Religious
Tattoos
One subject on which the major Biblically-based
religions agree is that getting a tattoo is wrong.
Fundamentalist Christians, Catholics, and Jews all agree on
this. They do, however, hold very different viewpoints on why
it is wrong. It is interesting to take a look at the beliefs
and viewpoints of these religions-- not only what each one
believes, but what each one bases that belief upon.
For Fundamentalist Christians, the
generally-expressed opinion is that people should not get tattoos
because tattoos are "a pagan practice." Fundamentalist
leaders state that this is a good enough reason for not getting
tattoos, although they also add that there is nothing in the
Bible which states that a person should not.
Potential confusion regarding this standpoint is explained in terms of
the Fundamentalist belief that the whole of the Bible consists of the
New Testament, and the New Testament contains no references to
tattooing, either positive or negative. Describing the
practice of tattooing as something that was, or is, done by pagans,
constitutes their main objection to the practice.
As Catholics believe that the Old Testament is as
relevant as the New Testament, the general Catholic negativity toward
the subject is covered by such Scripture passages as Leviticus 19:28,
which reads "You shall not make any cuts in your body for the dead, nor
make any tattoo marks on yourselves..."
For most Catholics, though, it is still usually considered to be more a
matter of personal interpretation and personal choice. The
usual modern-day Catholic interpretation of the subject is that while
tattooing is indeed wrong by Biblical standards, it is not necessarily
sinful.
The Jewish faith takes the subject, and negativity
about it, even further. As the Books of the Old Testament are
taken to be the word of God, and commandments to be adhered to, in the
Jewish faith tattoos are something which is simply not done.
This commandment against any desecration of the body has been proported
to be one of the main reasons tattooing was done on observant Jews at
the concentration camps during the Holocaust; it was not
merely a means of identification as many people assume. It
was an attempt to separate observant Jews from their God, albeit
unwillingly.
In the Jewish faith, desecrating the body with
tattoos is considered to be such a violation of the commandments that a
person who has tattoos is sometimes denied burial in Jewish
cemeteries. While this used to be the standard practice,
modern times reflecting fewer prohibitions has resulted in this being
less of a concern than in the past. Although today few but
the most orthodox consider it to be a serious issue, it is still indeed
an issue.
The general consensus amongst these three major
Biblically-based faiths is that it is wrong to get tattoos, although
each one's reasons and points of view certainly differ.
Whatever one's personal faith may happen to be, the two main factors
involve both what one's religion teaches about tattoos, and what their
specific reason is for it. These are important factors
regardless of how observant an person is of his or her particular
religion; and makes it clear that one should consider both
factors in order to make an informed decision on whether or not to get
a tattoo.
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