A:
The miracle in which Jesus turned water into wine is described only in John chapter 2, occurring "on the third day", or soon after the baptism of Jesus, and Jesus told his mother that his time [for miracles] had not come. Caution should be exercised in accepting this miracle as having really happened. In the synoptic gospels, Jesus had begun his forty days in the wilderness at this time, so could not have been at a wedding in Cana.
The author of John's Gospel, as the gospel name implies traditionally regarded as the apostle John, liked to ascribe to Jesus miracles similar to those attributed to the pagan gods. Just as the god Dionysus turned water into wine, so Jesus turned water into wine. Later in the same gospel, we are told of Jesus healing the lame man at the five-sided pool, now known to have been part of an Asclepium. a temple to the Greek god Asclepius. When Asclepius (John's "angel") came by and disturbed the water, the first to enter would be cured, but the lame man was never able to reach the water first. This points to these miracles as literary creations, not events that can be dated with precision.
The miracle of turning water into wine was His first (John 2:11), and Luke's gospel informs us that Jesus was "about thirty" when He began His ministry (Luke 3:23).
The Bible does not mention Jesus changing water to wine before his baptism. The first miracle of turning water into wine at the wedding in Cana is recorded in the Gospel of John and occurred after his baptism by John the Baptist.
The first miracle performed by Jesus was of changing the water into wine at the wedding feast.
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.
We may infer from the fact that the New Testament reports that one of the miracles performed by Jesus was to turn water into wine, that there is no objection to drinking wine. Presumably, if drinking wine was a bad thing, Jesus would have turned wine into water, rather than turning water into wine.
Jesus turned water to wine at w a wedding in Cana.
Jesus turned the water into wine, at the wedding in Canaan.
Mary witnessed Jesus turning water into wine at the wedding in Cana, where he performed his first miracle.
Fish and bread and turn water into wine
Yes. This was the first miracle Jesus did and can be read about in John 2:1-9.
The first miracle did by Jesus was to turn the water into wine at the wedding feast.
"Turn this water into wine!" is a line from "King Herod's Song," from Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice's rock opera, Jesus Christ Superstar.
Jesus turned water into wine at a wedding after the wine ran out. He told the servants to fill the jars with water and it became wine.
Jesus, being invited at a wedding with His mother Mary, changed water into wine. The servants were told to do whatever Jesus said, and He told them to put water in the wineskin Jesus then changed the water into wine for the wedding guests. This miracle is one of the decades of the Luminous Mysteries of the Holy Rosary.
Jesus turned water into wine in the Bible.
The miracle of turning water into wine was His first (John 2:11), and Luke's gospel informs us that Jesus was "about thirty" when He began His ministry (Luke 3:23).
Jesus did not make wine, He turned water into wine once.