Tattoo artists use job as way to share faith



They enjoy reaching out to a nontraditional crowd.
TOLEDO (AP) -- As an ordained minister, Brian Krabach denounces demonic symbols. As a tattoo artist, he refuses to ink his patrons with pentagrams or swastikas.
Krabach opened Revelation Tattoos in Toledo about a year ago as an extension of his ministry to people who feel put off by more straight-laced Christian lifestyles.
"It's not that we preach to people," he said. "We just talk."
Tattoo artist Ron Lee took Krabach as his apprentice, and the two co-founded the Toledo shop after Lee closed his parlor in nearby Petersburg, Mich.
Lee, 40, still works in Petersburg as a part-time firefighter and paints acrylic art of firefighters. He has been designing tattoos for 11 years.
Reaching out to peers
Krabach, 30, is a former Web designer and Internet entrepreneur who left his high-paying job to found Paradox Church, where he is the pastor.
"I thought about starting a church to reach our peers, a church that was like the others but with a different flavor," he said.
Krabach said the subject of God comes up every day at Revelation. The heavily tattooed and pierced minister said he enjoyed talking to tattoo artists about Jesus, but as he began to run out of uninked skin, he knew he'd need another approach to reach a nontraditional part of the population.
"So I decided to get on the other side of the chair," he said.
Krabach looked up Lee after learning he was involved in the Christian Tattoo Association, which claims several hundred members.
Found a spot
The two struck up a friendship and began looking for Toledo property. They found a spot nestled near a crack house and a liquor store.
"Brian's ministry is, I think, reaching the Gothics and other people who are marginalized by our usual standards of lifestyle," said the Rev. Dave Claassen, pastor of Mayfair-Plymouth Congregational Christian Church, a financial and spiritual supporter of Paradox.
But that ministry means drawing some lines, Lee said, such as not tattooing demonic symbols onto patrons.