Homebrewed Christianity

Beer in the Temple? & What the Bible Actually Says About Alcohol w/ John Anthony Dunne

Mar 10, 2026
John Anthony Dunne, New Testament scholar and beer nerd who studies wine and beer in the Bible, walks through biblical scenes soaked in fermented beverages. Short takes on temple libations, Cana and temple imagery, prophetic mountains dripping with wine, and a 'varietals' framework for wine symbolism. He ties all this to communion as a blended, communal climax of biblical themes.
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INSIGHT

Bible Is Soaked With Alcoholic Imagery

  • The Bible's conversation about alcohol is usually narrowed to permissibility debates, but scripture is actually saturated with diverse wine and beer imagery.
  • John Anthony Dunne maps this ubiquity across texts to show many symbolic roles beyond 'is it okay to drink'.
INSIGHT

Corinth Shows Communion Inequality Not Prohibition

  • Paul's critique of Corinthian meals targets socioeconomic division, not alcohol itself, because wealthier folks feasted while others went hungry.
  • Dunne connects 'not discerning the body' to failure of sharing at the Lord's Supper and broader communal unity.
INSIGHT

The Temple Poured Out Beer Daily

  • Numbers 28's daily libation likely refers to shekar as a grain/date-based beer rather than distilled spirits or wine.
  • Dunne cites production logistics, the Nazarite prohibition pairing, and Septuagintal translations to argue beer fits daily offering needs.
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