Alcohol in the Bible and Vehicle registration plates of South Korea: Difference between pages

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In [[South Korea]], the Surface Transportation Bureau of the [[Ministry of Construction and Transportation]] (MOCT) oversees the design and issue of '''license plates''' ({{lang-ko|번호판}}) for [[motor vehicle]]s.
[[Image:The Marriage at Cana - Decani.jpg|thumb|right|[[Jesus]] making [[wine]] in ''The Marriage at Cana'', a [[14th century]] [[fresco]] from the [[Visoki Dečani monastery]].]]
[[Alcoholic beverage]]s appear repeatedly in [[biblical literature]] – from [[Noah]] planting a vineyard and getting drunk in the [[Hebrew Bible]]<ref name="Ge9:20–27">[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ge+9:20-27 Ge 9:20–27]</ref> to [[Jesus]] in the [[New Testament]] miraculously making copious amounts<ref>Six pots of thirty-nine [[litre|liters]] each = 234 liters = 61.8 [[gallon]]s, according to Seesemann, p. 163.</ref> of wine at the [[marriage at Cana|wedding at Cana]]<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jn+2:1-11 Jn 2:1–11]</ref> and later incorporating wine as part of the central rite of [[Christianity]], the [[Eucharist]].<ref name="LastSupper">[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt26:27-29;Mk14:23-25;Lk22:20;1Co11:25 Mt 26:27–29; Mk 14:23–25; Lk 22:20; 1 Co 11:25]</ref> Wine is the most common alcoholic beverage mentioned in biblical literature, where it is a frequent source of symbolism,<ref name="ISBEWine"/> and was an important part of daily life in biblical times.<ref>Broshi (1984), p. 33.</ref><ref>Broshi (1986), p. 46: In the biblical description of the agricultural products of the Land, the triad 'cereal, wine, and oil' recurs repeatedly (Deut. 28:51 and elsewhere). These were the main products of ancient Palestine, in order of importance. The fruit of the vine was consumed both fresh and dried (raisins), but it was primarily consumed as wine. Wine was, in antiquity, an important food and not just an embellishment to a feast.... Wine was essentially a man's drink in antiquity, when it became a significant dietary component. Even slaves were given a generous wine ration. Scholars estimate that in ancient Rome an adult consumed a liter of wine daily. Even a minimal estimate of 700g. per day means that wine constituted about one quarter of the caloric intake (600 out of 2,500 cal.) and about one third of the minimum required intake of iron."</ref><ref name="ISBEWine">B. S. Easton (1915b).</ref> The inhabitants of ancient [[Palestine]] also drank beer and wines made from fruits other than grapes, and some references to these appear in the scriptures, too.<ref name="WaltkeP505">Waltke (2005), p. 505.</ref>


== Appearance ==
On the whole, biblical literature displays an ambivalence toward intoxicating drinks, considering them both a blessing from God that brings joy and merriment and potentially dangerous beverages that can be unwisely and [[sin]]fully abused.<ref name="WaltkeP127">Waltke (2005), p. 127.</ref><ref>Fitzsimmonds, p. 1255: "These two aspects of wine, its use and its abuse, its benefits and its curse, its acceptance in God's sight and its abhorrence, are interwoven into the fabric of the [Old Testament] so that it may gladden the heart of man (Ps. 104:15) or cause his mind to err (Is. 28:7), it can be associated with merriment (Ec. 10:19) or with anger (Is. 5:11), it can be used to uncover the shame of Noah (Gn. 9:21) or in the hands of Melchizedek to honor Abraham (Gn. 14:18).... The references [to alcohol] in the [New Testament] are very much fewer in number, but once more the good and the bad aspects are equally apparent...."</ref><ref name="RaymondP25">Raymond, p. 25: "This favorable view [of wine in the Bible], however, is balanced by an unfavorable estimate.... The reason for the presence of these two conflicting opinions on the nature of wine [is that the] consequences of wine drinking follow its use and not its nature. Happy results ensue when it is drunk in its proper measure and evil results when it is drunk to excess. The nature of wine is indifferent."</ref><ref>Edwards (1915b): "[Wine's] value is recognized as a cheering beverage (Jdg 9:13; Ps 104:15; Prov 31:7), which enables the sick to forget their pains (Prov 31:6). Moderation, however, is strongly inculcated and there are frequent warnings against the temptation and perils of the cup."</ref><ref>McClintock and Strong, p. 1016: "But while liberty to use wine, as well as every other earthly blessing, is conceded and maintained in the Bible, yet all abuse of it is solemnly condemned."</ref><ref name="COE">Ethical Investment Advisory Group: "Christians who are committed to total abstinence have sometimes interpreted biblical references to wine as meaning unfermented grape juice, but this is surely inconsistent with the recognition of both good and evil in the biblical attitude to wine. It is self-evident that human choice plays a crucial role in the use or abuse of alcohol."</ref> The relationships between [[Judaism and alcohol]] and [[Christianity and alcohol]] have generally maintained this same tension, though Christianity saw a number of its adherents, particularly around the time of [[Prohibition]], rejecting alcohol itself as inherently evil.
=== Pre-1973 ===
Few examples of designs prior to [[1973]] remain in existence; they are no longer valid. The most recent design is similar to the ones that followed, but the positions of some elements are different. These early plates are typically white with blue lettering, a color scheme still used today for [[motorcycle]] plates.


==Biblical literature==
=== 1973-2003 ===
Upon initial inspection, plates issued during this era seem to closely resemble those used in [[Japan]] (see [[Japanese license plates]] for examples). The plates are approximately the same width and height as North American or Japanese number plates. They measure 335 mm wide by 170 mm high for passenger vehicles, and 440 mm wide by 220 mm high for large trucks and buses. The information is arranged into two lines.
The term ''Bible'' can refer to several collections of books that are considered [[biblical canon|canonical]] by one or more religious group, and there is some variation on what books different subgroups consider canonical (see [[books of the Bible]]). The [[Hebrew Bible]], which [[Judaism]] calls the ''[[Tanakh]]'' and [[Christianity]] calls the ''[[Old Testament]]'', is canonical for both groups. [[Catholicism]], [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Eastern Orthodoxy]], and to some extent the churches of the [[Anglican Communion]] accept the [[biblical apocrypha]], or [[deuterocanonical books]], which the Jewish and [[Protestant]] canons exclude. All Christians accept the [[New Testament]], while Judaism rejects it.


The first line, occupying the upper third of the plate, identifies the [[Subdivisions of South Korea|province]] or [[Special cities of Korea|special city]] that issued the plate and the vehicle class.
Irrespective of the official standing of these collections with various religious groups, each is a set of historical artifacts that evidence views during their respective time periods of composition and editing. The Hebrew Bible contains the [[Torah]], or Mosaic Law, which is the preeminent part of the Bible for modern Judaism and for the Jews living in the days of the New Testament. The apocryphal/deuterocanonical books, while not universally accepted as canonical, have yet had significant influence among Jews and Christians alike<ref>Toy and Lévi.</ref> and give evidence of views during the [[Second Temple]] or [[intertestamental period|intertestamental]] <!--AWB shouldn't "fix" this-->period. The Hebrew Bible and the apocryphal/deuterocanonical books contain the background assumed by the New Testament and particularly by the [[Gospels]], Christianity's centerpiece of scripture, and the New Testament teaching on and exemplary use of alcoholic beverages reflects the attitudes and ideas found in earlier biblical literature.


The province/city name is written in full in [[hangeul]], minus the -do (도) or -si (시) suffix. Provinces and cities issuing plates include (in South Korean ''jamo'' order):
==Lexigraphy==
* [[Gangwon]] (강원)
* [[Gyeonggi]] (경기)
* [[Gyeongnam]] (경남)
* [[Gyeongbuk]] (경북)
* [[Gwangju]] (광주)
* [[Daegu]] (대구)
* [[Daejeon]] (대전)
* [[Busan]] (부산)
* [[Seoul]] (서울)
* [[Ulsan]] (울산)
* [[Incheon]] (인천)
* [[Jeonnam]] (전남)
* [[Jeonbuk]] (전북)
* [[Jeju]] (제주)
* [[Chungnam]] (충남)
* [[Chungbuk]] (충북)


The vehicle classes are as follows:
Biblical literature uses several words in its original languages to refer to different types of alcoholic beverages. Some of these words have overlapping meaning, particularly the words in [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] compared to the words in [[Koine Greek]], which is the language of both the [[Septuagint]] (an important and ancient translation of the Hebrew Bible) and the New Testament. While some apocryphal/deuterocanonical books may have been originally written in Hebrew or [[Aramaic language|Aramaic]], some were written in Greek, and they are all best known in the Greek version found in the Septuagint. Hence, the meanings of the words used for alcoholic beverages in each of these languages has bearing on alcohol and the Bible.
* 10-69: [[Automobile|passenger car]]s
* 70-79: [[van]]s
* 80-89: "[[freight]] vehicles" ([[trucks]])
* 90-99: "specialized vehicles" (such as [[recreational vehicle]]s)


The second line, occupying the lower two-thirds of the plate, uniquely identifies the vehicle. It contains a [[hangeul]] syllable prefix on the left, and a serial number on the right.
=== Hebrew ===
The [[Hebrew Bible]] was largely written in [[Biblical Hebrew|Hebrew]] with portions in [[Biblical Aramaic|Aramaic]], and it uses several words to represent alcoholic beverages:
{|border=1 class="wikitable"
!Hebrew !! Transliteration !! [[Strong's Concordance|Strong's no.]] !! Meaning<ref>All meanings from Brown et al. Specific links are given in the "Strong's no." column.</ref> !! References !! Septuagint translation(s)
|-
|align=center|יין
|align=center|''yayin''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=03196 3196]
|the common word translated "wine"<ref name="Eastons">M. G. Easton (1897b).</ref>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ge9:21;Ex29:40;Lv10:9;Nu6:3;Dt14:26;Jos9:4;Jg13:4;1Sa1:14;1Ch9:29;Ne2:1;Est1:7;Jb1:13;Ps60:3;Pr4:17;Ec2:3;SS1:2;Is5:11;Jr13:12;Ez27:18;Da1:5;Ho4:11;Jl1:5;Am2:8;Mi2:11;Hab2:5 Ge 9:21; Ex 29:40; Lv 10:9; Nu 6:3; Dt 14:26; Jos 9:4; Jg 13:4; 1Sa 1:14; 1Ch 9:29; Ne 2:1; Es 1:7; Jb 1:13; Ps 75:8; Pr 4:17; Ec 2:3; SS 1:2; Is 5:11; Jr 13:12; Ezk 27:18; Da 1:5; Ho 4:11; Jl 1:5; Am 2:8; Mi 2:11; Hb 2:5]; etc.<!-- Listed only the first verse from each book to give a sense of the use across authors and time periods. Stopped at Habakkuk because of the limitation on no. of verses at Bible Gateway. -->
|''gleukos'' (see below), ''katoinousthai'' ("to be drunken"),<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2356020 Entry for ''katoinoomai''] in Liddell et al.</ref> ''oinopotes'' ("drunkard"),<ref>[http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3630 Strong's 3630]</ref> ''oinos'' (see below), ''sumposion'' ("drinking party")<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2398793 Entry for ''sumposion''] in Liddell et al.</ref><ref>All references from Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 269 (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|תירוש
|align=center|''tirosh''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=08492 8492]
|properly "[[must]]"; sometimes rendered as "wine," "new wine," or "sweet wine." It can represent juice at any stage in the [[fermentation (wine)|fermentation]] process,<ref name="ISBEWine"/> and in some places it "represents rather wine made from the first drippings of the juice before the winepress was trodden. As such it would be particularly potent."<ref>Fitzsimmonds, p. 1254.</ref> It can certainly be alcoholic as in [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ho4:11 Ho 4:11].
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ge27:28;Nu18:12;Dt7:13;Jg9:13;2Ki18:32;2Ch32:28;Ne5:11;Ps4:7;Pr3:10;Is24:7;Jr31:12;Ho2:8;Jl1:10;Mi6:15;Hg1:11;Zc9:17 Ge 27:28; Nu 18:12; Dt 7:13; Jg 9:13; 2Ki 18:32; 2Ch 32:28; Ne 5:11; Ps 4:7; Pr 3:10; Is 24:7; Jr 31:12; Ho 2:8; Jl 1:10; Mi 6:15; Hg 1:11; Zc 9:17]; etc.<!--See note at yayin on how verses were chosen-->
|''methusma'' (Ho 4:11; see below), ''oinos'' (all other references; see below)<ref>All references from Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 366 (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|שכר
|align=center|''shekar''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=07941 7941]
|"strong drink"; "denotes any inebriating drink with about 7–10 percent [[alcohol by volume|alcoholic content]], not hard liquor, because there is no evidence of [[distilled beverage|distilled liquor]] in ancient times.... It was made from either fruit and/or [[barley beer]]";<ref name="WaltkeP505"/> the term can include wine as in [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Nu28:7 Nu 28:7], but generally it is used in combination with it ("wine and strong drink") to encompass all varieties of intoxicants<ref>Edwards (1915a).</ref>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lv10:9;Nu6:3;Dt14:26;Jg13:4;1Sa1:15;Ps69:12;Pr20:1;Is5:11;Mi2:11 Lv 10:9; Nu 6:3; Dt 14:26; Jg 13:4; 1Sa 1:15; Ps 69:12; Pr 20:1; Is 5:11; Mi 2:11]; etc.<!--See note at yayin on how verses were chosen-->
|''methê'' ("string drink, drunkenness"),<ref name="methe">[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2365616 Entry for ''methê''] in Liddell et al.</ref> ''methusma'' (see below), ''oinos'' (see below), ''sikera'' (see below)<ref>All references from Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 358 (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|חמר
|align=center|''chemer'' corresponding to the Aramaic ''chamar''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=02561 2561] and [http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=02561 2562]
|"wine"; the word "conveys the idea of 'foaming,' as in the process of fermentation, or when poured out. It is derived from the root ''hamar'', meaning 'to boil up'"<ref name="Eastons"/>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Dt32:14;Is27:2;Ezr6:9;7:22;Da5:1,2,4 Dt 32:14; Is 27:2; Ezr 6:9; 7:22; Da 5:1,2,4]
|''methê'' ("string drink, drunkenness"),<ref name="methe"/> ''oinos'' (see below)<ref>All references from Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 260 (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|עסיס
|align=center|'<!--This fixes a formatting problem-->''asis''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=06071 6071]
|"sweet wine" or "new wine", the vintage of the current year with intoxicating power<ref name="Eastons"/>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=SS8:2;Is49:26;Jl1:5;3:18;Am9:13 SS 8:2; Is 49:26; Jl 1:5; 3:18; Am 9:13]
|''glukasmos'' ("sweetness, sweet wine"),<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2322345 Entry for ''glukasmos''] in Liddell et al.</ref> ''methê'' ("strong drink, "drunkenness"),<ref name="methe"/> ''nama'', ''oinos neos'' ("new wine")<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2370365 Entry for ''neos''] in Liddell et al.</ref><ref>All references from Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 321 (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|חמץ
|align=center|''chomets''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=02558 2558]
|vinegar, which was made from wine or other fermented beverage and used as a condiment or, when mixed with water, a slightly intoxicating drink<ref>Kellermann, pp. 487–493.</ref><ref name="EastonVinegar">M. G. Easton (1897a).</ref><ref name="ISBEVinegar">B. S. Easton (1915a).</ref>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Nu6:3;Ru2:14;Ps69:21;Pr10:26;25:20 Nu 6:3; Ru 2:14; Ps 69:21; Pr 10:26; 25:20]
|''omphax'' ("unripe or sour grape"),<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2373965 Entry for ''omphax''] in Liddell et al.</ref> ''oxos'' (see below)<ref>All references from Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 260 (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|שמר
|align=center|''shemar'' (used in the plural: ''shemarim'')
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=08105 8105]
|[[Lees (fermentation)|lees]] or dregs of wine; "wine that has been kept on the lees, and therefore old wine"<ref name="Eastons"/> ("if [the wine] were designed to be kept for some time a certain amount of lees was added to give it body")<ref>Smith.</ref>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ps75:8;Is25:6;Jr48:11;Zp1:12 Ps 75:8; Is 25:6; Jr 48:11; Zp 1:12]
|''oinos'' (see below), ''trugias'' ("full of lees")<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%23105667 Entry for ''trugias''] in Liddell et al.</ref><ref>All references from Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 361 (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|סבא
|align=center|''sobhe''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=05435 5435]
|drink, liquor, wine
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is1:22;Ho4:18;Na1:10 Is 1:22; Ho 4:18; Na 1:10]
|''oinos'' (see below)<ref>Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 310 (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|ממסך
|align=center|''mamsak'' and ''mesekh''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=04469 4469] and [http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=04538 4538]
|"mixed drink," "mixed wine," "drink-offering;" the word is "properly a mixture of wine and water with spices that increase its stimulating properties."<ref name="Eastons"/>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ps75:8;Pr23:30;Is65:11 Ps 75:8; Pr 23:30; Is 65:11]
|''kerasma'' ("mixture")<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2356738 Entry for ''kerasma''] in Liddell et al.</ref><ref>Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 291f (appendix).</ref>
|-
|align=center|מזג
|align=center|''mezeg''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/view.cgi?number=04197 4197]
|"mixture", "mixed wine"
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=SS7:2 SS 7:2]
|''krama'' ("mixture, especially mixed wine")<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2359603 Entry for ''krama''] in Liddell et al.</ref><ref>Muraoka index in Hatch and Redpath, p. 288 (appendix).</ref>
|}


Only a small range of hangeul syllables are valid for each type of vehicle. Some of them identify more specific vehicle types; e.g., ''heo'' (허) is only used for rental cars. Some special plates have the hangeul prefix replaced by a circled hangeul word.
=== Greek ===
* [[Diplomat]]'s cars: "diplomat" (외교)
Unlike Hebrew, which has a variety of words for alcoholic beverages, Koine Greek uses five primary words:
* [[Construction]] vehicles: "[[commerce]]" (상품) - These will have the province name/vehicle class replaced by an organization name.
* National [[government]] vehicles: "nation" (국) - These have no province name.


The serial number is always four digits, 0-9. [[Leading zero]]s are included in the serial number.
{|border=1 class="wikitable"
!Greek !! Transliteration !! Strong's no. !! Meaning<ref>All meanings derived from ''The New Testament Greek Lexicon'' except where noted. Specific links are given in the "Strong's no." column.</ref> !! Septuagint references !! New Testament references
|-
|align=center|οίνος
|align=center|''oinos''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3631 3631]
|the common word translated "wine" in the New Testament and Septuagint.<ref name="Eastons"/><ref>Compare the [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2372551 entry for ''oinos''] in Liddell et al.</ref>
|<!-- Omitting link since it doesn't always reflect the Septuagint, and none of the online sources I have found for a translation of the LXX allow searching for multiple passages at once. --Flex --> Ge 9:21 (translating ''yayin''); Dt 7:13 (translating ''tirosh''); 23:14 (translating ''chemer''); Ps 68:12 (69:12 in the Hebrew numbering, translating ''shekar''); Is 1:22 (translating ''sobhe''); 25:6 (translating ''shemarim''); 49:26 (tanslating '<!--This fixes a formatting problem-->''asis''); etc.<ref>Hatch and Redpath, pp. 983f.</ref>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt9:17;Mk2:22;Lk1:15;Jn2:3;Ro14:21;Ep5:18;1Ti3:8;Ti2:3;Re6:6 Mt 9:17; Mk 2:22; Lk 1:15; Jn 2:3; Ro 14:21; Ep 5:18; 1Ti 3:8; Ti 2:3; Re 6:6]; etc.
|-
|align=center|γλευκος
|align=center|''gleukos''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=1098 1098]
|"sweet wine" (sometimes rendered "new wine"), which was intoxicating.<ref name="Eastons" /><ref>Compare the [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2322293 entry for ''gleukos''] in Liddell et al.</ref>
|Jb 32:19<ref>Hatch and Redpath, p. 270.</ref>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ac2:13 Ac 2:13]
|-
|align=center|σίκερα
|align=center|''sikera''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=4608 4608]
|a Hebrew [[loanword]] from ''shekar'' (see [[#Hebrew|above]]) meaning "strong drink."<ref>Compare the [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2394102 entry for ''sikera''] in Liddell et al.</ref>
| Lv 10:9; Nu 6:3; 28:7; Dt 14:26; 29:6 (29:5 in the Hebrew numbering); Jg 13:4,7,14; Is 5:11,22; 24:9; 28:7; 29:9<ref>Hatch and Redpath, p. 1266.</ref>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk1:15 Lk 1:15]
|-
|align=center|όξος
|align=center|''oxos''
|align=center|[http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3960 3690]
|vinegar, sour wine; could be made from grape wine or other fermented beverages; when mixed with water, it was a common, cheap drink of the poor and of the [[Roman army|Roman soldiers]]<ref>Heidland, pp. 288f.</ref><ref name="EastonVinegar"/><ref name="ISBEVinegar"/><ref>Compare the [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2374226 entry for ''oxos''] in Liddell et al.</ref>
|Nu 6:3; Ru 2:14; Ps 68:21 (69:21 in the Hebrew numbering); Pr 25:20<ref>Hatch and Redpath, p. 1001.</ref>
|[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt27:48;Mk15:36;Lk23:36;Jn19:29-30 Mt 27:48; Mk 15:36; Lk 23:36; Jn 19:29f]
|-
|align=center|μέθυσμα
|align=center|''methusma''
|align=center|None
|an intoxicating drink<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2365673 Entry for ''methusma''] in Liddell et al.</ref>
|Jd 13:4,7,15; 1Ki 1:11,15; Ho 4:11 (translating ''tirosh''); Mi 2:11; Jr 13:13 (all translating ''shekar'' except where noted)<ref>Hatch and Redpath, p. 908.</ref>
|None, but compare the related words ''methê'' ("drunkenness"),<ref>Thayer, p. 395.</ref><ref>[http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3178 Strong's 3178]</ref> ''methusos'' ("drunken"),<ref>Thayer, p. 396.</ref><ref>[http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3183 Strong's 3183]</ref> etc.
|}


When installed on a vehicle, the rear plate features an official seal over one of the retaining [[screw]]s to deter tampering or theft.
=== Alcoholic content ===
''Yayin'' and ''oinos'' (which in the Septuagint also often translates most of the Hebrew words for alcoholic beverages listed above)<ref name="ISBEWine"/><ref>Hatch and Redpath, pp. 983.</ref> are commonly translated "wine," but the two are also rarely, and perhaps figuratively or anticipatorily,<ref>Gentry (1991).</ref> used in the Bible to refer to freshly pressed juice.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is16:10;Jr48:33 Is 16:10; Jr 48:33]</ref> For this reason, prohibitionist and some abstentionist Christians (see [[Christianity and alcohol]] on the different viewpoints) object to taking the default meaning to be fermented beverages,<ref>Reynolds (1989): "[W]herever ''oinos'' [Greek for 'wine'] appears in the New Testament, we may understand it as unfermented grape juice unless the passage clearly indicates that the inspired writer was speaking of an intoxicating drink."</ref><ref>Moses, p. 621: "Wherever the Scriptures speak of wine as a comfort, a blessing or a libation to God, and rank it with such articles as corn and oil, they mean – they can mean only – such wine as contained no alcohol that could have a mischievous tendency; that wherever they denounce it, prohibit it and connect it with drunkenness and reveling, they can mean only alcoholic or intoxicating wines." Quoted in Reynolds (1989).</ref><ref name="Bacchiocchi">Bacchiocchi.</ref><ref name="MacArthurDrunk2">MacArthur "Living in the Spirit: Be Not Drunk with Wine – Part 2".</ref><ref>Earle: "''Oinos'' is used in the Septuagint for both fermented and unfermented grape juice. Since it can mean either one, it is valid to insist that in some cases it may simply mean grape juice and not fermented wine."</ref><ref>D. Miller: "The term oinos was used by the Greeks to refer to unfermented grape juice every bit as much as fermented juice. Consequently, the interpreter must examine the biblical context in order to determine whether fermented or unfermented liquid is intended."</ref><ref>Lees and Burns, pp. 431–446.</ref><ref>Patton: "Oinos is a generic word, and, as such, includes all kinds of wine and all stages of the juice of the grape, and sometimes the clusters and even the vine...."</ref> but there is a broad consensus that the words did ordinarily refer to alcoholic beverages.<ref name="WaltkeP127"/><ref name="COE"/><ref name="Eastons"/><ref name="Ewing">Ewing, p. 824 (emphasis in original): There is nothing known in the East of anything called 'wine' which is unfermented.... The wine used by the Jews in Palestine – people most conservative in their religious customs – at the Passover, is of the ordinary kind. And there is no trace of any tradition among them of a change having been introduced. Their attitude towards the drinker of unfermented grape juice may be gathered from the saying in ''Pirke Aboth'' (iv. 28), 'He who learns from the young, to what is he like? to one who eats unripe grapes and ''drinks wine from his vat'' [that is, unfermented juice].'"</ref><ref>C. Hodge, p. 3:616: "That [oinos] in the Bible, when unqualified by such terms as ''new'', or ''sweet'', means the fermented juice of the grape, is hardly an open question. It has never been questioned in the Church, if we except a few Christians of the present day. And it may safely be said that there is not a scholar on the continent of Europe, who has the least doubt on the subject."</ref><ref>A. A. Hodge, pp. 347f: "'Wine,' according to the absolutely unanimous, unexceptional testimony of every scholar and missionary, is in its essence 'fermented grape juice.' Nothing else is wine.... There has been absolutely universal consent on this subject in the Christian Church until modern times, when the practice has been opposed, not upon change of evidence, but solely on prudential considerations." Quoted in Mathison (2001).</ref><ref name="SchaffHerzog">Beecher, p. 472: "The Scriptures, rightly understood, are thus the strongest bulwark of a true doctrine of total abstinence, so false exegesis of the Scriptures by temperance advocates, including false theories of unfermented wine, have done more than almost anything else to discredit the good cause. The full abandonment of these bad premises would strengthen the cause immeasurably."</ref><ref name="ASB">Kaiser and Garrett: "Then as now, there were many varieties of wine, including red, white and mixed wines. The Old Testament employs a number of words for different kinds of wine. Precise translations for the Hebrew words are elusive since we do not know exactly how they differ from each other, but translators regularly use terms such as 'wine', 'new wine', 'spiced wine' and 'sweet wine'. Passages such as Hosea 4:11 make clear that these wines were alcoholic and intoxicating; there is no basis for suggesting that either the Greek or the Hebrew terms for wine refer to unfermented grape juice."</ref><ref>Entries for ''yayin'' and ''shekar'' in Harris et al., pp. 1:376 and 2:927.</ref><ref name="MacArthurQ&A">MacArthur, "Bible Questions and Answers"</ref><ref>Mathison (2001): "The testimony of historic Presbyterians and [[Baptist]]s is remarkable in its agreement on this subject. Until the middle of the 19th century, the use of wine in the Lord’s Supper in accordance with Christ’s institution was a non-issue for most of these theologians. Because no one since the early [[gnosticism|gnostics]] had made any argument or attempt to change the elements, they simply state the use of these elements as a given fact."</ref><ref name="JE">Hirsch and Eisenstein: "'Yayin' was the ordinary matured, fermented wine, 'tirosh' was a new wine, and 'shekar' was an old, powerful wine ('strong drink'). The red wine was the better and stronger.... Perhaps the wine of Helbon ([<!--intentional double brackets-->[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ez27:18 Ez 27:18]<!--intentional double brackets-->]) and the wine of Lebanon ([<!--intentional double brackets-->[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ho14:7 Ho 14:7]<!--intentional double brackets-->]) were white wines."</ref><ref>Pierard, p. 28: "No evidence whatsoever exists to support the notion that the wine mentioned in the Bible was unfermented grape juice. When juice is referred to, it is not called wine ([http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ge40:11 Gen. 40:11]). Nor can 'new wine' ... mean unfermented juice, because the process of chemical change begins almost immediately after pressing."</ref><ref>Edwards (1915b): "To insist on a distinction between intoxicating and unfermented wine is a case of unjustifiable special pleading."</ref>


These plates are always issued [[embossing|embossed]]; flat plates are unofficial replicas. [[Die (manufacturing)|Dies]] varied slightly over time. Starting in 1997, the four-digit serial number was repeated on the plate, spelled out in small stamped hangeul type on the lower left.
While the wines drunk in the times depicted in the Hebrew Bible were not diluted with water,<ref name="ISBEWine"/><ref>Compare [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is1:22 Is 1:22].</ref><ref>Clarke, commentary on Is 1:22: "It is remarkable that whereas the Greeks and Latins by mixed wine always understood wine diluted and lowered with water, the Hebrews on the contrary generally mean by it wine made stronger and more inebriating by the addition of higher and more powerful ingredients, such as honey, spices, defrutum, (or wine inspissated by boiling it down to two-thirds or one- half of the quantity,) myrrh, mandragora, opiates, and other strong drugs."</ref> after the conquest of [[Palestine]] by [[Alexander the Great]], the [[Hellenism|Hellenistic]] custom of diluting wine had taken hold such that the author of book of [[2 Maccabees]], which was written somewhere around the end of the 2nd century BC and the first half of the 1st century BC, speaks of diluted wine as "a more pleasant drink" and of both undiluted wine and unmixed water as "harmful"<ref>[http://nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/2maccabees/2maccabees15.htm#v39 2 Mac 15:39] (Vulgate numbering: [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2Mac15:40;&version=63 2 Mac 15:40])</ref> or "distasteful."<ref name="ISBEWine"/>


====Colors====
==Biblical references==
*Private cars, government cars - green with white; or white with black (some cities)
The many biblical references to alcoholic beverages are both positive and negative, real and symbolic, descriptive and didactic. Wine was commonly drunk at most meals and was a staple of life in ancient Palestine.<ref>Maynard (1997b), pp. 374–376.</ref><ref>Compare [http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/judith/judith10.htm#v5 Jdt 10:5]; [http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/judith/judith12.htm#v1 12:1–2]</ref>
*Taxis, cars for hire - yellow with blue
*Construction vehicles - orange/red with white
*Diplomat's cars - blue with white


===Winemaking===
===2004-2006===
These plates are similar in appearance to the 1973-2003 series, with some changes to the information presented. The province name is omitted. The prefix on the bottom line is moved to the top line - right of the class number for regular series, and left of the class number for the circled special series (diplomat, construction, etc). The serial number is printed larger to fill the entire bottom line, but still four digits for most plates, except for special series plates, which have six.
[[Image:MigdalHaemek5.jpg|thumb|right|Ancient [[wine press]] in Israel with the pressing area in the center and the collection vat off to the bottom left.]]
A number of passages refer to the practice of [[wine making]]. Both the climate and land of Palestine, where most of both the Hebrew and Christian scriptures takes place, were well-suited to growing grapes,<ref name="EwingGeneral">Ewing, p. 824.</ref> and the wine that the vineyards produced was a valued commodity in ancient times, both for local consumption and for its value in trade.<ref>See Broshi (1984), ''passim'' (for instance, p. 29: Palestine was "a country known for its good wines").</ref><ref>Compare [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2Ch2:3,10 2Ch 2:3,10]</ref> Vineyards were protected from robbers and animals by walls, hedges, and manned watchtowers.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ps80:8-15;Is5:1-2;Mk12:1;SS2:15 Ps 80:8–15; Is 5:1f; Mk 12:1; compare SS 2:15]</ref>


=== 2006-present ===
The harvest time brought much joy and play,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is16:10;Jr48:33 Compare Is 16:10; Jr 48:33]</ref> as "[m]en, women and children took to the vineyard, often accompanied by the sound of music and song, from late August to September to bring in the grapes."<ref name="Wine Making">Maynard (1997c), pp. 374f.</ref><ref>Broshi (1984), p. 24.</ref> Some grapes were eaten immediately, while others were turned into raisins. Most of them, however, were put into the [[wine press]] where the men and boys trampled them, also often to music.<ref name="Wine Making"/>
A new system has been phased in, starting with plates for government vehicles in 2006 and appearing on privately-owned vehicles now. The color scheme is now a simple black-on-white design. Dimensions have been slightly altered; the new plates are slightly less tall, only 155 mm. They are also available in a size format similar to the plates used in the [[European Union]], 520 mm wide by 110 mm tall. The numbering follows the pattern of the 2004 plate series, but all on one line. From left to right, the plate has the vehicle class, hangeul prefix, and four-digit serial number. Truck and bus plates remain the same width, but shrink slightly to 200 mm tall, and incorporate all the information into one line.


== External links ==
The fermentation process started within six to twelve hours after pressing, and the [[must]] was usually left in the collection vat for a few days to allow the initial, "tumultuous" stage of fermentation to pass. The wine makers soon transferred it either into large earthenware jars, which were then sealed, or, if the wine were to be transported elsewhere, into wineskins (that is, partially tanned goat-skins, sewn up where the legs and tail had protruded but leaving the opening at the neck).<ref name="EwingGeneral"/> After six weeks, fermentation was complete, and the wine was filtered into larger containers and either sold for consumption or stored in a cellar or [[cistern]], lasting for three to four years.<ref name="Wine Making"/><ref name="Broshi26">Broshi (1984), p. 26.</ref> Even after a year of aging, the vintage was still called "new wine," and more aged wines were preferred.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk5:39;Is25:6 Lk 5:39; compare Is 25:6]</ref><ref>Dommershausen, pp. 60–62.</ref><ref name="Broshi26"/>
* {{ko icon}} [http://www.insniz.com/at/at_i_b1001.jsp 자동차 번호판의 비밀] - Description and diagrams of plates.
* [http://www.olavsplates.com/south_korea.html Olav's Plates] - Photos of real plates.
* [http://www.licenseplatemania.com/landenframes/zuidkorea_fr.htm License Plate Mania] - More photos.


{{Asia in topic|Vehicle registration plates of}}
Spices and scents were often added to wine in order to hide "defects" that arose from storage that was often not sufficient to prevent all spoiling.<ref>Broshi (1984), p. 27.</ref> One might expect about 10% of any given cellar of wine to have been ruined completely, but [[vinegar]] was also created intentionally for dipping bread<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ru2:14 Ru 2:14]</ref> among other uses.<ref>Broshi (1984), p. 36.</ref>


[[Category:Vehicle registration plates by country|Korea, South]]
The [[Sukkot|Feast of Booths]] was a prescribed holiday that immediately followed the harvest and pressing of the grapes.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Dt16:13-15 Dt 16:13–15]</ref>
[[Category:Transportation in South Korea]]


[[ko:대한민국의 차량 번호판]]
=== Drunkenness ===
[[Image:Drunkenness of Noah EUR.jpg|right|thumb|350px|''The Drunkenness of Noah'' by [[Giovanni Bellini]]]]
''[[Easton's Bible Dictionary (1897)|Easton's Bible Dictionary]]'' says, "The sin of [[drunkenness]] ... must have been not uncommon in the olden times, for it is mentioned either metaphorically or literally more than seventy times in the Bible,"<ref name="Eastons"/><ref>Maynard (1997a), p. 114: "Excessive drinking was not uncommon in the ancient Near East."</ref> though some suggest it was a "vice of the wealthy rather than of the poor."<ref>Raymond, p. 26.</ref><ref>Edwards (1915b): "It ... is almost invariably the well-to-do who are charged with this vice [drunkenness] in the Bible. There is no evidence to prove that it prevailed to any considerable extent among the common people. Intoxicants were then an expensive luxury, beyond the reach of the poorer classes."</ref> Biblical interpreters generally agree that the Hebrew and Christian scriptures condemn ordinary drunkenness as a serious spiritual and moral failing<ref>Raymond, p. 90: Drunkenness "is not merely a disgusting personal habit and social vice, but a sin which bars the gates of [[Heaven]], desecrates the body, which is now in a special sense the dwelling-place of the [[Holy Spirit]], and stains the mystical body of Christ, the Church."</ref> in passages such as these (all from the [[NIV]]):

* [[Book of Proverbs|Proverbs]] 20:1: "Wine is a mocker and beer a brawler; whoever is led astray by them is not wise."
* Proverbs 23:20f: "Do not join those who drink too much wine or gorge themselves on meat, for drunkards and gluttons become poor, and drowsiness clothes them in rags."
* Proverbs 23:29f: "Who has woe? Who has sorrow? Who has strife? Who has complaints? Who has needless bruises? Who has bloodshot eyes? Those who linger over wine, who go to sample bowls of mixed wine."
* [[Book of Isaiah|Isaiah]] 5:11f: "Woe to those who rise early in the morning to run after their drinks, who stay up late at night till they are inflamed with wine. They have harps and lyres at their banquets, tambourines and flutes and wine, but they have no regard for the deeds of the [[Tetragrammaton|{{LORD}}]], no respect for the work of his hands."
* [[Book of Hosea|Hosea]] 7:2,5: "But they do not realize that I [God] remember all their evil deeds.... On the day of the festival of our king the princes become inflamed with wine, and he joins hands with the mockers."
* [[Gospel of Luke|Luke]] 21:34: "Be on guard, so that your hearts will not be weighted down with dissipation and drunkenness and the worries of life, and that day [of Christ's return] will not come on you suddenly like a trap."
* [[Epistle to the Romans|Romans]] 13:13: "Let us behave decently, as in the daytime, not in orgies and drunkenness, not in sexual immorality and debauchery, not in dissension and jealousy."
* [[First Epistle to the Corinthians|1 Corinthians]] 5:11: "But now I am writing you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is ... a drunkard.... With such a man do not even eat."
* 1 Corinthians 6:9f: "Do you not know that the wicked will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither ... the greedy nor drunkards ... will inherit the kingdom of God."
* [[Epistle to the Galatians|Galatians]] 5:19–21: "The acts of the sinful nature are obvious: ... drunkenness, orgies, and the like. I warn you, as I did before, that those who live like this will not inherit the kingdom of God."
* [[Epistle to the Ephesians|Ephesians]] 5:18: "Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit."
*[[First Epistle to Timothy|1 Timothy]] 3:2f: "Now the overseer [traditionally ''bishop''] must be above reproach, the husband of but one wife, temperate, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable, able to teach, not given to drunkenness [etc.]."

[[Image:GENTILESCHI Judith.jpg|left|thumb|''Judith Beheading Holofernes'' by [[Artemisia Gentileschi]]]]
Additionally, the consequences of the drunkenness of Noah<ref name="Ge9:20–27"/> and [[Lot (Bible)|Lot]]<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ge+19:31-38 Ge 19:31–38]</ref> "were intended to serve as examples of the dangers and repulsiveness of intemperance."<ref>Broshi (1984), p. 33.</ref> The title character in the [[Book of Judith]], one of the [[Apocrypha]], uses the drunkenness of the [[Assyria]]n general Holofernes to behead him in a heroic victory for the Jewish people and an embarrassing defeat for the general, who had schemed to seduce Judith.<ref>[http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/judith/judith12.htm#v1 Jdt 12]-[http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/judith/judith13.htm#v1 13]</ref>

One of the original sections of the book of [[1 Esdras]],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hope.edu/academic/religion/bandstra/BIBLE/1ES/1ES3.HTM |title=1 Es 3:17b–24 |accessdate=2007-06-06}}</ref> a book accepted as deuterocanonical by the Eastern church but rejected by Judaism and the Western church including Catholicism, describes a debate between three courtiers of [[Darius I of Persia]] over whether wine, the king, or women (but above all the truth) is the strongest. The argument for wine does not prevail in the contest, but it provides a vivid description of the ancients' view of the power wine can wield in excessive quantity.<ref>Edwards (1915b).</ref>

A disputed but important passage is Proverbs 31:4–7: "It is not for kings, O Lemuel – not for kings to drink wine, not for rulers to crave beer, lest they drink and forget what the law decrees, and deprive all the oppressed of their rights. Give beer to those who are perishing, wine to those who are in anguish; let them drink and forget their poverty and remember their misery no more." Some Christians assert that alcohol was prohibited to kings at all times,<ref name="MacArthurDrunk3">MacArthur, "Living in the Spirit: Be Not Drunk with Wine – Part 3".</ref> while most interpreters contend that only inappropriate use is in view here.<ref>Waltke (2005), p. 507: "A total prohibition [of wine for kings], says Ross [''Proverbs'', p. 1128.], 'would be unheard of in the ancient courts,' and v. 6 assumes that the king has wine cellars."</ref><ref name="Wesley">Wesley.</ref><ref name="Henry">Henry, ''Commentary'' vol. III.</ref><ref name="Gill">Gill, "Commentary on Pr 31:4–7".</ref> Some argue that the latter instructions regarding the perishing should be understood as sarcasm when compared with the preceding verses,<ref>Waltke (2005), p. 508.</ref><ref>Compare the notes on Proverbs 31:6–7 in Pratt.</ref><ref name="Bacchiocchi"/> while others contend the beer and wine are intended as a cordial to raise the spirits of the perishing,<ref name="Henry"/><ref name="Gill"/><ref name="MacArthurQ&A"/> while some suggest that the Bible is here authorizing alcohol as an [[anesthetic]].<ref name="MacArthurDrunk3"/><ref name="MacArthurQ&A"/><ref name="Clarke">Clarke, commentary on Pr 31:6, but compare his commentary on Ps 104:15.</ref><ref name="Meyers1">Meyers.</ref> Moreover, some suggest that the wines that Jesus was offered at his [[crucifixion]]<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt+27:34,48;Mk+15:23,36;Lk+23:36;Jn+19:28-30 Mt 27:34,48; Mk 15:23,36; Lk 23:36; Jn 19:28–30]</ref> were also intended as an anesthetic.<ref name="Henry"/><ref name="Clarke"/><ref name="Rayburn">Rayburn (2001a).</ref><ref>Seesemann, p. 164</ref>

=== Sacrifices and feasts ===
The Hebrew scriptures prescribed wine for use in festal celebrations and [[Korban|sacrificial rituals]].<ref name="Eastons"/> In particular, fermented wine was presented daily as a [[libation|drink offering]],<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ex+29:38-41;Nu+28:7;Ho9:4 Ex 29:38–41; Nu 28:7; compare Ho 9:4]</ref> as part of the [[first Fruits|firstfruits]] offering,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lv+23:9-14 Lv 23:9–14]; compare [http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/judith/judith11.htm#v12 Jdt 11:12–13]</ref> and as part of various supplementary offerings.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Nu+15:1-11 Nu 15:1–11]</ref> Wine was kept in the [[Temple in Jerusalem|temple]],<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1Ch+9:29;Jr+35:1-5 1Ch 9:29; compare Jr 35:1–5] and compare [[Josephus]]'s ''[[The Wars of the Jews]]'' [http://www.ccel.org/ccel/josephus/works/files/war-5.htm 5.13.6]: "... the vessels of that sacred wine and oil, which the priests kept [in the temple] to be poured on the burnt-offerings, and which lay in the inner court of the temple, and distributed it among the multitude, who, in their anointing themselves and drinking, used (each of them) above an [[Ancient Hebrew units of measurement|hin]] of them."</ref> and the king had his own private stores.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1Ch+27:27 1Ch 27:27]; compare Waltke on Proverbs 31:4–7: "v. 6 assumes that the king has wine cellars."</ref>

[[Image:Última Cena - Da Vinci 5.jpg|right|thumb|250px|''[[The Last Supper (Leonardo)|The Last Supper]]'' by [[Leonardo da Vinci]]]]
The banquet hall was called a "house of wine,"<ref>See translation and marginal note in the [[English Standard Version|ESV]] for [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=SS+2:4&version=47 SS 2:4].</ref> and wine was used as the usual drink at most secular and religious feasts, including feasts of celebration<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1Ch+12:38-40;jn+2:1-11;Job+1:13,18;Ne+8:9-12 1Ch 12:38–40; Jn 2:1–11; Job 1:13,18; Ne 8:9–12]</ref> and hospitality,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Pr+9:2,5;Est+1:7-8;5:6 Pr 9:2,5; Est 1:7f; 5:6]; compare those of the unfaithful in [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is+65:11-12 Is 65:11–12]</ref> tithe celebrations,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Dt+14:22-29 Dt 14:22–29]</ref> and official [[Jewish holiday]]s such as [[Passover]].<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt+26:17-30;Mk+14:12-16;Lk+22:7-13 Mt 26:17–30; Mk 14:12–16; Lk 22:7–13]. The [[Gospel of John]] offers some difficulties when compared with the [[Synoptic Gospels|Synoptists's]] accounts on whether the meal was part of the Passover proper. In any case, it seems that the Last Supper was most likely somehow associated with Passover, even if it wasn't the paschal feast itself. See the discussion in Morris, pp. 684–695.</ref> [[Jesus]] instituted the [[Eucharist]] at the [[Last Supper]], which took place at a Passover celebration, and set apart the bread and wine<ref>Seesemann, p. 162: "Wine is specifically mentioned as an integral part of the passover meal no earlier than [[Jubilees|Jub.]] 49:6 ['... all Israel was eating the flesh of the paschal lamb, and drinking the wine ...'], but there can be no doubt that it was in use long before." P. 164: "In the accounts of the Last Supper the term [''wine''] occurs neither in the [[Synoptic Gospels|Synoptists]] nor Paul. It is obvious, however, that according to custom Jesus was proffering wine in the cup over which He pronounced the blessing; this may be seen especially from the solemn [''fruit of the vine''] (Mark 14:25 and par.) which was borrowed from Judaism." Compare "fruit of the vine" as a formula in the [[Mishnah]], Tractate Berakoth 6.1.</ref><ref>Calvin (1555): "[T]he words related by Matthew – ''I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine'' – plainly show that what he delivered to the disciples to drink was ''wine''." The issue of fermented vs. unfermented grape juice was not an issue in Calvin's day, and he is here instead opposing the view of the Catholic Church that the cup contained [[transubstantiation|transubstantiated]] blood. Yet it is clear that he took "fruit of the vine" to mean ''wine''.</ref><ref name="Ewing"/><ref name="ProtTrans1">Mathison (2000).</ref><ref>Raymond, p. 80: "All the wines used in basic religious services in Palestine were fermented."</ref> that were present there as symbols of the [[New Covenant]]. [[Paul of Tarsus|St. Paul]] later chides the [[Corinth]]ians for becoming drunk on wine served at their attempted celebrations of the Lord's Supper.<ref name="1Co11:20–22">[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1Co+11:20-22 1Co 11:20–22]</ref>

Jews also customarily partook of bread and wine at burials for the dead.<ref>[http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/tobit/tobit4.htm#v17 Tob 4:17] (Vulgate numbering: [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Tob4:18;&version=63 4:18]); compare [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jr16:7 Jr 16:7]</ref>

===Bringer of joy===
The Bible also speaks of wine in general terms as a bringer and concomitant of joy, particularly in the context of nourishment and feasting:<ref>See also [http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/judith/judith12.htm#v13 Jdt 12:13,17–20] (Vulgate numbering: [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jdt12:12,17-20&version=63 12:12, 17–20]).</ref>

*[[Book of Judges|Judges]] 9:13 [[NASB]] (in a [[parable]] about a king): "But the vine said to them, 'Shall I leave my new wine, which cheers God and men, and go to wave over the trees?'&nbsp;"
*[[Psalms|Psalm]] 4:7 (in a positive, ''[[a fortiori]]'' comparison): "You have filled my heart with greater joy than when their grain and new wine abound."
*Psalm 104:14f: "[The {{LORD}}] makes ... plants for man to cultivate – bringing forth food from the earth: wine that gladdens the heart of man, oil to make his face shine, and bread that sustains his heart."
*[[Ecclesiastes]] 9:7: "Go, eat your food with gladness, and drink your wine with a joyful heart, for it is now that God favors what you do."
*Ecclesiastes 10:19a: "A feast is made for laughter, and wine makes life merry."
*[[Book of Zechariah|Zechariah]] 9:17: "How attractive and beautiful [the {{LORD}}'s people] will be! Grain will make the young men thrive, and new wine the young women."
*Zechariah 10:7: "The [[Tribe of Ephraim|Ephraimites]] will become like mighty men, and their hearts will be glad as with wine. Their children will see it and be joyful; their hearts will rejoice in the {{LORD}}."

The book of [[Ben Sira|Sirach]] discusses the use of wine in several places,<ref>[http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/sirach/sirach31.htm#v25 Sir 31:25–32]; [http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/sirach/sirach32.htm#v5 32:5f]; compare [http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/sirach/sirach9.htm#v10 9:10]; [http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/sirach/sirach40.htm#v20 40:20]; [http://www.ccel.org/ccel/bible/kjv.Sir.49.html 49:1 (KJV)] ([[Vulgate]] numbering: [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Si%2031:30-42;32:7-8;9:14-15;40:20;49:2&version=63 31:30–42; 32:7f; compare 9:14f; 40:20; 49:2])</ref> emphasizing joy, prudence, and common sense:<ref>Edwards (1915b).</ref> "Wine is very life to man if taken in moderation. Does he really live who lacks the wine which was created for his joy? Joy of heart, good cheer and merriment are wine drunk freely at the proper time. Headache, bitterness and disgrace is wine drunk amid anger and strife" (31:27–29, [[New American Bible|NAB]]).

=== Vows and duties ===
[[Image:Titian-John the Baptist.jpg|thumb|[[Titian]]'s John the Baptist, who held to a vow that excluded wine.]]
Certain persons were forbidden in the Hebrew Bible to partake of wine because of their vows and duties.<ref>Edwards (1915b): "Nowhere is the principle of total abstinence inculcated as a rule applicable to all. In particular cases it was recognized as a duty.... These, however, are isolated instances. Throughout the Old Testament the use of wine appears as practically universal.... Jesus and His apostles were not ascetics, and the New Testament gives no rough-and-ready prohibition of strong drink on principle."</ref> Kings were forbidden to abuse alcohol lest their judgments be unjust.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Pr+31:4-5 Pr 31:4f]; but compare the [[#Drunkenness|different views on these verses above]].</ref> It was forbidden to [[priest]]s on duty,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lv+10:9;Ez+44:21 Lv 10:9; compare Ez 44:21]</ref> though the priests were given "the finest new wine" from the first fruits offerings for drinking outside the [[tabernacle]] and temple.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Nu+18:12;Dt+12:17-19;18:3-5;Ex+22:29 Nu 18:12; Dt 12:17–19; 18:3–5; compare Ex 22:29]</ref>

The [[Nazirite|Naziritic vow]] excluded as part of its ascetic regimen not only wine, but also vinegar, grapes, and raisins,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Nu+6:2-4;Jg+13:4-5;Am+2:11-12 Nu 6:2–4; compare Jg 13:4–5; Am 2:11f]</ref> though when Nazirites completed the term of their vow, they were required to present wine as part of their sacrificial offerings and could drink of it.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Nu+6:13-20 Nu 6:13–20]</ref> While [[John the Baptist]] adopted such a regimen,<ref>Compare [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk+1:15 Lk 1:15].</ref> Jesus evidently did not during his three years of ministry depicted in the Gospels.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt+11:18-19;Lk+7:33-34;Mk14:25;Lk22:17-18 Mt 11:18f; Lk 7:33f; compare Mk 14:25; Lk 22:17f]</ref><ref name="RaymondP81">Raymond p. 81: "Not only did Jesus Christ Himself use and sanction the use of wine but also ... He saw nothing intrinsically evil in wine.[footnote citing [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt+15:11 Mt 15:11]<!--Intentional double bracket-->]"</ref>

The [[Rechabite]]s, a sub-tribe of the [[Kenite]]s, vowed never to drink wine, live in houses, or plant fields or vineyards,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jr+35 Jr 35]</ref> not because of any "threat to wise living" from these practices, but because of their commitment to a nomadic lifestyle by not being bound to any particular piece of land.<ref name="WaltkeP127"/> The Rechabites's strict obedience to the command of their father (rather than their nomadism and abstentionism) is commended and is contrasted with the failure of [[Kingdom of Judah|Judah]] and [[Jerusalem]] to listen to their God.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jr+35:16-17 Jr 35:16f]</ref>

During the [[Babylonian captivity]], [[Daniel]] and his fellow [[Jew]]s abstained from the meat and wine given to them by the king because they saw it as defiling in some way,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Da+1:1-16 Da 1:1–16]</ref> though precisely how these would have defiled the Jews is not apparent in the text.<ref>Rayburn (2001b) suggests the wine may have been used in pagan religious rituals.</ref> A later passage implies that Daniel did drink wine at times, though it may not have been the king's.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Da+10:2-3 Da 10:2f]</ref> Similarly, [[Book of Judith|Judith]] refused the [[Assyria]]n general's wine, though she drank wine from the stores she brought with her.<ref>[http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/judith/judith10.htm#v5 Jdt 10:5]; [http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab/bible/judith/judith12.htm#v1 12:1–2]</ref>

Christians are instructed regarding abstinence and their duty toward immature Christians: "All food is clean, but it is wrong for a man to eat anything that causes someone else to stumble. It is better not to eat meat or drink wine or to do anything else that will cause your brother to fall."<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ro+14:20-21 Ro 14:20b–21]</ref><ref>Raymond understands this to mean that "if an individual by drinking wine either causes others to err through his example or abets a social evil which causes others to succumb to its temptations, then in the interests of Christian love he ought to forego the temporary pleasures of drinking in the interests of heavenly treasures" (p. 87).</ref>

=== Symbolism and metaphor ===
The commonness and centrality of wine in daily life in biblical times is apparent from its many postitive and negative metaphorical uses throughout the Bible.<ref>Dommershausen, p. 64.</ref><ref>Raymond, p. 24: "The numerous allusions to the vine and wine in the Old Testament furnish an admirable basis for the study of its estimation among the people at large."</ref> Positively, free wine is used as a symbol of [[divine grace]],<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is+55:1-2 Is 55:1f]</ref> and wine is repeatedly compared to intimate love in the [[Song of Solomon]].<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=SS+1:4;4:10;7:6-9;8:2 SS 1:4; 4:10; 7:6–9; 8:2]</ref> Negatively, wine is [[personification|personified]]<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Pr+20:1 Pr 20:1]</ref> as a mocker ("[t]he most hardened apostate" in the Book of Proverbs whose chief sin is pride)<ref>Waltke (2004), p. 114.</ref> and beer a brawler (one who is "mocking, noisy, and restless").<ref name="WaltkeP127"/>

[[Image:Meeting of abraham and melchizadek.jpg|thumb|left|200px|''Meeting of Abraham and Melchizedek'' by [[Dirk Bouts|Dieric Bouts the Elder]]]]
Additionally, the [[chosen people]] and [[kingdom of God]] are compared to a divinely owned vine or vineyard in several places,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ps+80:8-15;Is+5:1-7;Jr+2:21;12:10;Mt+21:33-46;Mk+12:1-12;Lk+20:9-19;Jn+15:1-17 Ps 80:8–15; Is 5:1–7; Jr 2:21; 12:10; Mt 21:33–46; Mk 12:1–12; Lk 20:9–19; Jn 15:1–17]</ref> and the image of new wine fermenting in new wineskins, a process that would burst old wineskins,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt+9:17;Mk+2:22;Lk+5:37-38 Mt 9:17; Mk 2:22; Lk 5:37–38]</ref> represents that the new faith Jesus was bringing "cannot be contained within the framework of the old."<ref>Browning, p. 395.</ref> The complacent – those who are "lax in doing the Lord's work"<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jr+48:10 Jr 48:10]</ref> – are compared with "wine left on its dregs" too long such that it lacks a good taste and is of no value,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jr+48:11;Zp+1:12 Jr 48:11; Zp 1:12]</ref> and those who are corrupt are compared with "choice wine [that] is diluted with water."<ref name="Is1:22">[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is+1:22 Is 1:22]</ref>

Wine was also used as a symbol of blessing and judgment throughout the Bible. [[Melchizedek]] blessed and refreshed [[Abraham|Abram]]'s army with bread and wine;<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ge+14:18-19;Heb+7:1;2Sa+16:1-2 Ge 14:18f; compare Heb 7:1; 2Sa 16:1f]</ref> [[Isaac]] blessed [[Jacob]] by saying, "May God give you of heaven's dew and of earth's richness – an abundance of grain and new wine";<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ge+27:28 Ge 27:28]</ref> and when Jacob blessed his sons, he used a great abundance of wine as a symbol of [[Judah (biblical figure)|Judah]]'s prosperity.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ge+49:9-12 Ge 49:9–12]</ref> The nation of Israel was promised abundant wine and other central crops such as grain and oil<ref>M. S. Miller et al., p. 158f.</ref> if they kept God's [[covenant (biblical)|covenant]] commandments,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Dt+7:13;11:14;15:14;33:28;Pr+3:9-10;Jr+31:10-12;Ho+2:21-22;Jl+2:19,24;2Ki+18:31-32;2Ch+32:28;Ne+5:11;13:12 Dt 7:13; 11:14; 15:14; compare 33:28; Pr 3:9f; Jr 31:10–12; Ho 2:21–22; Jl 2:19,24; compare 2Ki 18:31–32; 2Ch 32:28; Ne 5:11; 13:12]</ref> and their wine would be taken away as a curse if the Israelites failed to keep the covenant.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Dt+28:39;28:51;Is+62:8;Ho+2:8-9;Jl+1:5-17;Mi+6:13-15;Zp+1:13;Hg+1:11 Dt 28:39; 28:51; compare Is 62:8; Ho 2:8–9; Jl 1:5–17; Mi 6:13–15; Zp 1:13; Hg 1:11]</ref>

Drinking a cup of strong wine to the dregs and getting drunk are sometimes presented as a symbol of God's judgment and wrath,<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jb+21:20;Ps+60:3;75:8;Is+51:17-23;63:6;Jr+13:12-14;25:15-29;49:12;51:7;La+4:21-22;Ezk+23:28-33;Na+1:9-10;Hab+2:15-16;Zc+12:2;Re+14:10;16:19 Ps 60:3; 75:8; Is 51:17–23; 63:6; Jr 13:12–14; 25:15–29; 49:12; 51:7; La 4:21f; Ezk 23:28–33; Na 1:9f; Hab 2:15f; Zc 12:2; Re 14:10; 16:19]; compare [[Psalms of Solomon|Ps Sol]] [http://www.goodnewsinc.net/othbooks/psalmsol.html 8:14]</ref> and Jesus alludes this cup of wrath, which he says he himself will drink, several times.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt+20:22;26:39,42;Lk+22:42;Jn+18:11 Mt 20:22; 26:39, 42; Lk 22:42; Jn 18:11]</ref> Similarly, the winepress is pictured as a tool of judgment where the resulting wine symbolizes the blood of the wicked who were crushed<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is+63:1-6;La+1:15;Jl+3:13;Re+14:18-20;19:15 Is 63:1–6; La 1:15; Jl 3:13; Re 14:18–20; 19:15]</ref> (hence the famous line "He [the Lord] is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored" in "[[The Battle Hymn of the Republic]]").<ref name="Coogan">Coogan, pp. 799f.</ref> Connected also to the cup of judgment is the wine of immorality, which the evil drink and which both brings and is part of the wrath of God.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jr+51:7;Re+14:8;17:2,4;18:3 Jr 51:7; Re 14:8; 17:2,4; 18:3]</ref>

[[Image:Parable of the Good Samaritan (detail) by Cornelis van Haarlem.jpg||thumb|Detail from ''The Good Samaritan'' by [[Cornelis van Haarlem]] showing the Samaritan pouring oil and wine on the injured man's wounds.]]
The [[Day of the Lord]], which is often understood by Christians to usher in the [[Messianic Age]], is depicted as a time when "[n]ew wine will drip from the mountains and flow from all the hills,"<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Am+9:13;Jl+3:18 Am 9:13; compare Jl 3:18]; [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=is+27:2;&version=49 Is 27:2 (NAS)]</ref> when God's people will "plant vineyards and drink their wine,"<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Am+9:14 Am 9:14]</ref> and when God himself "will prepare a feast of rich food for all peoples, a banquet of aged wine – the best of meats and the finest of wines."<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Is+25:6;Mt+8:11;22:2;Lk+13:29;14:15;22:28-30;Re+19:9 Is 25:6; compare Mt 8:11; 22:2; Lk 13:29; 14:15; 22:28–30; Re 19:9]</ref>

In the New Testament, Jesus uses wine at the Last Supper to signify the "New Covenant in [Jesus'] blood,"<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt+26:26-29;Mk+14:22-25;Lk+22:17-20;1Co+10:16;11:23-25 Mt 26:26–29; Mk 14:22–25; Lk 22:17–20; 1 Co 10:16; 11:23–25]</ref> but Christians differ over precisely how symbolic the wine is in the continuing ritual of the Eucharist (see [[Eucharistic theologies contrasted]]).<ref>Lincoln, p. 848.</ref>

===Medicinal uses===
Alcohol was used in ancient times for various medicinal ends, and the Bible refers to some of these practices. As discussed [[#Drunkenness|above]], it was likely used as an anesthetic to dull pain, and many interpreters suggest<ref name="Henry"/><ref name="Clarke"/><ref name="Rayburn"/><ref>Seesemann, p. 164.</ref> that it was in this capacity that wines were offered to Jesus at his [[crucifixion]].<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mt27:34,48;Mk15:23,36;Lk23:36;Jn19:28-30 Mt 27:34,48; Mk 15:23,36; Lk 23:36; Jn 19:28–30]</ref>

Secondly, in the [[Parable of the Good Samaritan]], Jesus tells a story about a man from [[Samaria]] who assists an injured man by, among other things, pouring oil and wine on his wounds.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lk10:34 Lk 10:34]</ref> Oil mixed with wine was a common remedy in the ancient world to cleanse wounds and assuage their pain.<ref>Gill, ''Exposition'' on Lk 10:34.</ref>

Lastly, St. Paul advises [[Timothy]] that he should not drink water only but should use a little wine for the sake of his stomach and frequent infirmities.<ref>[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1Ti5:23 1 Ti 5:23]</ref> Some have suggested this advice is particularly in reference to purifying low quality drinking water,<ref name="MacArthurDrunk3"/><ref>Guzig.</ref> while others suggest it was simply intended to help his digestion and general sickliness.<ref>Gill, ''Exposition'' on 1 Ti 5:23: "[The wine was intended] to help digestion, and to remove the disorders which might attend it."</ref><ref>Henry, ''Commentary'' on First Timothy, Chapter V: "Wine is most proper for sickly and weak people, whose stomachs are often out of order, and who labour under infirmities.... Wine should be used as a help, and not a hindrance, to our work and usefulness."</ref> Abstentionists generally regard this passage as a positive example of abstention from wine and see Paul's instructions as exceptional and purely for the sake of health,<ref name="MacArthurDrunk3"/> while other interpreters suggest that Timothy was "upright in his aims" but here guilty of an "excess of severity"<ref>Calvin (1556).</ref><ref>Jamieson: "Timothy seems to have had a tendency to undue ascetical strictness.... God hereby commands believers to use all due means for preserving health, and condemns by anticipation the human traditions which among various sects have denied the use of wine to the faithful."</ref><ref name="ISBEWine"/> or that he felt inappropriately bound by a [[Hellenism|Hellenistic]] custom that younger men should not drink.<ref>Clarke, commentary on 1 Ti 5:23.</ref>

==Notes==
<!--See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Footnotes for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the <ref> and </ref> tags and the tag below -->{{reflist|3}}

==References==
{{refbegin|2}}
*{{cite web|url=http://www.biblicalperspectives.com/books/wine_in_the_bible/1.html | title=A Preview of ''Wine in the Bible''| author=[[Samuele Bacchiocchi]] | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite encyclopedia|author=W. J. Beecher| title=Total abstinence | encyclopedia=[[The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge]] | accessdate=2007-01-22 | url=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/encyc11/Page_472.html}}
*{{cite journal |author=Magen Broshi |title=Wine in Ancient Palestine – Introductory Notes| date=1984| journal=Israel Museum Journal| volume=III |pages=pp. 21–40}}
*{{cite journal |author=Magen Broshi |title=The Diet of Palestine in the Roman Period – Introductory Notes| date=1986| journal=Israel Museum Journal| volume=V |pages=pp. 41–56}}
*{{cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=A Dictionary of the Bible| title=Wine| author=W. R. F. Browning |publisher=Oxford University Press, USA |date=2004 |origdate=1996 |id=ISBN 978-0198608905| }}
*{{cite book |author=[[John Calvin]] |date=1556 |chapterurl=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/calvin/calcom43.iii.vii.vi.html#iii.vii.vi-p17.1 |chapter=1 Timothy 5:22–25 |title=Commentary on Timothy, Titus, and Philemon |accessdate=2007-06-01}}
*{{cite book |author=John Calvin |date=1555 |title=Harmony of the Evangelists, Part 3 |chapter=Matthew 26:26–30; Mark 14:22–26; Luke 22:17–20 |chapterurl=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/calvin/calcom33.ii.xxvii.html |accessdate=2007-11-05}}
*{{cite book| author=[[Adam Clarke]] |date=1825 |title=Clarke's Commentary }}
**[http://www.godrules.net/library/clarke/clarkepsa104.htm Commentary on Ps 104:15]. Retrieved on [[2007-01-22]].
**[http://www.godrules.net/library/clarke/clarkepro31.htm Commentary on Pr 31:6]. Retrieved on [[2007-01-22]].
**[http://www.godrules.net/library/clarke/clarkeisa1.htm Commentary on Is 1:22]. Retrieved on [[2008-05-19]].
**[http://www.godrules.net/library/clarke/clarke1tim5.htm Commentary on 1 Ti 5:23]. Retrieved on [[2007-06-01]].
*{{cite encyclopedia| title=Wine |encyclopedia=The Oxford Companion to the Bible| author=M. D. Coogan| editor=[[Bruce Metzger]] and M. D. Coogan |publisher=Oxford University Press, USA |date=1993 |id=ISBN 978-0195046458}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |author=W. Dommershausen|editor=G. Johannes Botterweck and Helmer Ringgren|encyclopedia=Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament|volume=VI|title=Yayin|others=trans. David E. Green|date=1990|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans| id=ISBN 0802823300}}
*{{cite book |author=Ralph Earle |authorlink=Ralph H. Earle |chapter=1 Timothy 5:13 |title=Word Meanings in the New Testament |year=1986 |publisher=Beacon Hill Press |location=Kansas City, Missouri |isbn=0834111764 }}
*{{cite encyclopedia| url=http://www.bible-history.com/isbe/V/VINEGAR/ |encyclopedia=International Standard Bible Encyclopedia |title=Vinegar | author=Burton Scott Easton| editor=James Orr |date=1915a |accessdate=2007-03-09}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| url=http://www.bible-history.com/isbe/W/WINE%3B+WINE+PRESS/ |encyclopedia=International Standard Bible Encyclopedia |title=Wine; Wine Press | author=Burton Scott Easton| editor=James Orr |date=1915b |accessdate=2007-03-09}}
*{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/easton/ebd2.v.html?term=vinegar |author=Matthew George Easton |title=Vinegar | encyclopedia=[[Easton's Bible Dictionary (1897)|Easton's Bible Dictionary]]|date=1897a| accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| author=Matthew George Easton |url=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/easton/ebd2.w.html?term=Wine |title=Wine | encyclopedia=[[Easton's Bible Dictionary (1897)|Easton's Bible Dictionary]] |date=1897b| accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| url=http://www.bible-history.com/isbe/D/DRINK%2CSTRONG/ |encyclopedia=International Standard Bible Encyclopedia |title=Drink, Strong | author=D. Miall Edwards| editor=James Orr |date=1915a |accessdate=2007-03-09}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| url=http://www.bible-history.com/isbe/D/DRUNKENNESS/ |encyclopedia=International Standard Bible Encyclopedia |title=Drunkenness | author=D. Miall Edwards| editor=James Orr |date=1915b |accessdate=2007-03-09 }}
*{{cite web|url=http://www.cofe.anglican.org/info/ethical/policystatements/policyalcohol.pdf | title=Alcohol: An inappropriate investment for the Church of England|publisher=[[Church of England]]|author=Ethical Investment Advisory Group|date=January 2005|accessdate=2007-02-08}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| encyclopedia=Dictionary of Christ and the Gospels |editor=[[James Hastings]] |date=1913 |location=Edinburgh |publisher=T & T Clark |url=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/hastings/dict2/Page_824.html |volume=2 |title=Wine |author=W. Ewing |accessdate=2007-03-14 }}
*{{cite encyclopedia|author=F. S. Fitzsimmonds | title=Wine and Strong Drink| encyclopedia=New Bible Dictionary | editor=J. D. Douglas | edition=2nd ed. | publisher=InterVarsity Press |location=Downers Grove, Illinois | date=1982 |isbn=0830814418}}
*{{cite journal |author=[[Kenneth Gentry]] |title=Issue and Interchange – Gentry Responds|url=http://reformed.org/webfiles/antithesis/v2n2/ant_v2n2_issue3.html| journal=Antithesis | date=May /June 1991 | volume=2 |issue=2 | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite book |author=[[John Gill (theologian)|John Gill]]| date=1748 |title=John Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible }}
**[http://eword.gospelcom.net/comments/1timothy/gill/1timothy5.htm Commentary on 1 Ti 5:23]. Retrieved on [[2007-06-01]].
**[http://eword.gospelcom.net/comments/luke/gill/luke10.htm Commentary on Lk 10:34]. Retrieved on [[2007-06-01]].
**[http://eword.gospelcom.net/comments/proverbs/gill/proverbs31.htm Commentary on Pr 31:4–7]. Retrieved on [[2007-01-22]].
*{{cite web |url=http://www.studylight.org/com/guz/view.cgi?book=1ti&chapter=005#1Ti5_23 |author=David Guzig |title=Commentary on 1 Ti 5:23 |accessdate=2007-06-08}}
*{{cite book|title=Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament|author=[[R. Laird Harris]], [[Gleason Archer]], [[Bruce Waltke]]|publisher=Moody|date=1980}}
*{{cite book |title=Concordance to the Septuagint |author=[[Edwin Hatch]] and Henry A. Redpath |others=with an extensive Hebrew index by Takamitsu Muraoka appended |publisher=Baker Academic |edition=2nd ed. |date=1998 |isbn=978-0801021411}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| encyclopedia=Theological Dictionary of the New Testament |volume=V| author=Hans Wolfgang Heidland| editor=[[Gerhard Kittel]] and Ronald E. Pitkin | others=trans. Geoffrey W. Bromiley | date= 1967 | publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans | title=όξος| id=ISBN 0802822479}}
*{{cite book|author=[[Matthew Henry]] |date=1706–1721 |chapterurl=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/henry/mhc3.xx.xxxii.html#xx.xxxii-p6 | title=Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon) |chapter=Commentary on Pr 31:4–7 | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite book |author=Matthew Henry |title=Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation) |chapter=First Timothy, Chapter V |chapterurl=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/henry/mhc6.xv.vi.html#xv.vi-p16 |date=1706–1721 |accessdate=2007-06-01 }}
*{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=201&letter=W|title=Wine|encyclopedia=Jewish Encyclopedia|author=Emil G. Hirsch, Judah David Eisenstein, and the Encyclopedia's Executive Committee of the Editorial Board|accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite book|author=[[A. A. Hodge]]|title=Evangelical Theology |publisher=[[Banner of Truth Trust]] |date=1977 |origdate=1890 |isbn=978-0851512365}}
*{{cite book|author=[[Charles Hodge]]|title=Systematic Theology|chapter=The Lord’s Supper |chapterurl=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/hodge/theology3.iii.vi.xv.html#iii.vi.xv-Page_616 |publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans |date=1940 |origdate=1872 |accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite book |chapterurl=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/jamieson/jfb.xi.xv.vi.html#xi.xv.vi-p85.6 |chapter=First Timothy, Chapter 5 |title=Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible |author=Robert Jamieson |date=1871 |accessdate=2007-06-01 }}
*{{cite book|chapter=Wine and Alcoholic Beverages in the Ancient World | title=Archaeological Study Bible | publisher=Zondervan| author=William Kaiser and Duane Garrett, eds. |date=2006|isbn=9780310926054 }}
*{{cite encyclopedia |author=D. Kellermann |editor=G. Johannes Botterweck and Helmer Ringgren|encyclopedia=Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament| volume=IV| title=Chomets [et al.]|others=trans. David E. Green| date=1986| publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans| id=ISBN 0802823289}}
*{{cite book |author=Frederic Richard Lees and Dawson Burns |chapter=Appendix C-D |title=The Temperance Bible-Commentary |url=http://www.archive.org/details/temperancebiblec00leesrich |year=1870 |publisher=National Temperance Society and Publication House |location=New York |pages=pp. 431–446}}
*{{cite book|author=[[Henry Liddell]] and [[Robert Scott (philologist)|Robert Scott]] | title=[[A Greek-English Lexicon]] | coauthors=[[Henry Stuart Jones]] and Roderick McKenzie | location=Oxford | publisher=Clarendon Press | date=1940 | isbn=0198642261}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Religion|publisher=MacMillan Reference Books |edition=2nd ed. |date=2005 |id=ISBN 978-0028657332| title=Beverages |volume=2 |editor=Lindsay Jones |author=Bruce Lincoln}}
*{{cite web|author=[[John F. MacArthur]] |url=http://www.gty.org/Resources/transcripts/70-11 | title="Bible Questions and Answers, part 39"| accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite web|author=John F. MacArthur | url=http://www.gty.org/Resources/transcripts/1938 | title=Living in the Spirit: Be Not Drunk with Wine – Part 3 | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite web|author=John F. MacArthur|title="Living in the Spirit: Be Not Drunk with Wine – Part 2"| url=http://www.gty.org/Resources/transcripts/1937 | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite journal|author=Keith Mathison | url=http://thirdmill.org/newfiles/kei_mathison/TH.Mathison.Prot.Transub.1.html|title=Protestant Transubstantiation – Part 1: Thesis; Biblical Witness | journal=IIIM Magazine Online | volume=2 | issue=49 | date=December 4–10, 2000 | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite journal|author=Keith Mathison | title=Protestant Transubstantiation – Part 3: Historic Reformed & Baptist Testimony | url=http://thirdmill.org/newfiles/kei_mathison/TH.Mathison.Prot.Transub.3.html | journal=IIIM Magazine Online | volume=3| issue=2 | date=January 8 to January 14, 2001 | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |author=Jill Maynard, ed. |title=Drunkenness |encyclopedia=Illustrated Dictionary of Bible Life & Times|publisher=The Reader's Digest Association|location=Pleasantville, New York|date=1997a}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |author=Jill Maynard, ed. |title=Wine |encyclopedia=Illustrated Dictionary of Bible Life & Times|publisher=The Reader's Digest Association|location=Pleasantville, New York|date=1997b}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |author=Jill Maynard, ed. |title=Wine Making |encyclopedia=Illustrated Dictionary of Bible Life & Times|publisher=The Reader's Digest Association|location=Pleasantville, New York|date=1997c}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=EchvNjm6alIC&pg=PP14#PRA9-PA1010,M1 |title=Wine |author=[[John McClintock]] and [[James Strong (theologian)|James Strong]] (eds.) |encyclopedia= |publisher=Harper and Brothers | location=New York |date=1891 |encyclopedia=Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature |volume=X |pages=pp. 1010–1017}}
*{{cite journal|author=Jeffrey J. Meyers | title=Concerning Wine and Beer, Part 1 | journal=Rite Reasons, Studies in Worship | issue=48 | date=November 1996 | url=http://www.biblicalhorizons.com/rite-reasons/no-48-concerning-wine-and-beer-part-1/ | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite web |author=Dave Miller |title=Elders, Deacons, Timothy, and Wine |year=2003 |publisher=Apologetics Press |url=http://www.apologeticspress.org/articles/2262 |accessdate=2008-03-25}}
*{{cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Harper's Encyclopedia of Bible Life | title=The Life of the Farmer: Land Use and Crops | author=M. S. and J. L. Miller revising B. M. Bennett, Jr. and D. H. Scott | publisher=Castle Books| edition=3rd ed.| date=1996 | id=ISBN 0785807268}}
*{{cite book|author=[[Leon Morris]] |title=The Gospel According to John |chapter=Additional Note H: The Last Supper and the Passover |edition=revised ed. |publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans |date=1995 |isbn=978-0802825049 |series=New International Commentary on the New Testament}}
*{{cite web| url=http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/ |title=''The New Testament Greek Lexicon'' (based on ''Thayer's'' and ''Smith's Bible Dictionary'' plus others) | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite web| url=http://www.studylight.org/lex/heb/ |title= The Old Testament Hebrew Lexicon (based on the Brown, Driver, Briggs, Gesenius Hebrew and English Lexicon) | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite book |author=William Patton |chapter=Christ Eating and Drinking |title=Laws of Fermentation and the Wines of the Ancients |url=http://www.openlibrary.org/details/lawsoffermentati00pattrich |year=1871 |publisher=National Temperance Society and Publication House |location=New York |pages=p. 79}}
*{{cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Evangelical Dictionary of Theology|editor=Walter A. Elwell|author=R. V. Pierard |title=Alcohol, Drinking of | id=ISBN 0801034132 | publisher=Baker Book House | location=Grand Rapids, MI| date=1984}}
*{{cite book |title=The Spirit of the Reformation Study Bible | author=[[Richard L. Pratt, Jr.]], ed. | publisher=Zondervan | date=2003 | isbn=978-0310923602}}
*{{cite web|title="Revising the Practice of the Lord's Supper at Faith Presbyterian Church No. 2, Wine, No. 1" | url=http://faithtacoma.org/sermons/Revising_Communion/Revising_FPC_Lords_Supper_No.2_Wine_No.1_Jan.28.2001.htm | author=Robert S. Rayburn | date=2001a | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite web|author=Robert S. Rayburn | title="Revising the Practice of the Lord's Supper at Faith Presbyterian Church No. 3, Wine No. 2" | url=http://faithtacoma.org/sermons/Revising_Communion/Revising_FPC_LordsSupper_No.3_Wine_No.2_Feb.04.2001.htm | date=2001b | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite book |author=I. W. Raymond |title=The Teaching of the Early Church on the Use of Wine and Strong Drink |origdate=1927 |date=1970 |publisher=AMS Press |isbn=978-0404512866}}
*{{cite book|author=Stephen M. Reynolds |title=The Biblical Approach to Alcohol |publisher=Princeton University Press |location=Princeton, NJ |date=1989 |url=http://www.alcoholandthebible.org/biblical_approach.htm |accessdate=2007-02-28 }}
*{{cite encyclopedia| encyclopedia=Theological Dictionary of the New Testament |volume=V|author=Heinrich Seesemann| editor=[[Gerhard Kittel]] and Ronald E. Pitkin | others=trans. Geoffrey W. Bromiley | date= 1967 | publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans | title=οινος| id=ISBN 0802822479}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| url=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/smith_w/bibledict.html?term=wine |title=Wine |encyclopedia=Smith's Bible Dictionary | date=1884 | author=[[William Smith (lexicographer)|William Smith]] | accessdate=2007-03-08}}
*{{cite encyclopedia| encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Temperance and Prohibition |location=New York |publisher=Funk and Wagnalls |date=1891 |author=Moses Stuart }}
*{{cite book |author=[[Joseph Henry Thayer]] |title=A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament |date=1977 |publisher=Baker |origdate=1901 |origpub=T&T Clark |isbn=0801088720}}
*{{cite web| url=http://www.sacred-texts.com/jud/tbr/tbr38.htm |title=Tractate Berakoth 6.1 |accessdate=2007-03-15}}
*{{cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Jewish Encyclopedia|title=Sirach, The Wisdome of Jesus the Son of|author=Crawford Howell Toy and Israel Lévi| url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=836&letter=S&search=ben%20sira| accessdate=2007-01-22}}
*{{cite book|author=[[Bruce Waltke]]|title=The Book Of Proverbs: Chapters 1–15 | publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans | date=2004 | isbn=978-0802825452 |series=New International Commentary on the Old Testament}}
*{{cite book|author=Bruce Waltke |title=The Book of Proverbs: Chapters 15–31 |id=ISBN 978-0802827760 |publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans |date=2005 |series=New International Commentary on the Old Testament}}
*{{cite book|author=[[John Wesley]] | chapterurl=http://www.ccel.org/ccel/wesley/notes.ii.xxi.xii.ii.html | title=Wesley's Notes on the Bible |chapter=Notes on Pr 31:4–7 | accessdate=2007-01-22}}
{{refend}}

[[Category:Hebrew Bible topics]]
[[Category:Oenology]]
[[Category:Old Testament theology]]
[[Category:New Testament theology]]

[[es:El alcohol en la Biblia]]
[[no:Alkohol i Bibelen]]

Revision as of 07:22, 11 October 2008

In South Korea, the Surface Transportation Bureau of the Ministry of Construction and Transportation (MOCT) oversees the design and issue of license plates (Korean: 번호판) for motor vehicles.

Appearance

Pre-1973

Few examples of designs prior to 1973 remain in existence; they are no longer valid. The most recent design is similar to the ones that followed, but the positions of some elements are different. These early plates are typically white with blue lettering, a color scheme still used today for motorcycle plates.

1973-2003

Upon initial inspection, plates issued during this era seem to closely resemble those used in Japan (see Japanese license plates for examples). The plates are approximately the same width and height as North American or Japanese number plates. They measure 335 mm wide by 170 mm high for passenger vehicles, and 440 mm wide by 220 mm high for large trucks and buses. The information is arranged into two lines.

The first line, occupying the upper third of the plate, identifies the province or special city that issued the plate and the vehicle class.

The province/city name is written in full in hangeul, minus the -do (도) or -si (시) suffix. Provinces and cities issuing plates include (in South Korean jamo order):

The vehicle classes are as follows:

The second line, occupying the lower two-thirds of the plate, uniquely identifies the vehicle. It contains a hangeul syllable prefix on the left, and a serial number on the right.

Only a small range of hangeul syllables are valid for each type of vehicle. Some of them identify more specific vehicle types; e.g., heo (허) is only used for rental cars. Some special plates have the hangeul prefix replaced by a circled hangeul word.

  • Diplomat's cars: "diplomat" (외교)
  • Construction vehicles: "commerce" (상품) - These will have the province name/vehicle class replaced by an organization name.
  • National government vehicles: "nation" (국) - These have no province name.

The serial number is always four digits, 0-9. Leading zeros are included in the serial number.

When installed on a vehicle, the rear plate features an official seal over one of the retaining screws to deter tampering or theft.

These plates are always issued embossed; flat plates are unofficial replicas. Dies varied slightly over time. Starting in 1997, the four-digit serial number was repeated on the plate, spelled out in small stamped hangeul type on the lower left.

Colors

  • Private cars, government cars - green with white; or white with black (some cities)
  • Taxis, cars for hire - yellow with blue
  • Construction vehicles - orange/red with white
  • Diplomat's cars - blue with white

2004-2006

These plates are similar in appearance to the 1973-2003 series, with some changes to the information presented. The province name is omitted. The prefix on the bottom line is moved to the top line - right of the class number for regular series, and left of the class number for the circled special series (diplomat, construction, etc). The serial number is printed larger to fill the entire bottom line, but still four digits for most plates, except for special series plates, which have six.

2006-present

A new system has been phased in, starting with plates for government vehicles in 2006 and appearing on privately-owned vehicles now. The color scheme is now a simple black-on-white design. Dimensions have been slightly altered; the new plates are slightly less tall, only 155 mm. They are also available in a size format similar to the plates used in the European Union, 520 mm wide by 110 mm tall. The numbering follows the pattern of the 2004 plate series, but all on one line. From left to right, the plate has the vehicle class, hangeul prefix, and four-digit serial number. Truck and bus plates remain the same width, but shrink slightly to 200 mm tall, and incorporate all the information into one line.

External links