I asked first: why wouldn't He? You are ruining His beautiful building. That is a reason enough. Luckily He is quite patient.
"If anyone defiles the temple of God, God will destroy him. For the temple of God is holy, which temple you are." (1 Corinthians 3:17)
Holy is something separated from the rest for a divine purpose. I fear the the Body of Christ becomes more like the world by each day that passes.
I think God is more worried about our actions and words as Christians, not whether we're putting tattoos on our bodies.
Getting yourself a tattoo is an
action you do.
And sometimes the small details are the ones that matter. But I wouldn't say getting a tattoo is a 'small' detail.
Focus more on your own faith and stop condemning faithful Christians for getting tattoos. I think the Lord is more concerned with that than He is about whether or not I get a tattoo.
As I said: everything about us is important to Him.
So this is a more gentle way of saying "mind your own business". But I'm sorry: I can't. We are all one body. If one does something wrong, all the body suffers.
Besides, most Christians who get Christian-themed tattoos are doing so to glorify God, not "improve" themselves.
So you are simply adding your own works to God's to glorify him. God said man-originated methods of glorifying Him are useless; they are in vain. The best and only way of glorifying Him is by being obedient.
Yes.
I don't have a beard yet.
Yes.
These are all things that God created - he gave us hair that grows and bodies that do certain things for certain times. By your logic, anything we do to counter those things is saying "this isn't good enough".
God made hair grow for: it is easy to destroy it accidentally like burning or cutting it, so since it is growing, we won't have problems like that. Actually
not growing hair would be a very bad idea.
And I shower because the world now days is very dirty. Don't get me wrong: sweat is good, in a certain sense. But literally: it is just waste of the body. For it is eliminated from the body for a reason. It is something unusable anymore. It was used to cool the body and perhaps (but I'm not sure) to eliminate excess of minerals, but I don't know enough to be able to tell that certainly. Now you can't use it anymore. So it's useless after it gets eliminated from the body. This is why it must go away. It also smells bad.
So what is so bad about washing anyway? God makes the allegory of washing us from sin. If washing were bad, He wouldn't use that allegory in the good sense, would He? Now everything we wash away generally is bad or at least it doesn't have a good use, like dirt, sweat, etc.
yes. The idea behind it was keeping the body clean. The ceremonial laws all point to the uncleanness of God's people. It was to remind the people how unclean they were. Jesus has made the sacrifice to wash our sins away; we are no longer unclean.
So we must not keep the body clean anymore?
Now...if you don't believe that then you better prepare yourself that when you're married, there's going to be a very small window of opportunity for having sex with your wife. There's numerous rules in the OT about sex before, during and after a woman's menstrual cycle. And I'm sure that if you believe that ceremonial law is still in place, you would be sure to follow those rules as well.
Oh right! I forgot marriage is all about sex. [/sarcastic]
You're 15. That explains a lot. You can't even get a tattoo right now.
At any rate, any time you go out, you put your 'temple' at risk, whether they outweigh the benefits or not. That makes you no better than the person who goes and gets a tattoo.
God didn't forbid getting out of the house; he didn't forbid to prepare food is knives were involved, for example. But yet by example and commandant He doesn't allow us to defile ourselves by permanently marking our body or things alike.
It is illogical to think that because old-school temples had no adornments that human bodies are not to have any.
I have so much to say about this.
First of all, it was not just a Temple. It was God's Temple. You seem to be putting the Temple of God in line with the pagan temples, because you put it in plural ("old-school temple
s"). It was the Temple of the One God, His place of rest. That is where His presence was. And the Temple was carefully built according to His desire, just as it is written:
Then David gave his son Solomon the plans for the portico of the temple, its buildings, its storerooms, its upper parts, its inner rooms and the place of atonement. He gave him the plans of allthat theSpirit had put in his mind for the courts of the temple of the LORD and all the surrounding rooms, for the treasuries of the temple of God and for the treasuries for the dedicated things. He gave him instructions for the divisions of the priests and Levites, and for all the work of serving in the temple of the LORD, as well as for all the articles to be used in its service. He designated the weight of gold for all the gold articles to be used in various kinds of service, and the weight of silver for all the silver articles to be used in various kinds of service: the weight of gold for the gold lampstands and their lamps, with the weight for each lampstand and its lamps; and the weight of silver for each silver lampstand and its lamps, according to the use of each lampstand; the weight of gold for each table for consecrated bread; the weight of silver for the silver tables; the weight of pure gold for the forks, sprinkling bowls and pitchers; the weight of gold for each gold dish; the weight of silver for each silver dish; and the weight of the refined gold for the altar of incense. He also gave him the plan for the chariot, that is, the cherubim of gold that spread their wings and shelter the ark of the covenant of the LORD. "All this," David said, "I have in writing from the hand of the LORD upon me, and He gave me understanding in all the details of the plan." (1 Chronicles 28:11-19)
Look in how much detail the LORD made the plans for the Temple!
So it was the Temple of God,
very carefully built. It took them approximately 40 years to build it. They had plans from David received from revelation from God, by the Spirit. And it wasn't adorned outside. All of value was inside.
And it is perfectly logical
since you are the Temple of God now!
I'm not even wearing them now. What difference does that make?
Why do you wear them? Why do women (and some men now in these "modern" times) wear jewelry?
Shoes! Oh noez! You're telling God he didn't make your feet good enough!
He did make them good enough but unfortunately, men made roads of asphalt. As you know, it harms your feet to walk on asphalt on bear foot. If we were to walk on grass, as He intended, that would be a good point. But of course, God doesn't speak negatively about shoes, so why would they be bad?