Did Jesus Turn Water into Alcohol?

April 30, 2026

Did Jesus Turn Water into Alcohol?

Allen Webster

Jesus’ first miracle was performed in a backwater place, among common folk, at a simple wedding in little Cana of Galilee (John 2:1-11). Simply and silently, water became wine.

A question persists millennia later: Did Jesus create alcoholic wine?

The answer matters, not merely for Christian behavior, but for Christology. What we conclude about the nature of that wine reflects what we believe about the nature of Christ.

The Historical Context: A Wedding—Not a Tavern

Weddings in first-century Palestine were community celebrations that lasted for days (Mt. 25:1-12). Since hospitality was regarded as a sacred duty (Gen. 18:1–8; 19:1–8; Job 31:32; Heb. 13:2), to run out of provisions at a wedding feast was embarrassing to a host (cf. Prov. 27:14; Ecc. 10:19). So, when the wine failed, Jesus solved a big problem in an amazing way.

The Purpose of the Miracle. As the first of John’s seven miraculous signs to prove that Jesus of Nazareth was the Son of God (Jn. 20:30-31), it “manifested forth his glory; and his disciples believed on him” (2:11). It revealed creative power—the same power that made grapes and vines now made juice without either. It demonstrated his authority over nature.

The Quantity. Jesus filled six waterpots—holding “two or three firkins (metretēs) apiece”—with wine (2:6). Since a metretēs was 8.5–9 U.S. gallons, the total volume would have been 120–180 gallons.[i] On one hand, the large amount underscores abundance and generosity. It reflects messianic imagery—joy, blessing, fulfillment (Amos 9:13). On the other, this helps with interpretation. Alcoholic potency in this quantity would be irresponsible even by worldly standards. Would the sinless Son of God provide 150 gallons of intoxicating beverages to people who had already been drinking freely? Excavations at Khirbet Qana (Cana) suggest it was a small village at that time whose entire population was between 200–400 inhabitants (some say as few as 100). So, in effect, one is accusing Jesus of giving a gallon of alcohol to every adult in the village. Such would diminish, not manifest, his glory.

The Quality. The governor declared it “good wine” and noted that it was unusual to save the best for last (2:10). Does “well drunk” mean intoxicated? Methusthōsin can mean “drunken” (Mt. 24:49; 1 Cor. 5:11; Rev. 17:6), but often simply means to drink to satisfaction[ii] (cf. Septuagint, Psa. 36:8; 65:10; Isa. 34:5). The expression reflects customary banquet language and does not require that guests were intoxicated.[iii] If they were drunk, then how could they tell which wine was better?

The Cultural Context: Wine in the Ancient Jewish World

Jewish wedding feasts were gatherings of people devoted to Moses’ Law, which condemned drunkenness (Prov. 20:1; 23:29–32). It strains credibility to imagine a devout Jewish celebration descending into intoxication, with the Messiah supplying the means.

The “good wine” at Cana was certainly superior—not in potency and proof, but in purity and freshness (good, kalos, can mean excellence in purity, suitability). In ancient times, especially among Jews, the best wine was not necessarily the strongest, but the sweetest. Wine drawn off before pressing (called “free run”) was considered best because it was sweetest. William Patton noted in Bible Wines that since the world then had no sugar, people were generally more interested in having “a sweet drink than in alcoholic exhilaration.”[iv]

Since fermentation consumes the natural sugar in grape juice, those desiring sweetness sought to limit or prevent it. Without refrigeration or preservatives, they developed practical methods to keep juice unfermented or minimally fermented. The various methods produced wine strengths along a spectrum—from fresh juice to moderately alcoholic (by our standards).

Level 1: Freshly Pressed (new wine/gleukos). In its earliest stage, “wine” is simply sweet juice. If consumed immediately or preserved carefully, it never becomes alcohol. From late July through September (extending into early October in cooler hill regions), the harvest season in Palestine, Jews had fresh juice (cf. Num. 13:20; Deut. 16:13).

Intoxication Level of Fresh Juice: None

If left unpreserved, unfermented juice would remain sweet (non-alcoholic) only temporarily—from hours to a few days (the warmer the climate, the shorter). In summer months, mild fermentation began within 6 to 24 hours due to airborne yeast and wild yeast present on grape skins. But Jews could have non-alcoholic grape juice year-round. How?

Level 2: Boiling into a Syrup (sapa or defrutum). The Jews practiced boiling according to the Jewish Mishna (c. AD 200). It was common to boil fresh juice down to a third of its original volume or even down to a paste. Mishnah Avodah Zarah 2:3 says that boiled wine was acceptable to drink among Gentiles (cf. Terumot 11:1; Mishnah Maaser Sheni 2:1).

Boiling wine caused it to thicken since it reduced the water content. By heating fresh juice (called must), fermentation was halted (heat destroyed the yeast organisms). The sugar concentration would be increased by volume so the juice would be sweeter. The high sugar content would resist spoilage. (Very high sugar concentrations can create osmotic pressure that stresses/inhibits yeast and slows down fermentation. This is why honey, syrup, and thick concentrates can resist microbial activity.)

The result of boiling fresh juice was a sugar concentration in the form of a thick, sweet concentrate.[v] It was later diluted with water and reconstituted as a non-alcoholic beverage (similar to juice reconstituted from concentrate today).[1] Further, alcohol content in fermented wine can be removed by boiling. Alcohol evaporates at lower temperature (173° Fahrenheit/78.3° Celsius) than water (212°/100°). (Technically, “faster” at 212°).

Intoxication Level of Boiled Grape Juice (Sapa/Defrutum): None

Level 3: Sealed and Kept in Cool Storage. Fresh juice was sometimes stored in tightly sealed containers to limit air exposure. Columella, a Roman agricultural writer,[vi] described storing fresh must in amphorae (two-handled, pointed-bottom clay jars) which were coated with pitch or resin.

Restricting oxygen contact slowed both spoilage and fermentation. In some cases, these containers were submerged in cool water, buried, or stored in cellars or caves to maintain lower temperatures. Juice could be kept fresh under cold water for about a year.[2] The Roman statesman, Cato, said: “If you wish to have must [grape juice] all year, put grape juice in an amphora and seal the cork with pitch; sink it in a fishpond. After thirty days take it out. It will be grape juice for a whole year” (De Agri Cultura CXX).

If fresh juice was not boiled but was sealed immediately and stored in a cool environment, fermentation was greatly slowed but not prevented. Eventually, it would ferment and the resulting strength depended on temperature, yeast presence, sugar content, and oxygen exposure. Such wine could eventually reach 8–11 percent ABV. If diluted, alcohol was reduced to 0.05 to 3 percent. If juice was boiled into sapa and then stored, the alcohol level was zero percent, and it remained non-alcoholic when extracted.

Intoxication Level of Sealed/Stored Wine: None to Moderate

Level 4: Strained or filtered wine. Classical writers demonstrate a desire for less potent wine even among Greeks and Romans. Pliny the Elder referred to wine whose “strength has been broken by the filter” (viribus fractis per colum).[vii] Plutarch discussed wine being diluted so as not to inflame the passions at banquets.[viii] Even Horace spoke of wines that were tamed or mellowed.[ix] Repeated filtration did not eliminate fermentation, but it lowered potency by removing impurities and reducing yeast and sediment. Compared to modern alcohol, the result was a “light wine,” weaker than today’s table wine.

Intoxication Level of Filtered Wine: Reduced

Level 5: Diluted with water. Wine in the ancient Mediterranean world was commonly mixed with water before drinking. Undiluted wine was often considered barbaric.[x] While dilution did not remove all alcohol, it significantly moderated its intoxicating effect. The ratios generally were 3:1, 4:1, but went up to 20:1. Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible (vol. 2) says, “A single drink in the U.S. is not the same as wine in the first century that could be watered as much as 1 part alcohol to 20 parts water.”[3]

A 12 percent wine (their strongest)[4] diluted 20:1 was the equivalent of non-alcoholic beer today (0.48 ABV); a 3:1 dilution became roughly 3 percent alcohol; a 4:1 dilution was 2–2.5 percent. A standard glass of wine in the U.S. would be 4-5 times that concentration.[5] A 180-pound man drinking 3 percent wine would have to drink five pints (80 ounces/2.3 liters) to reach a blood alcohol content of .08 (legal limit in 49 states). Drinking 2 percent requires six pints (96 ounces/3 liters), and these would have to be consumed within two hours on an empty stomach. The social setting of a Jewish wedding—extending over days—would typically involve gradual consumption, not rapid intake, with food. This does not mean that some diluted wine was incapable of causing drunkenness, but it shows the required volume was substantial, would necessitate continuous drinking, and would demonstrate deliberate excess. And the likelihood is they used unfermented drinks or diluted more. See I Only Drink in Private for further discussion of dilution

Intoxication Level of Diluted Wine: Significantly Lowered

Level 6: Naturally Fermented Ancient Wine (undiluted). Even when fully fermented, and undiluted, ancient wine did not reach modern alcohol potency levels for several reasons:

  • Natural yeasts die off at around 9–11 percent alcohol levels. If the alcoholic content is much above 10 percent, yeast cells are killed and fermentation ceases. So, ancient wines topped out at about 7-10 percent.[6]
  • Sugar levels in ancient grapes were generally lower than modern cultivated varieties. As a rule of thumb, the percentage of alcohol will be half of the percentage of the sugar in the juice.
  • Today’s wine is often engineered for maximum ferment
  • No distillation technology existed to produce stronger beverages—whiskey, vodka, rum. The alembic still, which separates alcohol from wine, was perfected by Persian alchemist Abu Musa Jabir ibn Hayyanaround 800 A.D. (“Alcohol” is an Arabic word.) It spread to Europe around 1200.

So, a comparison of ancient wine with today’s alcohol reveals the following:

  • Strongest: Ancient, fermented wine: 8–11 percent; today, distilled liquor 35–50 percent.
  • Common: Diluted wine: 2–4 percent; today, table wine: 12–15 percent; port or sherry: 18–20 percent.

Thus, when Scripture warns against intoxication (Eph. 5:18), it addresses a sin that was far less than its modern counterpart.

Intoxication Level of Ancient Wine: Moderate (limited by ancient methods)

No one disputes that Israel, Rome, or Greece had wine that contained alcohol but to say that ancient people had to drink wine is false. These practices show that ancient people understood fermentation and took measures either to encourage it or to restrain it. Sweetness was valued by many; intoxication was desired by others. They had the means to preserve juice instead of having to drink fermented wine.

Even if some Jews did drink light wine, it cannot be proven that Jesus or the early church did. Jewish practice is not Christian law. The Jews did many things, such as divorce, Corban, and buying/selling in the temple, that were outside the will of God. The only authority in the church is Scripture (Col. 3:17), so one would need a verse that proves Jesus, the apostles, or the early church drank fermented wine in order to have divine permission today. It is interesting that the traveling companion of Paul had to be coached to use wine for medicine (or to make his drinking water healthy, 1 Timothy 5:23). Where did he get the idea that he should be so strict?

The Linguistic Context: The Spirit’s Words in Two Languages

There are thirteen words translated by wine or strong drink in the Bible, yayin (Hebrews) and oinos (Greek) being the primary words. Some who defend moderate drinking default to the assumption that every instance of yayin or oinos was alcoholic. This is simply not the case. Fresh-pressed wine, new wine, and boiled wine, for instance, were free from any intoxicating effects (Luke 5:37-39).

Bible words must be defined by context, usage, and scholarship, while avoiding applying modern definitions to first-century contexts.¹⁰ The two view oinos interpretation is sometimes disparaged as being of modern origination,[7] but it holds up biblically and lexically (going back even before the time of Christ). See Dave Miller. See Lexical Study on Wine in Both Testaments. Many words have different meanings in different contexts. The word “work,” for instance, can mean meritorious works or works of obedience, depending on the context (Ephesians 2:9; James 4). The same is true with oinos.

Yayin (Hebrew). The most common Old Testament word for wine is yayin (יַיִן) (used 141 times). According to a Hebrew and English Lexicon, yayin denotes “wine” in a broad sense—either fermented or the fruit of the vine.[xi] Gleason Archer notes that the word “does not specify whether the juice had undergone fermentation or not.”[xii] The context determines which is in view.[xiii] In Genesis 9:21, Proverbs 20:1, and Proverbs 23:31, yayin refers to fermented drink. In other passages it is used of fresh juice (Gen. 27:28, 37; 40:11; Num. 18:12; Prov. 3:10).

Oinos (Greek). The New Testament equivalent is οἶνος, which occurs 34 times, including in John 2. Many standard Greek lexicons define oinos as “wine” without specifying fermentation.[xiv] In Ephesians 5:18, the phrase, “Be not drunk with wine” obviously refers to alcoholic wine, but in Revelation 19:13-15 (Christ treading the winepress), it refers to juice. The Septuagint uses oinos to translate yayin over 30 times. Norman Geisler observes, “Neither the Hebrew nor the Greek word for wine necessarily implies fermentation.”[xv]

Gleukos (Greek). This word occurs once in the New Testament (Acts 2:13). Classical Greek usage describes γλεῦκος (from which we get “glucose”) as freshly pressed grape juice—sweet, not aged. [xvi] The term was used on Pentecost in mockery (cf. Peter’s denial, 2:15).

Oxos (Greek). This word appears six times in five verses, in connection with the crucifixion. It was low grade sour wine used by soldiers and laborers (not standard table wine). It was vinegar that had gone through a similar fermentation process (Mt. 27:34; Mk. 15:23).

Sikera (Greek)/Shekar (Hebrew). The term σίκερα is translated “strong drink” and corresponds to the Hebrew shekar (שֵׁכָר), an intoxicating beverage made from grain, dates, or other substances.[xvii] Shekar is found 23 times in the Old Testament and is frequently paired with yayin (e.g., Lev. 10:9; Num. 6:3; Prov. 20:1; Isa. 5:11). John the Baptist was to drink “neither wine (oinos) nor strong drink (sikera)” (Lk. 1:15, only time sikera is found in the New Testament). The pairing reflects established vocabulary distinctions in Jewish usage.

Scripture possesses precise terminology to communicate the subject accurately:

  • Yayin and oinos—general words for wine.
  • Gleukos—sweet or newly pressed wine.
  • Shekar/sikera/oxos—strong drink, intoxicating beverage.

Thus, oinos in John 2 does not require the conclusion that Jesus created alcohol.

The Moral Context: The Spotless Character of Christ

This is the most serious part of this study. To say that Jesus made, distributed, and drank alcohol insults the holiness of the Holy One. The question is not merely historical—it is theological; it is practical. Any interpretation of John 2 must harmonize with the holy character of Christ and the consistent biblical warnings against alcohol.

Jesus is “holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners” (Heb. 7:26). He set the bar the highest it has ever been set. Being harmless, he never encouraged excess, enabled vice, or allowed his example to contradict the moral tenor of the law. To suggest that he miraculously produced gallons of intoxicants contradicts the concept of “harmless.”

Consider some facts and related questions:

  • Jesus sharpened blurred ethical lines in the Law and called out those who cut corners (Mt. 23:1-23; Heb. 5:12-14). Since Moses’ Law condemned alcohol as a source of deception and ruin (Prov. 20:1; 31:4–5; Hab. 2:15), would he participate in a feast with drinking—yea, become the host of it?
  • Jesus came “to seek and to save that which was lost” (Lk. 19:10). Would he begin his ministry by clouding sinners’ judgment or weakening their restraint?
  • Would he teach followers to pray, “Lead us not into temptation” (Mt. 6:13), and then supply the very thing that dulls moral awareness and inflames temptation?
  • Would he provide abundant alcohol in his ministry and then condemn drunkenness in his gospel? (Eph. 5:18).
  • Would he send people home drunk from a wedding and then forbid Christians to cause others to stumble? (Rm. 14:21).
  • Would he attend a drinking party and then forbid his followers to attend drinking parties? (Gal. 5:20-21; 1 Pet. 4:1-3). Can we not walk in his steps? (1 Pet. 2:21).
  • Would he forbid his followers from harming their bodies (Acts 16:28; 1 Cor. 6:19-20) and then give a substance that killed the brain cells of his friends and disciples?
  • Would he demand soberness of Christians (1 Pet. 4:7; 5:8) and then pour drinks that cause loss of control?
  • Would he put poison in the bodies he would soon buy with his blood? (1 Cor. 6:19-20). (Ethyl alcohol is toxic, even fatal, unless sufficiently diluted.)
  • Would he help people yield the members of their bodies as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin? (Rm. 6:13).
  • Would Jesus plant a tree with poison fruit? Even those who are pro-alcohol admit a massive number of innocent people have their lives destroyed by those who consume alcohol. We can know a tree by its “fruits” (Mt. 7:15).
  • Would he give the devil an advantage over his disciples? (Eph. 4:27).

Could you see the Son of God walking into a bar and announcing, “The next round of drinks is on me”? Such a blasphemous thought is far less than teaching he turned alcohol into wine.

To argue, “Jesus drank alcohol because Matthew 11:19 says he came ‘eating and drinking’” (cf. Lk. 7:34), is shallow and solipsistic. The same context has John accused of being demon-possessed. Was he? Jesus’ enemies accused him of being demon-possessed, too (Jn. 7:20; 8:48, 52; 10:20). Was he? They accused Jesus of violating Sabbath laws (Mt. 12:2; Mk. 2:24; Jn. 5:16-18; 9:16); does this mean that he disrespected the law? They accused him of blasphemy (Mt. 9:3; 26:65; Mk. 2:7; Jn. 10:33); did he spoke flippantly of God?

Christ’s enemies labeled him a “winebibber” (Lk. 7:34), but we must not join them. His miracle manifested glory, not indulgence; abundance, not intoxication; purity, not corruption. The “good wine” Jesus gives is not found in a bottle but in grace and truth (Jn. 10:10).

[1] Jim McGuiggan, The Bible, The Saint and The Liquor Industry, (Lubbock, TX: International Biblical Resources), 41

[2] J. Wesley Adams and Donald C. Stamps, Fire Bible (Springfield, MO: Life Publishers International, 2011).

[3] Elwell, Walter A., and Barry J. Beitzel. “Wine.” Baker Book House, 1988, p. 2147.

[4] Wine in the first century would be fermented by strains of wild yeasts and could at times reach concentrations of 11-12%. (https://cfc.sebts.edu/faith-and-culture/was-new-testament-wine-alcoholic/)

[5] https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/standard-drink-sizes/index.html

[6] Harris, R. Laird. 1980. Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament. Vol. 1. Chicago, IL: Moody.

[7] Intellectual honesty requires not allowing preferences to reject scholarship, as the Jehovah’s Witnesses do in John 1:1, Calvinists do in restricting sarx beyond its lexical range, denominational debaters do by redefining psallo contrary to historical usage.

[i] Walter Bauer, Frederick W. Danker, William F. Arndt, and F. Wilbur Gingrich (BDAG), A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, 3rd ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), 643; cf. Merrill C. Tenney, “John,” in The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, rev. ed., ed. Tremper Longman III and David E. Garland (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2007), 9:47.

[ii] BDAG defines μεθύω as “to drink to the point of intoxication” but also notes usage meaning “to drink freely” or “to have one’s fill.” See also Henry George Liddell and Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, Henry Stuart Jones (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996), 1104.

[iii] D. A. Carson, The Gospel According to John, The Pillar New Testament Commentary (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1991), 175.

[iv] William Patton, Bible Wines; The Laws of Fermentation and Wines of the Ancients (New York: National Temperance Pub. House, 1871), 46.

[v] Pliny the Elder, Natural History 14.11–14, trans. H. Rackham, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1945).

[vi] Columella, On Agriculture 12.19–20, trans. E. S. Forster and Edward H. Heffner, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Press, 1954).

[vii] Pliny, 14.22.

[viii] Plutarch, Moralia, vol. 8, Table Talk, trans. Paul A. Clement and Herbert B. Hoffleit, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Press, 1969), 657E–658A. cf. Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae.

[ix] Horace, Odes and Epodes, trans. Niall Rudd, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge, MA: Harvard)

[x] Pliny, Natural History 14.22.

[xi] Francis Brown, S. R. Driver, and Charles A. Briggs (BDB), A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the OT (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1907), 406.

[xii] Gleason L. Archer, Encyclopedia of Bible Difficulties (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1982), 245.

[xiii] Ludwig Koehler and Walter Baumgartner, The Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament, Leiden: Brill, 1994–2000, 2:399–400.

[xiv] BDAG, 701.

[xv] Norman L. Geisler, Baker Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1999), 817.

[xvi] BDB, 1016; Koehler and Baumgartner, 4:1453–54.

[xvii] BDAG, 202.

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