Lol you must qualify as substantial Christian then right?
Scimi
I don't think I understand the reference.
From a legal and marketing standpoint and not from any particularly religious one, beverages marked "non-alcoholic" may sometimes be totally alcohol-free, but the label can also be applied to beverages with trace amounts of alcohol. The exact cutoff may vary by country, but 1% would be a pretty good guess.
There is a different range of alcohol content (1-3% is an okay guess for the range) where non-alcoholic no longer applies, instead you'd have to label it as low-alcohol.
Now, if we make a pivot to prohibitions for religious reasons, it's well worth mentioning that low-alcohol beer is disallowed. It would take quite a bit of it to have an effect, but it's not totally unrealistic.
However, it's also well worth pointing out that trace amounts are allowable, in that very small non-zero amounts of alcohol are permissible on religious grounds and it corresponds with the tendency to label such things as non-alcoholic on non-religious grounds. In other words, a non-alcoholic label is never meant to be a guarantee that the drink has zero alcohol- it might be zero, but it indicates that it falls in the range of zero to one percent and guarantees that it will have zero effect.
I'm sorry that I didn't understand the substantial Christian reference, but it's nice that I could help you lol.