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Letchitsa1
Guest
I was raised in the United Methodist Church and we always used grape juice for pretty much the reasons provided. I have family that are fairly devout in the Baptist, Mennonite, Church of Christ and Church of the Brethren, and all of them use grape juice as well. Based on my experience - the practice of using grape juice instead of wine is far more wide-spread among Protestants than you seem to believe.I highly doubt your characterization. The cults and some Baptist churches (those that strictly adhere to the SBC), are the only churches that come to mind for me, although I’d be open to seeing your evidence to the contrary. However, the SBC resolution on alcohol makes no mention about non-alcoholic wine in the Bible:
sbc.net/resolutions/amResolution.asp?ID=1156
I believe what Catholics are seeing is a) misunderstanding on the part of Protestant members (which is not absent from the Catholic church either) who defend this doctrine on this basis, b) fringe groups that just make radical claims to stir the pot (which is also not absent from the Catholic church), and c) leftover feelings that were passed on from American Prohibition, which, quite frankly, wasn’t all that long ago.
I would agree that part of the issue is misunderstanding on the part of various Protestant groups, and I can certainly see some of it being leftover feelings from our own period of prohibition in this country, but I do not agree that it is the “fringe elements” of Protestantism that embrace this belief. Case in point - the Methodists are among the largest of the Protestant denominations, and I know for a fact the overwhelming majority of them use grape juice instead of wine (though it isn’t always easy to tell with Methodists what they will believe and do, and I don’t say that to be mean or disparaging).