Jun 16, 2026

Tattoo

The Bible does not declare tattoos inherently sinful for Christians, but the matter requires careful discernment about motivation, design, and witness.

The Old Testament Prohibition and Its Context

The primary biblical reference appears in Leviticus 19:28: “You shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor tattoo any marks on you: I am the Lord.”[1] However, understanding this command requires recognizing its original purpose. During Moses’ time, tattoos were common but associated with those who followed other gods, and the law condemned the Jewish people from getting tattoos so they would be distinct from ungodly cultures around them.[1] The context concerns tattoos that identify religious loyalty, and Yahweh established other external marks for his people, along with countercultural aspects that were to distinguish his people.[2]

Freedom in the New Testament

Today’s Christians are free from the Jewish law and look to the teachings of the New Testament for guidance.[1] Levitical laws are part of the Old Covenant given specifically to the Jewish people during their wilderness journey, designed for the Israelites’ cultural and spiritual context at that time, not for the entire world.[3]

The Guiding Principles

Rather than a blanket prohibition, Paul offers two principles. Your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, and you should glorify God in your body and spirit, which are God’s.[1] Anyone considering a tattoo should ask whether the particular design would honor the Lord—while a small cross might be honorable, many other choices would not.[1]

Additionally, not all things that are lawful are helpful or edifying, and believers are responsible for the welfare of other members of the family of believers, considering the possible implications of decisions that are basically irreversible.[1]

Practical Considerations

Consider practical issues: Will the tattoo make employment difficult? Are there health concerns? Is it financially wise? How would it affect relationships with family or those you’re trying to reach for the Lord?[1] Each person should be completely certain it’s the right choice, and God may lead one person to get a tattoo while leading another to refrain—so long as a person seeks the Lord’s will, freedom rather than judgment should apply.[1]

[1] Alex McFarland and Bert Harper, 100 Bible Questions and Answers for Families: Inspiring Truths, Helpful Explanations, and Power for Living from God’s Eternal Word (BroadStreet Publishing Group, LLC, 2023), 177–179.
[2] Peter T. Vogt, Interpreting the Pentateuch: An Exegetical Handbook, ed. David M. Howard Jr., Handbooks for Old Testament Exegesis (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Academic & Professional, 2009), 194.
[3] Kelly K, Tough Topics: 25 Biblical Answers to Controversial Questions (Lake Mary, FL: Charisma House, 2025), 20–21.






















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