During a conference, Christian speaker Joyce Meyer made a biblical case in favor of tattoos and admitted she has been thinking of getting one herself just to shut the mouths of religious people.
The video clip posted by Joyce Meyer Ministries on March 14 kicked off with Meyer explaining the difference between being holy and religious.
“Holiness is not legalism,” Meyer declared.
She went on to explain that religious people have made a mess of holiness by putting a bunch of rules and regulations on people. She listed drinking, dancing, wearing makeup and more among those rules.
She quoted Isaiah 44:5 in defense of getting permanent markings “One will say, I am the Lord’s; and another will call himself by the name of Jacob; and another will write [even brand or tattoo] upon his hand, I am the Lord’s, and surname himself by the [honorable] name of Israel.”
She also shared the counterargument often used to discourage believers from getting tattoos found in Leviticus 19:28: “Do not cut your bodies for the dead, and do not mark your skin with tattoos. I am the LORD.”
Televangelist Pat Robertson, among others, has cited Leviticus to argue that getting tattoos is a “heathen practice”.”You look at the Bible, the people are told not to mark their bodies and cut themselves like the heathen did. Tattooing is a heathen practice, it is not a Christian practice,” Robertson said in 2016.
But Meyer rejected the argument and contended that God also tattooed those He loves to Himself.
“The Bible says in Isaiah 49 that God has a picture of you tattooed on the palm of His hand,” she maintained.
“I’m right on the verge of going and getting a tattoo,” she added, pointing to her shoulder blade. “I thought I might as well just push all the religious people right off the cliff and just get it over with.”
Watch video here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDAXKwekeCY
Meyer said her ink would say, “I belong to the Lord.”
“I lived in so much bondage from legalism,” Meyer revealed of her past. “Everything in legalism is about something you can not do. Let me tell you something — it is not boring to serve Christ, it is so much fun and there’s so much you can do and not only that, you can enjoy all of it!”
She further pointed out that in Ezekiel 16:9-13 there was a big celebration and God put earrings and nose rings on the Israelites.
“Here’s the bottom line, it’s all about your motives and how you are doing things. We can’t look at the outside of somebody and decide for ourselves that they’re an evil person … That’s why so many people today don’t want anything to do with the church ’cause all they get is criticism and judgement,” she concluded.
The clip finished with Meyer encouraging those in attendance to pursue holiness but in freedom.
Will Honeycutt, a professor at Liberty University, believes that while “the Bible does not explicitly forbid tattoos,” Christians should remember that “the Bible has a high view of the body as God’s handiwork, which is not to be disfigured.”
Also, he argued, one should not get a tattoo out of rebellion. Rather, “our primary motive for anything we do should be to glorify God.”
“Are you seeking to direct people’s thoughts toward God or yourself?” Honeycutt posed.
Culled from: https://www.christianpost.com
If you read through this argument, you would find each point as riveting as we did. Which do you stand for? Should a fully devoted Christian be having tattoos? Jesus didn’t have Tattoos. Christianity is about endurance and long suffering. Since when did christianity become characterised by Fun?? or to be more specific, “Worldly” fun? Tell us your view in the comment section below