That’s fine Templar but it does not answer the why - this is a traditional Catholic forum and the traditional Catholic nuns and brothers taught me that the body was the Temple of the Holy Spirit. If we are traditional Catholics, what has changed in the last 40 years ? One is tempted to say it is nothing more than popular culture. What I am asking for is a rebuttal to the nuns and brothers who taught me back in the 60s.
They said no. The body is the Temple of the Holy Spirit. No graffitti on the Temple. You say, yes. Evidently what I was taught was wrong. I search for an answer.
BH,
I do not make the claim that I am either right or wrong. I am only trying to express my opinion within the context of this discussion. My first question is to define “traditional”, and to state what that really means to Catholics. Many things that were considered “OK”, or even encouraged 40 years ago is scarce or impossible to find today.
As one pointed out, the word “tattoo” was not known to the Church fathers until the 1700’s, therefore they couldn’t necessarily be “against” it. I believe the negative stigma that tattoos have is due to the type of person who traditionally had tattoos.
Also those that quote vague biblical passages, especially in the OT, are grasping at straws for justification of their opinions.
And as I mentioned before, I have trouble believing that it is encouraged to hang a large crucifix in a Church, wear a crucifix necklace, paint a picture of a crucifix, even hang a crucifix in our home, yet if I tattoo a crucifix on my body, that’s a sin?
And as far as our bodies being the temple goes, do we have the same attitude about people who are fat? Or people who don’t maintain good hygiene? If our body is a temple and it should be treated as such, then how do these people fit in?
Also, I have to ask you about this irony.
My father sat me down and said there are sheep and there are goats. Sheep follow the flock. That message struck home. Simply because everyone says tattoos are OK does it really make it so?
Here’s a rhetorical question for you.
If sheep follow the flock, do I have a tattoo because I want to be like everyone else or do I have a tattoo because I am
different from everyone else?