine and the other half take the grape juice. It's just so wonderful! Yay!

This is a bit off topic, but you say "it was put to a vote." Is everything "voted" on at the congregation you attend? If so, what is the role or need for elders?

aggie03
29th February 2008, 05:23 PM
This is a bit off topic, but you say "it was put to a vote." Is everything "voted" on at the congregation you attend? If so, what is the role or need for elders?
It was the elders who asked the congregation to vote, if I remember the story correctly...

I still say it's time to end this one...we can start the conversation again about alcohol in a different thread. This was not the purpose of this one.

Apollos1
29th February 2008, 07:07 PM
Hey aggie –

This thread was pretty much closed down for a week until you felt the need to mention we should close it down. Now look what you have caused ! ;)

I can’t comprehend elders – the shepherds over the flock – asking the sheep for a vote over what I see as an item of example and scripture, but then, they capitulated in favor or alcohol. Who can predict such?

I think I will close out with the following…

Koey vulgarly complained - That's all BS. Oinos is the Greek word. Go to a bottle shop and ask for some Greek wine - read the label. Ask any Greek what oinos is and he won't tell you it's grape juice. You guys are reading your modern legalistic bigotry backwards into history.

Oinos is the Greek word for wine – not “fruit of the vine”. Oinos is NEVER used in conjunction with the Lord’s Supper. I don’t go to Liquor stores and I don’t need them for my source of information in religion. I would not ask them to tell me what Christ used in the Lord’s Supper either!

I am familiar to the likes of you, Koey. People who know little about scripture and pay even less attention to how to apply it… coming along with a deep pocket of selfishness in a congregation wanting to know what they can do for YOU and how they can accommodate YOU – while calling those that want to follow the Bible “legalistic” and “bigots”. No thanks for the insults. You have already shown me that you want to have your way and if you do not get your way much whining, crying, and name calling will follow. We don’t allow tantrums at my congregation oh pedantic one.

Koey claimed without any prior support - Simple fact is, Jesus introduced wine for communion - Tom Welch introduced grape juice. You can do what you want and I'll honor your faith. Heck, I'll even share communion with you - you with your kiddie juice and me with my wine.

Fact is “fruit of the vine” is grape juice – this is what was used in the LS – Jesus introduced it - and I gave spectacular evidence in the thread above to PROVE it while you whined like a child about everyone and everything that you disagreed with.

You offered---- nothing. You presented --- NADA …except your selfish unsubstantiated opinions. There was NO semblance of any proof for “oinos” in the LS.

YOU will honor my faith? You said this and turned right around and belittled what I believe in – “fruit of the vine” in the Lord’s Supper. You are a hypocrite! Does your vino make you feel like a man?

My closing in a word… GROW UP !!!

aggie03
29th February 2008, 07:18 PM
Well...I was really asking one of the mods to lock it...suppose I should have been more specific :).

I agree that this is an important topic to talk about, but it seemed like tempers were flaring up - and I didn't notice that it had been a week. My mistake. Sorry. :doh:

CounselorII
14th March 2008, 12:00 PM
I'm new to this forum and I am not impressed. The lack of self control as it pertains to inflammatory remarks is amazing. Advocating alcohol or non-alcohol is rooted in selfishness and it is of no consequence. Why is it that you have not moved on from milk to solid food by now.

JDIBe
14th March 2008, 05:09 PM
I'm new to this forum and I am not impressed. The lack of self control as it pertains to inflammatory remarks is amazing. Advocating alcohol or non-alcohol is rooted in selfishness and it is of no consequence. Why is it that you have not moved on from milk to solid food by now.
Friend,

Inflamatory remarks by a poster who is not a member of the Restoration Movement does not help the situation either. We appreciate you being here and you are more than welcome to stay and participate, but please strive to be a peacemaker......

James 3:17
But the wisdom that comes from heaven is first of all pure; then peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of mercy and good fruit, impartial and sincere.

Koey
14th March 2008, 07:37 PM
I feel the need to correct the gross biblical ignorance over the term "fruit of the vine" here. We need to understand the historical context and not just retrofit our own understanding.

First of all the term was used by Jews 2,000 years ago to refer to the sacred wine used for Passover, not grape juice. Second, Passover is 6 months after the grape harvest in that part of the world. Third, preventing grape juice turning into wine is a modern invention only possible since Thomas Brampton Welch's invention in the 1800's. It was his son who sold the idea at the Chicago World's Fair to the churches, not Jesus Christ on that Passover evening 2,000 years ago.

Some people are so against alcohol that beyond all reason they try to turn wine into grape juice. They invent silly reverse engineered reasoning to support their bigotry, such as people keeping clusters of unpicked grapes for 6 months so that they could squeeze out fresh grape juice (unlikely fantasy), or preserving grape juice with chemicals (which were only used to prevent wine turning into vinegar), or that wine was watered down (actually a curse biblically). None of these fantasies holds water. The simple fact is that when Jesus instituted communion wine it was Passover wine, not Tom Welch's pasteurized grape juice.

When he returns, he says he will drink wine with us again. Will the legalists refuse the cup when Jesus himself hands it to them? I hope not.

You can disagree with the ancient history as long as you want. But, you cannot disagree that for most of 2,000 years (before Tom Welch) the Church used wine and not grape juice. It seems unlikely that they were sinning for 2,000 years, but really just following Jesus.

Those who are liberal mindedly turning wine into grape juice, can do what they want. I frankly don't mind if my brother next to me perfers grape juice at the Lord's Table. What I do not wish is that my brother judges me for MY FAITH which is to follow what I am convinced was Jesus' own example.

As such, I am glad that our small part of the Restoration Movment has restored the original wine to the table and left off where Tom Welch intervened.

DerSchweik
14th March 2008, 07:45 PM
Gentlemen,
This thread seems to be generating some "heat" of late.
This is just a friendly reminder to everyone to keep tempers down and comments objective, to the point, and Christ-like.
If a new thread is appropriate to keep the OP intact, then I'd recommend someone start a new one to discuss this specific topic there - preferably in the new "Formal Discussion" sub-forum - for this thread certainly qualifies. If the OP prefers, we can move this thread there without issue.
If you have any questions or issues, please PM me or any of the other mods here.
Thanks for your cooperation and understanding. - God bless. - DerSchweik

Koey
14th March 2008, 08:10 PM
I feel the need to provide a list of scriptures which show the good side of wine. The teetotalers only provide half of the biblical evidence to support their theory that alcohol is banned biblically. It is not. The only thing that is banned is drunkenness, excess. So, here we go with the other side of the story:

Genesis 14:18 And King Melchizedek of Salem brought out bread and wine; he was priest of God Most High.

Genesis 27:28 May God give you of the dew of heaven, and of the fatness of the earth, and plenty of grain and wine.

Exodus 29:40 and with the first lamb one-tenth of a measure of choice flour mixed with one-fourth of a hin of beaten oil, and one-fourth of a hin of wine for a drink offering.

Numbers 15:5 Moreover, you shall offer one-fourth of a hin of wine as a drink offering with the burnt offering or the sacrifice, for each lamb.

Numbers 15:7 and as a drink offering you shall offer one-third of a hin of wine, a pleasing odor to the LORD.

Numbers 18:12 All the best of the oil and all the best of the wine and of the grain, the choice produce that they give to the LORD, I have given to you.

Numbers 18:12 All the best of the oil and all the best of the wine and of the grain, the choice produce that they give to the LORD, I have given to you.

Deuteronomy 11:14 then he will give the rain for your land in its season, the early rain and the later rain, and you will gather in your grain, your wine, and your oil;

Deuteronomy 12:17 Nor may you eat within your towns the tithe of your grain, your wine, and your oil, the firstlings of your herds and your flocks, any of your votive gifts that you vow, your freewill offerings, or your donations;

Deuteronomy 14:23 In the presence of the LORD your God, in the place that he will choose as a dwelling for his name, you shall eat the tithe of your grain, your wine, and your oil, as well as the firstlings of your herd and flock, so that you may learn to fear the LORD your God always.

Deuteronomy 14:26 spend the money for whatever you wish-- oxen, sheep, wine, strong drink, or whatever you desire. And you shall eat there in the presence of the LORD your God, you and your household rejoicing together.

Deuteronomy 16:13 You shall keep the festival of booths for seven days, when you have gathered in the produce from your threshing floor and your wine press.

Deuteronomy 33:28 So Israel lives in safety, untroubled is Jacob's abode in a land of grain and wine, where the heavens drop down dew.

1 Samuel 1:24 When she had weaned him, she took him up with her, along with a three-year-old bull, an ephah of flour, and a skin of wine. She brought him to the house of the LORD at Shiloh; and the child was young.

Psalm 104:14-15 You cause the grass to grow for the cattle, and plants for people to use, to bring forth food from the earth, and wine to gladden the human heart, oil to make the face shine, and bread to strengthen the human heart.

Proverbs 3:10 then your barns will be filled with plenty, and your vats will be bursting with wine.

Proverbs 31:6 Give strong drink to one who is perishing, and wine to those in bitter distress;

Ecclesiastes 10:19 Feasts are made for laughter; wine gladdens life, and money meets every need.

Isaiah 1:22 Your silver has become dross, your wine is mixed with water.

Isaiah 36:17 until I come and take you away to a land like your own land, a land of grain and wine, a land of bread and vineyards.

Amos 9:13 The time is surely coming, says the LORD, when the one who plows shall overtake the one who reaps, and the treader of grapes the one who sows the seed; the mountains shall drip sweet wine, and all the hills shall flow with it.

Matthew 9:17 Neither is new wine put into old wineskins; otherwise, the skins burst, and the wine is spilled, and the skins are destroyed; but new wine is put into fresh wineskins, and so both are preserved.

Luke 5:39 And no one after drinking old wine desires new wine, but says, 'The old is good.'

Luke 7:33-34 For John the Baptist has come eating no bread and drinking no wine, and you say, 'He has a demon'; the Son of Man has come eating and drinking, and you say, 'Look, a glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!'

John 2:3-9 Jesus turns water to wine

I Timothy 5:23 No longer drink only water, but take a little wine for the sake of your stomach and your frequent ailments.

Loveaboveall
17th March 2008, 02:01 PM
For a very long time in our local church I and a few others have been quite uncomfortable. Thomas Welch's modern invention of grape juice was shoved down our throats each Sunday, and we wanted wine like Christ instituted.

The Churches of Christ have no creed but Christ theoretically, but in practice, they have no creed but Churches of Christ traditions, which include no tolerance for anything but immersion baptism and being a teetotaler.

So, about 6 months ago, some of us requested a choice for communion, wine for some and juice for others, so that everyone's faith could be accomodated. For a long time this decision was put off and in the end I just gave up and decided no longer to take part because of the mandatory grape juice. It just did not represent my faith.

Then, a miracle occurred. One elder who is a firm grape juicer, teetotaler and vehemently anti-alcohol, said we ought to consider the faith of others. It was put to a vote and we now accomodate the faith of others in this area.

Yahoooooo! I feel so much better now! About half of us take the wine and the other half take the grape juice. It's just so wonderful! Yay!



Sorry to burst your bubble, but unless you actually squeezed it from the fruit yourself and left it to "ferment" as you suggest it was, you are no closer to partaking of the "fruit of the vine" then by using Welch's grape juice. The modern fermenting processes were not in place then and create a much higher alcohol content. Why would you want to partake of a drug during your worship service to Jesus? Maybe you can explain this to me. IMO, you are much farther from partaking of what was drunk at the original LS by using modern wine(of course that is just my opinion, take it or leave it)

Loveaboveall
17th March 2008, 02:04 PM
When he returns, he says he will drink wine with us again. Will the legalists refuse the cup when Jesus himself hands it to them? I hope not.

.

Could you please define the word "legalist" for me, I am not sure your definition?

ChurchofChrist
17th March 2008, 06:30 PM
heres the danger...where does the compromises stop. Do you add instrumental music because some want it? Do you have a service on Saturday night because some find it more convienent? Do you stop practicing immersion because sprinkling is easier? Do you allow a women to teach because she wants to? Do you omit a qualification for an Elder because it doesn't fit the person? This is how Satan creeps into the church.

Koey
18th March 2008, 08:44 AM
heres the danger...where does the compromises stop. Do you add instrumental music because some want it? Do you have a service on Saturday night because some find it more convienent? Do you stop practicing immersion because sprinkling is easier? Do you allow a women to teach because she wants to? Do you omit a qualification for an Elder because it doesn't fit the person? This is how Satan creeps into the church.
I sincerely appreciate the opportunity to respond to these questions, because I believe it is the Churches of Christ who have already compromised on the above issues and need to get back to their original charter -- no creed but Christ.

Jesus did not ban instrumental music. Therefore to ban it is to ban something that Jesus did not do.
Nowhere did Jesus mandate a Sunday or Saturday Sabbath for the Church. Sure the church began observing Sunday, and you can even see a few verses in the Bible which hint at that, but none of them makes it a command. So, Saturday night services? Jesus was neither for nor against them. So, to say that is compromising is actually creating a rule that Jesus did not.
Immersion is nowhere commanded by Jesus. That is a total misunderstanding of the Greek word "baptizo." It literally kills me to say that for sure it means literally to immerse, but it doesn't literally kill me because I am using the word kill which means one thing literally but not here, and baptizo can also be used in a non-literal sense, such as to wash, IN the Bible. Custom is custom, and not a command that either Jesus or the apostles made.
Women? I tend to agree with you partially on that issue. I am not in favor of women preaching because "they" want to, but if God sends one, "because there was no man in Israel" then I do not want to judge God, and hence do not rule women out of preaching or prophesying, especially since there were women prophets in the Bible. A big topic of course, and I am somewhat ambivalent on it for these reasons.
I do not omit any qualification for an elder, but I notice that Paul did. The two lists in 1 Timothy and Titus are not identical.
As far as Satan having crept into the church, I think he has been there a long time, and one of his favorite tricks is to get people tied into rules like the ones above, that neither Jesus nor the apostles made.Compromise? I think that we need to stop compromising with our man-made rules, by throwing them out and getting back to the idea of "no creed but Christ."

Izdaari
18th March 2008, 09:58 AM
I sincerely appreciate the opportunity to respond to these questions, because I believe it is the Churches of Christ who have already compromised on the above issues and need to get back to their original charter -- no creed but Christ.
Jesus did not ban instrumental music. Therefore to ban it is to ban something that Jesus did not do.
Nowhere did Jesus mandate a Sunday or Saturday Sabbath for the Church. Sure the church began observing Sunday, and you can even see a few verses in the Bible which hint at that, but none of them makes it a command. So, Saturday night services? Jesus was neither for nor against them. So, to say that is compromising is actually creating a rule that Jesus did not.
Immersion is nowhere commanded by Jesus. That is a total misunderstanding of the Greek word "baptizo." It literally kills me to say that for sure it means literally to immerse, but it doesn't literally kill me because I am using the word kill which means one thing literally but not here, and baptizo can also be used in a non-literal sense, such as to wash, IN the Bible. Custom is custom, and not a command that either Jesus or the apostles made.
Women? I tend to agree with you partially on that issue. I am not in favor of women preaching because "they" want to, but if God sends one, "because there was no man in Israel" then I do not want to judge God, and hence do not rule women out of preaching or prophesying, especially since there were women prophets in the Bible. A big topic of course, and I am somewhat ambivalent on it for these reasons.
I do not omit any qualification for an elder, but I notice that Paul did. The two lists in 1 Timothy and Titus are not identical.
As far as Satan having crept into the church, I think he has been there a long time, and one of his favorite tricks is to get people tied into rules like the ones above, that neither Jesus nor the apostles made.Compromise? I think that we need to stop compromising with our man-made rules, by throwing them out and getting back to the idea of "no creed but Christ."
I agree with most of that, but with one difference: IMO man-made customs and traditions aren't necessarily a bad thing, so long as we don't fool ourselves into thinking that they're commanded by God, and so long as they're not inconsistent with what scripture really does require.

ChurchofChrist
18th March 2008, 08:03 PM
I sincerely appreciate the opportunity to respond to these questions, because I believe it is the Churches of Christ who have already compromised on the above issues and need to get back to their original charter -- no creed but Christ.

Jesus did not ban instrumental music. Therefore to ban it is to ban something that Jesus did not do.
Nowhere did Jesus mandate a Sunday or Saturday Sabbath for the Church. Sure the church began observing Sunday, and you can even see a few verses in the Bible which hint at that, but none of them makes it a command. So, Saturday night services? Jesus was neither for nor against them. So, to say that is compromising is actually creating a rule that Jesus did not.
Immersion is nowhere commanded by Jesus. That is a total misunderstanding of the Greek word "baptizo." It literally kills me to say that for sure it means literally to immerse, but it doesn't literally kill me because I am using the word kill which means one thing literally but not here, and baptizo can also be used in a non-literal sense, such as to wash, IN the Bible. Custom is custom, and not a command that either Jesus or the apostles made.
Women? I tend to agree with you partially on that issue. I am not in favor of women preaching because "they" want to, but if God sends one, "because there was no man in Israel" then I do not want to judge God, and hence do not rule women out of preaching or prophesying, especially since there were women prophets in the Bible. A big topic of course, and I am somewhat ambivalent on it for these reasons.
I do not omit any qualification for an elder, but I notice that Paul did. The two lists in 1 Timothy and Titus are not identical.
As far as Satan having crept into the church, I think he has been there a long time, and one of his favorite tricks is to get people tied into rules like the ones above, that neither Jesus nor the apostles made.Compromise? I think that we need to stop compromising with our man-made rules, by throwing them out and getting back to the idea of "no creed but Christ."
There are verses backing up all of the things i said. It's insanse to think baptism is not immersion. Why then did the Ethiopian stop the chariot and GO DOWN INTO the water. If you are going to represent the death, BURIAL, and ressurection of Christ you need to be submerged. And just because Jesus didn't say it himself doesn't mean it is not the word of God. Look at 2 Timothy 3:16

crawfish
18th March 2008, 11:02 PM
heres the danger...where does the compromises stop. Do you add instrumental music because some want it? Do you have a service on Saturday night because some find it more convienent? Do you stop practicing immersion because sprinkling is easier? Do you allow a women to teach because she wants to? Do you omit a qualification for an Elder because it doesn't fit the person? This is how Satan creeps into the church.

Do you believe that it is right to hold onto a man-made tradition; i.e., "the way we've always done things"; if it prevents your church from appealing to outsiders? Sometimes in the CofC we are so intent on not offending our weaker brother that we sacrifice our ability to reach the lost. That, in my mind, is the larger sin.

Koey
19th March 2008, 01:06 AM
There are verses backing up all of the things i said. It's insanse to think baptism is not immersion. Why then did the Ethiopian stop the chariot and GO DOWN INTO the water. If you are going to represent the death, BURIAL, and ressurection of Christ you need to be submerged. And just because Jesus didn't say it himself doesn't mean it is not the word of God. Look at 2 Timothy 3:16
There are problems with your interpretation of the Bible. You will find few theologians who actually know their Greek that will argue that the mode of baptism is important, the fact of baptism is, but the mode is not really exactly specified in the Bible.

If I go paddling ankle deep in the creek, I go down into the water. If I come up again out of the water from paddling, it does not mean that I was totally immersed. Some of the first pictures of Jesus' baptism showed him ankle deep in the Jordan with water being poured over him. The point is not which view is historically correct. The point is that nowhere in the Bible is baptism specified or even commanded as immersion.
On the picture of baptism being like Jesus' burial. Jesus was not buried in the gound. He was buried above ground in a tomb, behind a stone. Taking the picture too literally forces a false interpretation and totally misses the point that Jesus was not buried in the ground. To take baptism as a literal picture rather than a figurative one, we would also have to magically stand water sideways and be "buried" sideways or perhaps in a waterfall. That does not happen. Therefore the picture is metaphorical not literal.