Re: Jesus and Wine: What do you want to force the scriptures to mean.
1 Cor 11:21,22 "For in eating every one taketh before other his own supper: and one is hungry, and another is drunken. What? have ye not houses to eat and to drink in? or despise ye the church of God, and shame them that have not? What shall I say to you? shall I praise you in this? I praise you not."
First, Paul condemns drunkenness, Rom 13:13; Gal 5:21, so why would Paul contradict himself and supposedly approve of drunkenness at houses? If the Corinthians were drunk Paul certainly would have condemned it.
Secondly, the Greek word for "drunken" in v20 is methyo and carries the idea of being full, satiated. In the context Paul is contrasting "hungry" with "drunken". Some were hungry or empty and had nothing to eat while others were full, had eaten and were sated, full.
Leon C Field " "Methuei, (drunken) in this case, is plainly contrasted with peina which is correctly rendered as ‘hungry.’ The antithesis, therefore, requires the former to be understood in the generic sense of ‘surfeited,’ not in the narrow sense of ‘drunken.’ The overfilled man is compared to the underfilled man. This is the interpretation adopted by the great body of expositors, ancient and modern."
Leon C. Field, Oinos: A Discussion of the Bible Wine Question (New York, 1883), p. 60
While I understand that it is your desire to believe that the early Christians did not drink regular wine at the Lords supper, and that the word does not mean drunken, it does appear that the usage is as I claimed. Here are all the places where the word is used. Pick a meaning that fits everywhere the word is used, in the context in which it is found... If you want truth, that is. :
Mat_24:49 and begins[SUP]G757[/SUP] to beat[SUP]G5180[/SUP] his fellow[SUP]G4889[/SUP] slaves[SUP]G4889[/SUP] and eat[SUP]G2068[/SUP] and drink[SUP]G4095[/SUP] with
drunkards[SUP]G3184[/SUP];
Joh_2:10 and *said[SUP]G3004[/SUP] to him, "Every[SUP]G3956[/SUP] man[SUP]G444[/SUP] serves[SUP]G5087[/SUP] the good[SUP]G2570[/SUP] wine[SUP]G3631[/SUP] first[SUP]G4413[/SUP], and when[SUP]G3752[/SUP]
the people [SUP]R1[/SUP]have
[SUP]N1[/SUP]drunk[SUP]G3184[/SUP] freely[SUP]G3184[/SUP],
then he serves the poorer[SUP]G1640[/SUP]
wine; but you have kept[SUP]G5083[/SUP] the good[SUP]G2570[/SUP] wine[SUP]G3631[/SUP] until[SUP]G2193[/SUP] now[SUP]G737[/SUP]."
Act_2:15 "For these[SUP]G3778[/SUP] men[SUP]G3778[/SUP] are not
drunk[SUP]G3184[/SUP], as you suppose[SUP]G5274[/SUP], [SUP]R1[/SUP]for it is
only the [SUP]N1[/SUP]third[SUP]G5154[/SUP] hour[SUP]G5610[/SUP] of the day[SUP]G2250[/SUP];
1Co_11:21 for in your eating[SUP]G2068[/SUP] each[SUP]G1538[/SUP] one[SUP]G1538[/SUP] takes[SUP]G4301[/SUP] his own[SUP]G2398[/SUP] supper[SUP]G1173[/SUP] first[SUP]G4301[/SUP]; and one[SUP]G3739 G3303a[/SUP] is hungry[SUP]G3983[/SUP] and [SUP]R1[/SUP]another[SUP]G3739 G1161[/SUP] is
drunk[SUP]G3184[/SUP].
1Th_5:7 For those[SUP]G3588[/SUP] who sleep[SUP]G2518[/SUP] do[SUP]G2518[/SUP] their sleeping[SUP]G2518[/SUP] at night[SUP]G3571[/SUP], and those[SUP]G3588[/SUP] who get[SUP]G3182[/SUP] drunk[SUP]G3182[/SUP]
get[SUP]G3184[/SUP] [SUP]R1[/SUP]
drunk[SUP]G3184[/SUP] at night[SUP]G3571[/SUP].
Rev_17:2 with whom[SUP]G3739[/SUP] [SUP]R1[/SUP]the kings[SUP]G935[/SUP] of the earth[SUP]G1093[/SUP] committed[SUP]G4203[/SUP]
acts of immorality[SUP]G4203[/SUP], and [SUP]R2[/SUP]those[SUP]G3588[/SUP] who dwell[SUP]G2730[/SUP] on the earth[SUP]G1093[/SUP] were [SUP]R3[/SUP]
made[SUP]G3184[/SUP] drunk[SUP]G3184[/SUP] with the wine[SUP]G3631[/SUP] of her immorality[SUP]G4202[/SUP]."
Rev_17:6 And I saw[SUP]G3708[/SUP] the woman[SUP]G1135[/SUP]
drunk[SUP]G3184[/SUP] with [SUP]R1[/SUP]the blood[SUP]G129[/SUP] of the [SUP]N1[/SUP]saints[SUP]G40[/SUP], and with the blood[SUP]G129[/SUP] of the witnesses[SUP]G3144[/SUP] of Jesus[SUP]G2424[/SUP]. When I saw[SUP]G3708[/SUP] her, I wondered[SUP]G2296[/SUP] [SUP]N2[/SUP]greatly[SUP]G2295 G3173[/SUP].
Here’s the Strong’s definition: G3184
μεθύω
methuō
meth-oo'-o
From another form of
G3178; to
drink to
intoxication, that is,
get drunk: - drink well, make (be) drunk (-en).
Total KJV occurrences: 7
Here's another one from a different Greek Dictionary:
G3184
μεθύωmethuō; from μέθυ methu (wine); to be drunken: - drunk (3), drunk freely (1), drunkards (1), get drunk (1), made drunk (1).
Am I saying that you can't completely change the meaning to fit what you want to believe? Of course not. There are tons of religious groups that do not like consistent meaning and that change the meaning whenever what was said doesn't match what they want to believe. Of course, you then have to accept that the Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses ... and ton's of others can hold to their private interpretations as well.
As it stands though, those that showed up early to the Lord's supper and drank all the wine and ate all the bread were drunk, and those that showed up later went hungry. And there is no lambasting of the participants for not using non-alcoholic grape juice.