Posted on 03/30/2018 9:25:33 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
During a recent conference, Christian speaker Joyce Meyer made a biblical case for getting 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 kicks 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.
Meyer quoted Isaiah 44:5 in defense of getting permanent markings. The scripture says, "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."
Meyer said her ink would say, "I belong to the Lord." She admitted that her husband pushed back a bit on her stance but they realized it was just a religious stance stemming from legalism.
Evangelist Christine Caine, seated in the front row of the meeting, can be seen rooting Meyers on as she expressed her interest in getting a tattoo.
"Why would I do that (get a tattoo)? Just to make religious demons mad, no other reason," she maintained.
"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!"
The Saint Louis native 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.
Hillsong New York City Pastor Carl Lentz has also defended Christians getting tattoos and addressed the criticism he often receives about his own markings. "Biblical interpretation is huge right? So with tattoos not being allowed you mean Leviticus. We play both sides of the coin I think that is healthy. Like this paradox of scripture, interpretation is actually is part of our faith, the tension of it. So, on one hand, we say that is the Old Testament scripture, there is no New Testament verification of that. That law that had to do with slaves, that identified you as part of a tribe we don't believe that came through the cross," Lentz told World Religion News last year.
"We don't believe that when Jesus died and rose again that old Levitical scripture applied to our modern life. That is ridiculous," the Virginia native argued. "At the same time, there are some things we do believe follow through on the cross. So the way we break down we would literally put up the Old Testament and then put a cross in the middle and then we put up the New Testament and we say anything that comes through the cross is eternal. Anything that stops is Old Testament."
Making the case against tattoos, some Christians have cited 1 Corinthians 10:23, pointing out that the question isn't about whether tattooing one's body is a "sin." But it's more about whether it's "a good and necessary thing to do."
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.
>>The OT Law is not a law to us...It is a teacher...We will not go to hell for violating the law..
So that whole “Thou shalt not kill” stuff is merely a suggestion for Christians?
Jews don’t get tattoos. My father got one in the German concentration camps. I could never get one after that.
Those Latins have a way with words.
Most people when they talk doctrine are not really talking doctrine, but culture.
Like wearing a coat and tie to church is important to some people and they will insist on it. That’s not doctrine but some people have elevated it to be a doctrine.
Who cares what Albert Barnes thinks? It’s just his opinion. It would not be difficult to cite other scholars who disagree.
Scholar-shopping is easy but useless.
Omne papillae pascam vos primus vivificat.
May I suggest this: $
I think she’s full of herself. I looked on my Christian channels and don’t even see her on there but she may be.
Sorry for your reverse-bias mindset. In fact, Barnes' comments are accepted because, as in this case, his scholarly treatment gives the facts of what a verse says in context.
By contrast, who cares about your opinionated contrariness?
She sounds like a witch with a bee.
She is part of the prosperity gospel movement....among other things.
https://carm.org/joyce-meyer
I believe you have it exactly right, but it isn't just your opinion. God made us/we evolved to be attracted to women just as they are. Women need do nothing to look good. Body modification can only be a negative.
Seems to me, the sexiest a woman can get is when she steps out of the shower. No makeup, no hairstyling and no clothes: That's as good as it gets.
I searched the rest of the thread so far and found post #56, where sasportas wrote,
Meyer is a charismatic. Charismatics, for as long as I can remember, abominated anything that smacked of doctrine. They said of those who held to certain doctrines of Christianity, their doctrines were religious. This is what Meyer means when she speaks against those who are religious.SNIP--
All Meyers is doing is just including tattoos in with what charismatics call religious, or doctrine. Religious is a code word to them, you have to know what they mean by it.
I am not very familiar with those who call themselves charismatics, but there exists a strain within the evangelical world that uses "religion," "religious," and the like as dirty words. (For example, some people will insist that they don't have a "religion" but a "relationship with Jesus.") I can see a germ of truth within that idea, but this usage twists the ordinary usage of the word in a number of ways that sow confusion and cause non-believers to mock those "non-religious" religious people.
Saying things like this which were a commonsense thing at one time, now puts you into a “Basket of Neanderthals”.
Well, all I can say is, bring me some Flintstone meat!
That limbs getting skinny...careful
She's proof that it works...
That’s exactly why I never got one.
As dumb as I was in my 20’s,(left leaning and morally bankrupt) I still knew how that would turn out.
Gipple.
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