Jesus is as mad as a harlot locked in a Bible factory over THIS story from Tennessee.
Friends, let us see what the Holy Bible has to say on the subject.
Leviticus 19:28 (King James Version)
Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you: I am the LORD.
This would include the revolting goth vice of "piercings" referred to in the secular news story above as well. How this drug-addict homer can be so deluded is beyond me. He must have been reading some false Bible while bending over in the showers to pick up the soap.
Christian tattoo parlor avoids profane designs
Customers get a witness along with their body art
Billy Joe Henry would love to tattoo your arms — but don't ask him for a peace sign or profanity.
Henry owns a Christian tattoo parlor on Broadway in Nashville— he's also set up shop in Terre Haute, Ind., and plans to have a parlor in Clarksville by the end of the summer.
While serving time in jail in Indiana for a felony drug charge — he said he was taking about $250 worth of drugs each day at the time — he became a Christian when one of his jail mates started preaching.
"I had to listen because he was a big guy, and I wasn't about to make him mad," Henry said.
That night, after hearing the Gospel in a cell, Henry said a prayer. "I said, 'God, if you're real, get me out of here and I'll start going to church,' " Henry recalled. Within a couple of weeks of going to jail, Henry's judge threw out his case and his criminal
record was expunged. He walked away a free man.
And he didn't forget his promise.
As part of his reform, Henry, 38, decided to give up tattooing.
Then one Sunday at church, Henry's wife, Lynn Henry, felt God put it in her heart for Henry to open a Christian tattoo parlor.
"This is what he loved doing, and there needed to be a way for him to do something he loved doing," she said.
The Henrys first opened a parlor in Indiana before moving to Nashville three years ago and opening Billy Joe's Tattoos. They now live in Hendersonville with their 8-year-old son.
Billy Joe Henry said they now have a large Christian customer base but their "heart" is still to reach non-Christians.
"It's our way of witnessing to those who aren't going to listen to a man in a three-piece suit telling them about Jesus and what he can do for them," he said.
"I'm there for the nonbeliever, for the person that doesn't know Christ. That's where the mission field is: the nonbeliever."
Henry won't tattoo any design "that glorifies sin," he said. Limitations include marijuana leaves, profanity, peace signs and homosexuality. This sometimes drives away business, but Henry said he isn't bothered.
"We try and make sure that everybody understands that we're just a tattoo shop. We have different beliefs than a lot of other people, but we have great tattoo artists and great body piercers who do awesome work," Billy Joe Henry said.
Customers get a witness along with their body art
Billy Joe Henry would love to tattoo your arms — but don't ask him for a peace sign or profanity.
Henry owns a Christian tattoo parlor on Broadway in Nashville— he's also set up shop in Terre Haute, Ind., and plans to have a parlor in Clarksville by the end of the summer.
While serving time in jail in Indiana for a felony drug charge — he said he was taking about $250 worth of drugs each day at the time — he became a Christian when one of his jail mates started preaching.
"I had to listen because he was a big guy, and I wasn't about to make him mad," Henry said.
That night, after hearing the Gospel in a cell, Henry said a prayer. "I said, 'God, if you're real, get me out of here and I'll start going to church,' " Henry recalled. Within a couple of weeks of going to jail, Henry's judge threw out his case and his criminal
record was expunged. He walked away a free man.
And he didn't forget his promise.
As part of his reform, Henry, 38, decided to give up tattooing.
Then one Sunday at church, Henry's wife, Lynn Henry, felt God put it in her heart for Henry to open a Christian tattoo parlor.
"This is what he loved doing, and there needed to be a way for him to do something he loved doing," she said.
The Henrys first opened a parlor in Indiana before moving to Nashville three years ago and opening Billy Joe's Tattoos. They now live in Hendersonville with their 8-year-old son.
Billy Joe Henry said they now have a large Christian customer base but their "heart" is still to reach non-Christians.
"It's our way of witnessing to those who aren't going to listen to a man in a three-piece suit telling them about Jesus and what he can do for them," he said.
"I'm there for the nonbeliever, for the person that doesn't know Christ. That's where the mission field is: the nonbeliever."
Henry won't tattoo any design "that glorifies sin," he said. Limitations include marijuana leaves, profanity, peace signs and homosexuality. This sometimes drives away business, but Henry said he isn't bothered.
"We try and make sure that everybody understands that we're just a tattoo shop. We have different beliefs than a lot of other people, but we have great tattoo artists and great body piercers who do awesome work," Billy Joe Henry said.
Friends, let us see what the Holy Bible has to say on the subject.
Leviticus 19:28 (King James Version)
Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you: I am the LORD.
This would include the revolting goth vice of "piercings" referred to in the secular news story above as well. How this drug-addict homer can be so deluded is beyond me. He must have been reading some false Bible while bending over in the showers to pick up the soap.

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