Blessing-side passage

Isaiah 65:8 and the cluster in the grape

Isaiah 65:8 is one of the strongest blessing-side wine texts in the larger two-wines argument.

Updated March 8, 2026 Section: Studies

The passage

Isaiah 65:8 says, “As the new wine is found in the cluster, and one saith, Destroy it not; for a blessing is in it...” This page matters because it joins wine language, cluster language, and blessing language in the same verse.

Isaiah 65:8

We read this as one of the clearest reasons not to assume that every biblical wine reference is intoxicating drink.

Why we return to this verse often

If a reader begins with the assumption that wine always means alcohol, this verse immediately becomes awkward. The cluster language keeps the reader close to the grape and close to blessing, which is why we treat it as a key blessing-side text.

This verse does not answer every question by itself. It does show that the Bible can use wine language in a way that points toward life, preservation, and blessing rather than poison or impairment.

Why this verse is paired with Deuteronomy 32:33

The broader study often places Isaiah 65:8 next to Deuteronomy 32:33. One verse speaks of blessing in the cluster. The other speaks of wine as poison and venom. We argue that readers should not flatten those two directions into one modern assumption.

Frequently asked questions

Does this verse alone prove our whole conclusion?

No. It is one key piece in our larger argument, but it is especially valuable because it pushes back against a one-size-fits-all alcoholic reading.

Why does the word cluster matter here?

Because we treat it as part of the context that keeps the reader close to the fruit and blessing language, rather than importing later intoxication assumptions into the verse.

Key answers connected to this page