ItinerantPreacher said:
rsc2a said:
ItinerantPreacher said:
rsc2a said:
ItinerantPreacher said:
BALAAM said:
Let's not forget that in Exodus 22:29 they were to offer to God the first of their ripe fruit and their LIQUORS!
Define the word liquor using an old dictionary and not a preconception.
Even dictionary.com realizes the meaning is not limited to an alcoholic beverage. Same as the NKJV translators and ESV translators.
"I'm a KJVo guy except for all those places where I'm not."
Not the point at all. Many others here use other versions, simply pointed it out.
The fact that you are hypocritical of your KJVo stance when it crashes into your personal mores isn't a relevant point?
Nothing like hijacking a thread to distract from the point.
Pointing out that you are a hypocrite who redefines words whenever they don't fit your erroneous preconceived notions about the very topic being discussed isn't a hijack...it is simply pointing out that you really don't care about what Scripture teaches regarding this topic.
You'll simply dodge, ignore, redefine or do whatever is necessary to distort the clear meaning to shove it into your own personal predilection.
In short, if you were going to be intellectually honest with us (and, more importantly, yourself), this is clearly a case where you either need to abandon your idolatrous KJVo-ism or your hard stance on alcohol, a stance Paul refers to as the teachings of demons. Granted since one is idolatry and the second makes you a messenger of Satan, I'd probably abandon both, but that's just me.
[quote author=ItinerantPreacher]Was I right about the word or not?[/quote]
Dictionary does give an alternate definition: "any liquid substance as broth from cooked meats or vegetables". Now if you want to completely ignore every bit of context, then you might be able to use that definition, but I'm certain that context is driving your hermeneutics.
Interestingly enough, every example of the word used in a sentence on dictionary.com refers to alcoholic beverages. And, of course, the term was being used to describe alcoholic beverages 300 years before King Jimmy commissioned the translation that bears his name.