Core study

Two wines in the Bible: blessed wine and cursed wine

Two wines in the Bible is our shorthand for a repeated contrast: one stream on the side of blessing (non-alcoholic wine) and one stream on the side of poison, danger, and impaired judgment (leaven-yeast fermented alcoholic wine).

Updated March 8, 2026 Section: Studies

Quick answer

We conclude that the Bible presents two broad moral kinds of wine: one on the side of blessing and one on the side of poison, danger, and impaired judgment. The point is not that the Bible always uses two separate English words. The point is that the contexts divide in two directions, and forcing a single alcoholic meaning into both directions creates contradiction.

Why non-contradiction matters so much

The wine debate breaks down if contradiction is ignored. Some passages bless. Some passages warn. Some passages place wine near fruitfulness and cluster language. Others place wine near mockery, poison, or judgmental error.

Those tensions should be read carefully, not flattened into one modern assumption.

The four related studies that make the contrast hard to ignore

How these four related studies reinforce the two-wines framework.
Blessing-side witnessWarning-side witnessWhy the pair matters
Isaiah 65:8Deuteronomy 32:33Blessing in the cluster is not morally interchangeable with poison and venom.
Fruitful, life-giving languageProverbs 23Wine that sparkles, bites, and stings belongs on the warning side.
Holy use and blessing-side contextsIsaiah 28:7Judgment-clouding wine language cannot simply be imported back into blessing texts.

What we are not saying

Saying “two wines” does not make every verse easy. It means the Bible’s own moral and contextual tensions require more than a flat one-drink answer. The phrase is a reading framework, not a shortcut around careful exegesis.

Where to go after this page

For the broad overview, return to Wine in the Bible. For the practical categories, continue to Types of wine in the Bible. For the direct moral conclusion, go to Is drinking a sin?.

Blessing-side passages to compare with warning-side passages

Frequently asked questions

Does “two wines” mean two separate English words?

No. During the time of the KJV Bible translation one word, wine, was enough because it held a broader meaning than it does today. It also means the contexts divide in two moral directions even though English translations often use the same surface word.

What is the strongest blessing-side related study for this question?
What is the strongest warning-side related study for this question?

Deuteronomy 32:33 is one of the strongest, and Proverbs 23 is another.

Sub-guides on this topic