yes
Answer:
Not the women of the House of Israel and those allowed to live among them per Leviticus 19:28.
The New Testament does not oppress women. What ever you read in the New Testament and think is oppression of women may be the customs of the people of that time
Well it's not a specific "who" or "where". Body piercings and it's origins come from many various countries and many various time frames, in some cases piercings can be thousands of years old. Tracing back to various cultures. So to put a specific who or where on the origins of body piercings would be a guess at best.
Body piercings aren't meant to be. Your body probably isn't agreeing with what you're doing to it.
I would not go over 5 you could have more but give your body a brake
The answer differs from person to person but the eyebrow peircing on a women says "Im feminine but still bad ass" its a good time
The size is selected at the time the piercing is done to best fit the client not all piercings are the same size.
This question is so vague that I have avoided answering questions like it (sometimes worded exactly the same) for a very long time, however, just so it's not asked again, the answer is that a large percentage of the population does in fact have body piercings. In fact more people than you ever expect even have genital piercings.
Jesus Christ was not alive in His earthly body yet in the time of the Old Testament. Therefore He did not say "I tell you the truth" at all in the Old Testament.
Yes you can. The maximum number of piercings that can safely be done in one sitting by a professional body piercer is three, any more and the body starts to go into shock, which is a needless stress the body can do without.
You have too much time on your hands, in this day and age piercings in the public do not indicate anything other than a personal style or taste. Read a book, go fishing, buy a kite, but quit reading something into body piercing that is not there.
In the Old Testament, there are instances where women were devalued due to the patriarchal society prevalent during that time. Women were often considered inferior to men and were subjected to social and cultural norms that limited their roles and rights. This devaluation is reflected in the texts and practices of the Old Testament.
The New Testament