God’s Tattoos

Call me a Boomer. Among the more surprising developments across my nearly seven decades of life is the now widespread practice of tattooing. As a child in the 50’s, the only tattoos I ever saw were on the occasional sailor, and we rarely saw many of them. Indeed, I don’t think there was a tattoo parlor anywhere in our city, and if there were, it would have been on the shady side of town. So, it was with an old-fashioned, skeptical eye that I first began to see (and judge) the advent of tattooing in the 2000’s. What was an isolated thing at first, a fashion of youth, is today rather ubiquitous. You see them everywhere, across age groups, religious groups, etc. Indeed, I suspect there are a lot of tattoo’s that we don’t see, inscribed in places that have meaning for the wearer, though not meant for the public eye.

I no longer judge them. They are clothing, of a sort, ink suits and badges, performing some of the things that clothing has always accomplished, but in a manner that indicates a deeper commitment or need. Adam and Eve (in their sin) found that they were naked and they sought to hide. They covered themselves with leaves. We’ve been covering ourselves ever since. Generally, our coverings are “identities,” false modes of being that always hide the truth of our shame. Our shame is painful – who would want it to be seen?

And so we wear our school colors, our class uniforms, the styles and fashions that seek to say many things about us, often suggesting things that are misleading. Our removeable identities seek to make us more than we are. The school colors and merchandise seek to say, “We won,” even though “we” didn’t play a single minute. They played. We watched. But our make-shift identities say that they are us and that we won.

It’s a tribal thing. Nations are but tribes writ large, flags but tattoos on a pole.

And then there are God’s tattoos.

See, I have inscribed you on the palms of My hands; Your walls are continually before Me.” Isaiah 49:16

This comes in a passage where God is assuring the people of Israel that He will never forget them.

“Can a woman forget her nursing child, and not have compassion on the son of her womb? Surely they may forget, Yet I will not forget you.Isaiah 49:15

In our Orthodox prayers for the departed, we pray, “Make their memory to be eternal.” It is a prayer that asks God to do what He has already promised to do (which is typical of most prayers).

There is yet more to be seen in this “eternal memory” within God. Isaiah depicts it as “graven on His hands.” We clearly see the hands of God, manifest in the hands of Christ, who is crucified for us. Our “names” are engraved as wounds in the hands of “Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.” God not only remembers us (described in such a graphic manner), but remembers us in our suffering. Those same wounds do not disappear in the resurrected Christ, but remain visible, now as marks of His glory.

…if indeed we suffer with Him, we will also be glorified with Him (Rom. 8:17)

The clothing, costumes, and marks we place upon ourselves seek to reveal something (or cover something). In some manner, they shield us, though feebly, like the fig-leaves of poor Adam. There is, however, a nakedness that is not ashamed, when it is covered in the righteousness of Christ, received in Holy Baptism. Its marks are indelible. Within the soul there is inscribed the wounds of Christ, gathering into them all the suffering of the soul. In that patient work, suffering is transformed into glory by the God who will not and cannot forget.

Remember us, O Lord, in Your kingdom!

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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31 responses to “God’s Tattoos”

  1. Hal Freeman Avatar
    Hal Freeman

    Great and comforting thoughts. And you also took me back to the old days when my older cousin was in the Navy and got a tattoo. Shock and disbelief!!! Thank you!

  2. Margaret Avatar
    Margaret

    Thank you for this Fr. Stephen, it is so very comforting! And I, as a small child, remember when only my uncle who had been in the navy had a tattoo. When tattoos came into popularity our daughter was maybe 4 years old and my husband read an article in the NY Times that discussed the “new popularity among young people of tattoos”. He proceeded to tell our four year old that she should never get a tattoo! And when she was a teenager and her friends began to get tattoos (early on it seemed like mostly family members who wanted to remember a deceased loved one would all get similar tattoos). I agree with all that you have said here and I no longer see the tattoo as a threat to our children’s — or anyone’s — well being, except for the hateful ones. I really appreciate your comments about “God’s Tattoos”. Glory to God for All Things.

  3. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen wrote:

    “Within the soul there is inscribed the wounds of Christ, gathering into them all the suffering of the soul. In that patient work, suffering is transformed into glory by the God who will not and cannot forget.”

    How does this transformation into glory work exactly? What does it look like? What is God not forgetting?

    Also … my fundamentalist blood pressure is rising again :-):

    Leviticus 19:28:

    “‘Do not cut your bodies for the dead or put tattoo marks on yourselves. I am the Lord.”

    Can the tattoo parlors which line my city streets now rest easier because of the New Covenant?

  4. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Margaret,
    They have become ubiquitous. They no longer shock me (except for things like facial tattoos, etc.). I would underline, however, the element of shame that underlines much of our desire to clothe ourselves (or mark ourselves). The deep heart desires to be clothed with the righteousness of Christ – but very few know this and too few seek this (myself included).

    Our tribal markings (tatt’s, t-shirts, hats, flags, etc.) are symptoms of the dark times within our culture’s souls. I pray for light in the darkness and the brightness of the saints.

    “I will greatly rejoice in the LORD; my soul shall exult in my God, for he has clothed me with the garments of salvation; he has covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decks himself like a priest with a beautiful headdress, and as a bride adorns herself with her jewels, so my God has adorned me…”

  5. Nehme Saliba Avatar
    Nehme Saliba

    I appreciate your thought-provoking analysis. We must speak to society in its own language without demonizing it.

  6. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew, the Levitical prohibition, to my mind, ranks right up there with not eating pork. There is no canonical prohibition of this in the Christian tradition. Indeed, in Coptic practice, tattooing a cross on the wrist has been an important safeguard against child-stealing in the surrounding culture (I’m told). Pilgrims to Jerusalem, from Russia, insisted on getting a tattoo to mark their visit so that people back home would believe them. I believe it is still a common practice.

    How does this transformation (wound to glory) work? It is a healing that is consistent with resurrection. “Thou hast turned my mourning into dancing for, Thou hast put off my sackcloth, and girded me with gladness.” I believe this to be one of the most profound things that can take place in the Christian life. It is, for one, the healing of shame – this comes as we behold Christ face-to-face and are immersed in His love.

    I think of the conversation between Christ and Peter on the shore of the Galilee: “Peter, do you love me…feed my sheep.” There are the words (that we hear), but with each asking, there is a progressive healing of the wound and shame of Peter’s denial.

    The shame (wounds) of our soul craves this sort of healing – and, too often, it is not received. We should “restore” one another in our mutual ministry. Confession is a sacramental tool. It is, above all, an application of love.

    When you walk down your city streets and see the many tattoo parlors, pray for those who need healing in their souls and to be covered with the righteousness and mercy of Christ. And remember that you are one of them.

    When I was a child in SC, there was a fundamentalist university in town. Their students were easily identified by the manner of their clothing. The clothing was a form of tattoo’s when I come to think of it.

  7. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Fr. Stephen as always.

    What about suffering that isn´t self-inflicted; suffering as a result of what someone else does to us? What shame, if any, needs to be healed there?

    I am nearly certain I know the university Fr. Stephen. As you know, I spent some very formative years in SC.

  8. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    My wife has a colorful, small tattoo on her right calf of a turtle. It is symbolic of her Delaware Indian Tribal heritage. I was taken back when I first saw it.

    Yet it is an indelible connection to her Tribe. I suspect the Christian prohibition of tattoos comes from not wanting to be a martyr or anti-Christian.

  9. Cliff Avatar
    Cliff

    What about the scars that are left on one’s heart Father? They are only noticed by God and not men, yet are still part of my identity.

  10. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    Shame, as an experience, doesn’t really need a “moral” component – doesn’t matter who did it (us or someone else) or whether it was intentional or unintentional. A wound is a wound.

  11. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Cliff,
    All things can be healed – in the light of the glory of God as seen in the face of Jesus. The difficulty, I think, is allowing the love of God to enter into the deepest part of the heart.

    I think one of the reasons we are admonished to forgive everyone for everything (in essence) is that this is a means of allowing that light to enter.

  12. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen said:

    “A wound is a wound.”

    And I want them all healed Fr. Stephen.

    I remember learning about God in such fresh, new ways when I began learning about Orthodoxy so many years ago. God as divine healer and humankind as the sick who need this healing. This juxtaposed to the idea of me being a horrible, totally depraved sinner who needs moral correction … ugh!

    Peter on the shore of the Sea of Galilee receiving healing directly from our Lord. What a beautiful picture! “Feed my sheep”

  13. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Kmarin,
    The purpose of such prayer is the purpose of all prayer – communion with God. That we might dwell in Him and He in us. That is, in a nutshell, the purpose of our existence.

  14. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen said:

    “That we might dwell in Him and He in us. That is, in a nutshell, the purpose of our existence.”

    I´m so happy to be a regular part of a blog that does its very best to instill into the hearts and souls of its readers the purpose of human existence.

    Thanks so much Fr. Stephen and everyone else!

  15. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    For me, there are certain cornerstones of Orthodox Christian belief. That we exist in order to have communion with God is among the most important. I like to remind readers of such things frequently (so that I remember them myself).

  16. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    It is also my cornerstone Fr. Stephen. Thanks again.

  17. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    BTW: Martin Scorsese is producing a mini-series on the lives of Saints. One he included is St. Moses, the Black

  18. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Michael,
    I’m sceptical of Hollywood in the extreme. So…time will tell.

  19. Seraphim Avatar

    I just want to thank Fr. Stephen for so graciously, humbly, and simply unpacking the mystery of shame, Holy Confession, healing and Love!

    It’s a great blessing to me and so many, that have wounds and sins, that need deep healing.

    My heart tells me only one who has suffered from shame can truly heal it, and so few Priests extend to us such understanding and compassion, when dealing with our shame. Often anger or frustration is offered, because it’s even hard to stand with someone else in their shame.

    Thank you Fr. Stephen, you are a great blessing to us! I hope someday to enter into the healing and peaceful humility and Love that you offer us in Christ’s Love! And to understand how God deeply comforts us, and to find that comfort.

    May God Bless you for your honesty and Love, dear Father Stephen!

  20. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Seraphim,
    It’s a great joy when this kind of healing takes place in this life – it’s a foretaste of paradise. It also serves as a reminder that this joy waits for us. May God give us grace!

  21. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Father, skepticism is appropriate, but so is hope. As one who participated in amateur theater for 20 years while young — there is always hope for the truth to make itself known through joy and the natural predilection of the human heart.

  22. Jul Avatar
    Jul

    As someone who deeply appreciates craftsmanship and artistry in the material world, I often think about if/how there can be a healing quality in how we approach things like clothing and textiles. Can what we make and wear as we walk through life reflect the beauty and creativity of God (or attempt to), just as there can be something redemptive about gardening in a fallen world of weeds? Is clothing nothing more than a covering or source of inflated pride? Being raised in a Protestant tradition that seemed to ignore the physical in favor of a purely rational understanding of theology, I always struggled to make sense of my own intuition that contemplating (and embodying) beauty through material means is deeply important. After all, God created this beautiful, complex, material universe! If this makes sense, I would appreciate any thoughts or insights on this.

  23. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Jul,
    You are certainly correct – clothing and such has a greater purpose than merely covering our shame (though some element of that is likely to be present at all times). Vestments are a wonderful example – in which the clothing of a priest is a proclamation of the gospel. The proclamation of beauty (craftsmanship and the like) contains an element of gospel about it as well.

    I have a chapter in my book on shame (Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame) that focuses on the mystery of clothing. I look particularly at the wonder of bridal clothing (across all cultures!) and its place within the intimacy-beyond-shame that is the marriage bed.

    In truth, we can never reduce anything to something simple (like shame) because we are very complex and so is the whole of our life. Forgive me if my earlier comments erred on the side of reductionism.

    My mother loved to sew – and was quite good at it. She grew up in a time when farm girls (and others) often fashioned their dresses out of the cloth material of flour sacks that were made in lovely prints expressly for the purpose of providing beautiful material. I have wonderful memories of her wonder and awe as she would examine a seam on a very well-made piece of clothing.

    Thanks for the reminder in all of this!

  24. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    My late wife had many problems that led to anger. Her way out of that was 1. Sewing and repairing garments (not vespers); 2. making prayer ropes.
    Her prayer ropes were gorgeous and easy to use. The prayers she offered as she worked were an important aspect of their beauty and their use. I have one 25 count rope of her’s left that I use from time to time because I do not want to use it up.

  25. Jul Avatar
    Jul

    Fr. Stephen,
    Thank you for your helpful reply. It’s inspiring to think of a time when even flour sacks were thoughtfully and beautifully made with the intent of being re-purposed. I’ll certainly check out your book and the particular chapter on clothing.

    Michael,
    Thank you for sharing about your late wife – what a lovely example of craftsmanship as a form of meditative prayer.

  26. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Jul said:

    “Can what we make and wear as we walk through life reflect the beauty and creativity of God (or attempt to)?”

    Thanks for this Jul. Personally I think this is how it was always intended to be; creating things in life that both glorify God and reflect God´s beauty. Because society has become so detached from the divine I think what it creates is often a reflection of self rather than God. I think Fr. Stephen even mentioned earlier a movement in art that is anti-beauty. I find this troubling.

  27. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    My response to the Leviticus question:

    I wish I lived decades ago when women were not pressured to wear makeup. Facial tattoos seem shocking; some of the common ways women apply makeup are just as deforming, yet we have grown accustomed to them. What’s worse: a facial tattoo or 80 units of Botox? Both cover shame. One is a public expression of control over the shame (the tattoo), one privately hides the shame (the Botox). The latter devalues natural beauty and causes others who don’t engage in plastic surgery to feel worse.

    I do not have tattoos, but I do wear makeup. I think both should be treated the same way.

  28. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Michelle,
    Living in a cultural context brings difficulties for us all.

  29. Kmarin Avatar
    Kmarin

    Thank you for your reply, Fr. Stephen. “The purpose of such prayer is the purpose of all prayer – communion with God. That we might dwell in Him and He in us. That is, in a nutshell, the purpose of our existence.”

    I appreciate both your nuance and ability to distill. That we might dwell in Him and He in us.

  30. Kmarin Avatar
    Kmarin

    Thank you for your reply, Fr. Stephen.

    I appreciate both your nuance and ability to distill. That we might dwell in Him and He in us.

    Ironically, the commenting function rejected my comment because “I already said that.” And yet, what is distilled bears repetition.

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