In John chapter 2 verse 10 the words have well drunk is interpreted in the Greek as "to drink to intoxication " it is word number 3184 in the strongs concordance and is methuo in Greek. Further to this, others point to the fact that methuo is here in the passive voice in Greek and also to the fact that the person making the statement was talking about usual practice and not necessarily to what was happening at this particular wedding. The simple fact is we do not know and those who suggest the wine was not fermented point to the fact that Jesus would thus effectively be countenancing a substance we know to be harmful, despite the antioxidents, and would be approving of drunkenness. In addition, there is evidence that the ancients actually made a substance they called 'wine' by boiling off the water and skimming off the substances which cause fermentation. This ennables long storage and transport and relates to Jesus illustration about wine in new and old wineskins. They would then re-constitute this substance with the addition of water when they required the 'wine'.
Only one miracle has been recorded. That doesn't mean He did no others there, it just means there is only one we know of. There may have been more, but effectively our answer is one. Buck Burch wrote: Jesus actually performed 2 miracles in Cana. Both are recorded in John. In John 2:1-11, Jesus was at a wedding and turned the water into wine. After some time (John 4:46-54), Jesus returned to Cana and healed a royal official's son, albeit by distance. The son was in Capernaum while Jesus pronounced him healed in Cana.
Saint Andrew was a disciple of John the Baptist who followed Jesus after hearing his teachings. Andrew met Jesus along with his brother Peter while they were fishing, and Jesus called them to become his disciples. Through this encounter, Andrew came to know Jesus and became one of his closest followers.
Oh, dude, Cana and Canaan are like cousins. They're related but not the same. Cana is a village in Galilee where Jesus turned water into wine at a wedding, and Canaan is an ancient region in the Near East. So, they're kind of like distant relatives in the family tree of geography.
In John 2, Jesus performed His first miracle. He turned water into wine at a wedding. The thing is, when you look at the way wedding were done in ancient times, they were what we would call, a big party. Dancing, drinking, singing, and more were done at a wedding. Jesus had to travel a great distance to get to this wedding, meaning that we could deduce at least two things from this. 1. That Jesus was well liked enough to know people who lived far away. Remember, they didn't hop into a taxi and get there a couple hours later, they had to take donkeys and go on foot. He must have been a good enough Guy to know these people and be invited. 2. Jesus turned water into WINE. It's not to say that Jesus was a wino, but rather the fact that the "party" was still going, and He genuinly cared enough for the bride and groom to keep the party going! I don't know about you, but that doesn't sound like a stick-in-the-mud kind of Person. In Luke 10, we see that Jesus becomes with "joy from the Holy Spirit" when in the presence of children. The idea of Jesus being a stern-faced Man, who never smiled, well likely comes from our perception of Him in art, much the same way that we perceive Him as white, with brown hair and blue eyes. But imagine for a moment, just how popular of a person would be if they never smiled? Jesus was enormously popular in a lot of regions, meaning that He had to be quite a Guy.
Jesus did not institute marriage , Jehovah God did with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. Read the scriptures listed here in your Bible.Jesus celebrated with persons at marriage feasts, though. In fact, he performed his first miracle, by turning water to wine at John 2:1-11--"Now on the third day a marriage feast took place in Ca′na of Gal′i·lee, and the mother of Jesus was there. Jesus and his disciples were also invited to the marriage feast. When the wine ran short the mother of Jesus said to him: "They have no wine." But Jesus said to her: "What have I to do with you, woman? My hour has not yet come." His mother said to those ministering: "Whatever he tells YOU, do." As it was, there were six stone water jars sitting there as required by the purification rules of the Jews, each able to hold two or three liquid measures. Jesus said to them: "Fill the water jars with water." And they filled them to the brim. And he said to them: "Draw some out now and take it to the director of the feast." So they took it. When, now, the director of the feast tasted the water that had been turned into wine but did not know what its source was, although those ministering who had drawn out the water knew, the director of the feast called the bridegroom and said to him: "Every other man puts out the fine wine first, and when people are intoxicated, the inferior. You have reserved the fine wine until now." Jesus performed this in Ca′na of Gal′i·lee as [the] beginning of his signs, and he made his glory manifest; and his disciples put their faith in him.
Only one miracle has been recorded. That doesn't mean He did no others there, it just means there is only one we know of. There may have been more, but effectively our answer is one. Buck Burch wrote: Jesus actually performed 2 miracles in Cana. Both are recorded in John. In John 2:1-11, Jesus was at a wedding and turned the water into wine. After some time (John 4:46-54), Jesus returned to Cana and healed a royal official's son, albeit by distance. The son was in Capernaum while Jesus pronounced him healed in Cana.
At the beginning of Christ's ministry. The exact date is inevitably unknown, since we do not know the exact year of Jesus' birth.
If it is leaking antifreeze or water, or if it is making noise or binding when turned by hand.
Mary witnessed Jesus turning water into wine at the wedding in Cana, where he performed his first miracle.
With the water turned off on all the water devices in your house, see if your water meter is still running.
If you are a Christian, Jesus is your creator. If you are his child, then you will know him for his love, which is as vast as the heavens.
Yes,he does know we love him he can tell from heaven he's the man who can walk on water so he can tell we love him.
jesus loves me this i know! for the bible tells me so! little ones ....
most basic answer: Fermented Apples. I don't know the technical process.
There is one Jesus.
When the water from your faucet is sputtering when being turned off, then it is a sign that your water is overheating. Trickling from the valve can also mean over pressure.
well they had wine so they fermented stuff alchohol production is a science sure is