Do you know what the Bible says
about jewelry, ornaments and
piercings (even tattoos)?
Should Christians wear jewelry?
By Ken Raggio
(I have created an imaginary story-line
here - based on scriptural facts - to give
a life-like context to this subject.
Nevertheless, I have tried very hard
to accurately present the true Biblical,
doctrinal essence. - KR)
From the earliest days,
jewelry was a blessing from God
It was
a beautiful bracelet
he drew carefully out of the tapestry bag. Rebekah gasped at the sight
of it, because somehow she instantly knew this stranger was going to
give it to her. He respectfully took her wrist and lifted it with his
left hand while he slid the bracelet smoothly over her hand. It was
solid gold.
"Crafted in Syria," he
explained, "and very valuable." She didn't need to be told. She had
always admired her grandmother's jewelry, but only in her fondest
dreams could she think of having any of her own.
Abraham's gifts to Rebekah
were fine jewelry
While
she studied it, she
couldn't ignore the fact that Eliezer was still digging in the tapestry
bag. When he produced another bracelet, identical to the first, she was
dumbfounded. He placed it on her other wrist. And reached into the bag
again. This time an exquisitely designed earring, a one-of-a-kind to be
sure, was laid in her hand. It was fine gold, trimmed in a silver
design, carefully inlaid with a ruby, an emerald and a diamond. It was
gorgeous.
Her ears had been pierced
since she was a baby, but all she ever wore in them was a pair of
simple onyx studs. She nervously fumbled with each earlobe until she
had the old piece out. Eliezer's compatriot thoughtfully pulled a
looking glass from his camel pouch, and held it for her while she
helped her donor place the new one in. It was hard to say what sparkled
more, the jewels, or Rebekah's eyes. Suddenly, her subtle comeliness
illuminated into stunning beauty.
Abraham
was wealthy in silver
and gold
Eliezer's
whole entourage had
been standing around all the while, quietly observing the presentation.
Suddenly, there was a burst of cheers and applause as they uniformly
acknowledged how well-suited she was to the elegant garnishings, and
more importantly, at Eliezer's good fortune in finding such an
obviously outstanding young woman for his master's son.
Little
did she know that
these were only tokens of a wealth of fine things that would eventually
be bestowed upon her. Abraham was very rich, not only in his livestock,
but also in much silver and gold. (Genesis 13:2). He would spare no expense
in lavishing his wealth upon his only daughter-in-law. Abraham's
generosity evidently reflected the very heart of God on these matters.
Joseph was rewarded in
Pharaoh's court with Gold and Jewelry
Years
later, Abraham's
great-grandson, Joseph, was selected to be used of God. It was God
Himself who instigated Joseph's rise to power in Pharaoh's court. His
family had impudently denounced him as a dreamer. But through Sovereign
arrangement, Joseph would inevitably wear Pharaoh's priceless ring and
golden necklace: God's reward to Joseph for serving His purpose.
The fleeing Israelites
spoiled the Egyptians of much precious jewelry
Two
hundred years later,
Israel's descendants numbered in the hundreds of thousands - even
millions. But times had changed, and Egypt had been hard on them. Yet
these were the people of God, and they were under an eternal directive.
Their future prosperity was sealed in prophetic guarantees. "Moses,
instruct all the women, that on the night before you flee the land,
they are to take a spoil of all the jewelry of the Egyptian women. I
want them to have great and valuable possessions when they go. Be sure
they all understand that I am with them. The jewelry will be a sign to
them that I am generous to my people" (see Exodus 11:2 and 12:36).
Afterward,
a strange thing
happened. Moses was called up into Mount Sinai, and for days, no one
heard from him. Everyone expected him back shortly, but this was
ridiculous. Nobody had seen or heard from Moses in weeks. What was
going on? Moses carried unprecedented authority over these Hebrews.
Aaron was beginning to wonder how he got by with it. As long as
everybody did everything Moses said, fine. But if they didn't, Moses
could be a monster. And at no time would it be more evident than the
day he finally came down from the mountain, and found them partying,
recklessly, with no thought or care about what God thought of their
reveling.
Their
jewelry became the
idols of the Israelites
The
most awesome thing they had done. The most valuable gifts God had given them, they had turned
into idols! Those crazy people had already forgotten God and His
fabulous mercy - bringing them across the Red Sea, feeding them with manna, and so many other miracles. Now, they had now molded a golden calf out of a large
quantity of their jewelry, and were dancing around, having the time of
their life, imagining that this golden calf had actually been their
deliverance from Egypt. It was a morbid abomination.
The
Holy Spirit was so
utterly grieved at their foolishness that he must have literally
gloated in Moses' fury toward them. In fact, if Moses hadn't mercifully
intervened, God would have destroyed them then and there. Moses'
righteous indignation flared, and he angrily forced them to grind the
golden calf to dust, scatter the powder in water, and drink it!
(Exodus 32:20). It was as if he was saying, "God's Spirit might have
dwelled within you, but now you will be filled with your phony god! I
hope you get sick!"
Not to
be mocked, God then
threatened to remove the presence of His Cloud by day, and Fire by
night, warning them that if they didn't take off all their ornaments
immediately, He just might come down and destroy them all. (Exodus 33:1-6). In a dramatic act of national repentance, all Israel quickly
stripped themselves of all their jewelry. God was appeased.
The
next related incident was
that God instructed Moses to take up a free-will offering for the
construction of the Tabernacle. At the top of the long list of
suggested items: "GOLD!" He was not forcing it out of them, but the
suggestion was conspicuously specific. They took the hint, because
"every man that offered, offered an offering of gold unto the Lord."
(Exodus 35:22). And not just portions of what they owned, but they
brought "all jewels of gold" to the Lord (verse 22).
To
say that was the end of
the matter would be incorrect. For in the centuries to come, as surely
as their military victories included the spoils of precious jewelry in
great wealth, God strictly imposed upon them to bring it to Him. "Moses
and Eliezer the priest took the gold of them, even all wrought jewels"
(Numbers 31:51). Even though the men had taken these spoils, "every man
for himself," they were collected, "what every man had gotten, of
jewels of gold, chains, and bracelets, rings, earrings, and tablets"
(perhaps gold beads) "to make an atonement for our souls before the
Lord" (verse 50).
God
Declared Jewelry an
Abomination
Now,
anyone should know that
jewels can't buy salvation, so we must deduce that their offering was
somehow intended to be a reprieve for their past idolatry of jewelry.
God eventually verbalized His hatred for the sight of jewelry on his
people. He forbade them to keep jewelry as spoils of war. "Thou shalt
not desire the silver or gold that is on them, nor take it unto thee,
lest thou be snared therein: for it is an abomination to the Lord thy
God. Neither shalt thou bring an abomination into thine house, lest
thou be a cursed thing like it: but thou shalt utterly detest it, and
thou shalt utterly abhor it; for it is a cursed thing" (Deuteronomy
7:25-26).
"Thou Shalt Utterly Detest It! Thou Shalt Utterly Abhor It!"
Even the kings were forbidden
to accumulate personal collections of jewelry. In the eventuality that
God would set up kings over Israel, each was instructed in advance not
to "greatly multiply to himself silver and gold" (Deuteronomy 17:17).
Solomon would later transgress, and it would cost him his relationship
with God. In the next generation, Joshua pronounced the sentence of
death by stoning and by fire upon Achan and his entire family. The
charge: keeping in their possession precious gold and silver, instead
of turning it over to the treasury of the Lord (Joshua 7:21).
Gideon sinned by desiring
jewelry
Gideon
was a mighty man of
valor, greatly used of God, but in his latter years, Gideon made a
request of the men of Israel: "that you would give me every man the
earrings of his prey." They spread a garment, and threw in golden
earrings, ornaments, collars, even the chains from the camels' necks.
Gideon had a priestly vestment molded from it all, and "all Israel went
a whoring after it: which thing became a snare unto Gideon, and to his
house" (Judges 8:24-27).
The
Word of God consistently and repeatedly denounces the ownership and possession of jewelry
Every
time Israel began to
possess jewelry, it became an occasion for spiritual decline, through
some form of vanity such as pride, sensuality or idolatry. It literally
turned their hearts away from God. The evidence grows, that jewelry
became increasingly offensive to God. Gideon had requested the jewels
of the Ishmaelites. Note that "they had gold earrings because they were
Ishmaelites." The strong implication is that the Jews didn't have
earrings.
God
never forgot the mockery
associated with jewelry.
Ezekiel
refreshed the issue,
reminding them that God had girded them with fine linen, "and covered
thee with silk. I decked thee also with ornaments, and I put bracelets
upon thy hands, and a chain upon thy neck. And I put a jewel upon thy
forehead, and earrings in thine ears, and a beautiful crown upon thy
head. Thus was thou decked with gold and silver" (Ezekiel 16, see also
Hosea 2:13). God raged over the fact that they played the harlot,
committing spiritual and physical whoredoms with them.
NOWHERE in the Old Testament did God ever give them permission to take back their
jewelry, nor did He ever give them any indication that He had changed His mind and now approves of their having jewelry.
Did
God drop his objections
to jewelry in the New Testament?
Evidently
not, since Paul for
some reason admonished, "...that women adorn themselves in modest
apparel, with shamefacedness and sobriety; not with broided hair" (a
hairstyle interwoven with jewels), "or gold, or pearls, or costly
array; but (which becometh women professing godliness) with good
works." (I Timothy 2:9).
Are
all ornaments undesirable?
The
only ornaments we can be
sure are allowed are spiritual in nature: "even the ornament of a meek
and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price" (see I
Peter 3:1-4). Peter confessed that "silver and gold, have I none" (Acts
3:6), while Paul stated, "I have coveted no man's gold or silver" (Acts
20:33). Jesus instructed the disciples to leave gold and silver out of
their ministerial baggage in Matthew 10:9.
Here are several reasonable
conclusions:
- 1. God originally lavished
jewelry upon those He favored.
- 2. Israel consistently abused
the privilege by idolizing their jewelry, or somehow turning it into an
abomination before God.
- 3. God turned against their
ever owning it, with the sole exceptions of it being allowed with some
restrictions in the treasury of the king's palace, and with no
restrictions in the treasury of the Lord's house, where it belonged.
- 4.
God has consistently, ever since the golden calf debacle, objected to anyone having private possession of jewelry.
Men have been condemned repeatedly for possessing jewelry.
- 5. The New Testament carries
the same spirit and attitude forward, of God's displeasure with
ornaments, and His pleasure with spiritual virtue in their place.
The
personal possession of
jewelry or ornaments was shown to induce vanity, pride, sensuality and
idolatry - vices that NO Christian should want - or ALLOW!
Alternately, we are offered the privilege of wearing the most beautiful of all ornamentation: the
virtues of Godliness, which are many and multi-faceted. While the
natural eye relishes outward garnishing, and criticizes comeliness and
shamefacedness, the Spirit of the Lord scarcely acknowledges
store-bought beauty, but lavishes praise on spiritual virtue.
While
no one can deny the
natural beauty of a fine piece of jewelry, nor berate its value in
material terms, it is important to remember whose eyes we seek to
please. The ornaments He thinks are beautiful have never been crafted
by even the finest jeweler!
AFTERTHOUGHT: Maybe
the same arguments also condemn body piercings (including EAR piercing), and even TATTOOS. "Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the
dead, nor print any marks upon you: I am the LORD," Leviticus 19:28.
A pierced ear with a golden earring is a double transgression against the holiness of God.
The modern epidemic of piercings and tattooing is the testimony of a
generation that has sold itself to Satan, despises the laws of God, and gloats itself in being a billboard for every vain, carnal and worldly image. God hates it.
"What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's," 1 Corinthians 6:19-20.
"Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you? If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy; for the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are," 1 Corinthians 3:16-17.
It is flagrant hypocrisy for a Christian to defend the use of their body as a mannequin for all the world's fads and fashions, but vehemently deny God His right to use their body as HIS advertisement.
"I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God," Romans 12:1.
SEE ALSO: HOLINESS: A PLACE APART FROM FORBIDDEN THINGS
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And God bless you!
Ken Raggio