Still Yet More on Tattoos

A third reader writes:

I’m pretty sure real tatooing (as opposed to simple outside coloration such as with magic market) could well be considered a sin against the fifth commandment, since it’s an attack on your own body. As are the multiple piercings one sees these days. Anytime you willingly violate the body’s natural boundaries (skin) for non-life-saving reasons, you’re in trouble.

You seem to be taking a position that goes beyond what the Church does. The argument you use would prohibit even the piercing of ears, and the Church does not condemn that practice.

While some reason would seem to be needed to break the skin, the Church does not seem to envision it as being a grave reason like the need to save a life. Indeed, many surgeries are performed that involve breaking the skin but are for much lesser goals than saving a life.

I suspect that you probably meant "for therapeutic reasons," but the Church does not seems to require that criterion (it does for mutilation, but as noted above, tattoos do not impair body function and so are not mutilation). Things like ear piercing or tattooing can play cultural functions in some societies, and those can be important reasons as well.

Since the function of the skin is to protect the body, it would seem that the skin can be pierced as long as there is some good to be achieved that is proportionate to the risk of infection given the precautions that are being taken against infection in a particular cause. If a man decides that he’s going to make a statement about his devotion to the Blessed Virgin by having a tattoo of Our Lady of Guadalupe put on his arm then he may be able to arrange it so that the risk of infection is low enough to be counterbalanced by the good to be achieved by his making the statement.

If you can cite any current Magisterial documents to the contrary, though, I’d love to see them. Hope this helps!

Author: Jimmy Akin

Jimmy was born in Texas, grew up nominally Protestant, but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant seminary professor, he started an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture the more he found to support the Catholic faith, and in 1992 he entered the Catholic Church. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," is published in Surprised by Truth. Besides being an author, Jimmy is the Senior Apologist at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to Catholic Answers Magazine, and a weekly guest on "Catholic Answers Live."

3 thoughts on “Still Yet More on Tattoos”

  1. I understand the Catholic Church does not have a position against tattooing. But, do you think it’s appropriate for a priest to bless a person’s tattoo of religious nature i.e. the virgin or a cross?

  2. The Church does not have an official position on tattoos and ear piercing. However, Fr. Mitch Pacwa points out that in the Old Testament – I believe it’s in the Book of Deuteronomy – it talks about not marking the body.
    Fr. Pacwa always puts it this way: he says it’s like putting a mustache on the Mona Lisa. When you understand – and, again, that’s not a dogmatic teaching of the Church – but there are principles in Sacred Scripture that tells us that the body is sacred.
    To put these tattoos and such, we have to be reasonable. If somebody gets a small tattoo or pierces their ears, we’re not going to say that that’s a sin. However, we have to be moderate; let our moderation be known to all, as Scripture says. Keep this principle in mind, that our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit.
    In the Old Testament, we do have laws that say you’re not to mark the body and there are reasons for that. Now, that doesn’t mean it’s a sin for a lady to get a little rose on her ankle. We’re not saying that. We have to be circumspect and in all of these matters, we should be different than the world. We should have a higher standard. Don’t go too far on this saying that whoever gets a tattoo is sinning, but at the same time keep in mind these principles. Moderation is the key here. But that’s about as far as we can go.
    Just look at some of these folks that have so many holes in them that if they took a drink, they may just end up like the cartoon character with liquid squirting out of the holes from their bodies. Our culture has just gone crazy with this sort of thing and one does have to think about that sort of paganism; the context in which God condemned marking the body in the Old Testament.
    That may well come into play with some of these examples of extreme piercing. These can be external manifestations of a deep spiritual problem. Somebody who wants to poke holes all over their bodies is perhaps revealing that there is a deeper problem that someone (e.g., a parent or relative) may need to get to.
    Though those of us in the Church aren’t going to be running around and condemning everybody for piercing their nose but we should be, as Catholic Christians, concerned about the hearts and the souls of folks who resort to those kinds of practices.

  3. Remember, the Sacred Order of the Universe, the way God wants and created the Universe, must be respected. Doing things with your body tha are against true beauty, that is the reflection of God in Creation, is a sin.

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