ΧΦ°ΧΦ·ΧΦ²ΧΦ·Χͺ Χ’ΧΦΉΧΦΈΧ ΧΦ²ΧΦ·ΧΦ°ΧͺΦ΄ΦΌΧΧΦ°, Χ’Φ·Χ ΧΦ΅ΦΌΧ ΧΦ°Χ©Φ·ΧΧΦ°ΧͺΦ΄ΦΌΧΧΦ° ΧΦΈΧ‘ΦΆΧ
I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with unfailing kindness
Tattooed by: hossam.tattoos at tattoo.hysteria.amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Jeremiah came to us with a name that already carried deep meaning. Named after the prophet, he had always felt drawn to the strength and intimacy of Hebrew scripture. After a season marked by loss and reflection, he found himself seeking something rooted and enduring. He chose a verse that had accompanied him through grief and growth, a promise that stayed with him through prayer and change.β β
βI have loved you with an everlasting love. I have drawn you with unfailing kindness.β Jeremiah 31:3. A verse about love that does not falter and grace that reaches out even when we feel most unsteady. For Jeremiah, this became more than text. It was a reminder of where he turns for strength and of who knows him best, his Creator.β β
He imagined the verse running down the spine, close to his core, a physical reminder of a spiritual foundation. Gabriel envisioned the piece as a visual journey, beginning with structure and moving toward breath and freedom. Letters that first carry weight and discipline begin to open and lift, taking on an organic form that feels alive and reaching. It is a movement from tradition toward personal faith, from knowing of love to feeling it within.β
This piece is about being drawn back to what grounds you. It is about unfailing kindness and the courage to walk in it.β
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