De Jager
Puritan Board Junior
Hello friends,
I was recently studying through Galatians and was struck with the forcefulness of Paul's admonition to the the churches in Galatia to not receive circumcision.
That got me thinking - why the issue with circumcision? If this is the covenant sign, and points to the righteousness of faith (Rom. 4:11), why speak of it so harshly in the letter to the Galatians?
My conclusion is that Paul's issue wasn't with the sign itself, but the way that the sign had been misapplied and misunderstood by the Jews. The Jews viewed circumcision as just another box in the Mosaic law to check off in order to be justified by law-keeping. They did not consider that circumcision pre-dated Moses by 430 years and was given to Abraham AFTER he was justified by faith alone.
Thus, when the Judaizers urged the Gentiles to receive circumcision, they were not in essence saying "you should receive the covenant sign like we did", but rather "you need to do this in order to be justified...oh and by the way, you also need to keep all the rites and ceremonies of the Mosaic law".
This in my mind, is one of the reasons that circumcision had to go. The early church was filled with Jews, and the Jews of the day did not understand God's covenant sign. A continuation of circumcision as the covenant sign would have brought in massive confusion to the churches, since many of the Jews viewed it as a "work" and not as a sign of faith.
Another reason I have heard is that circumcision was a bloody sign, and since Christ's blood was shed once for all, we no longer need to shed any blood. Therefore, we have a much cleaner sign in baptism.
These are a couple of reasons I can think of as to why circumcision was discontinued. What is your take on the issue?
I was recently studying through Galatians and was struck with the forcefulness of Paul's admonition to the the churches in Galatia to not receive circumcision.
That got me thinking - why the issue with circumcision? If this is the covenant sign, and points to the righteousness of faith (Rom. 4:11), why speak of it so harshly in the letter to the Galatians?
My conclusion is that Paul's issue wasn't with the sign itself, but the way that the sign had been misapplied and misunderstood by the Jews. The Jews viewed circumcision as just another box in the Mosaic law to check off in order to be justified by law-keeping. They did not consider that circumcision pre-dated Moses by 430 years and was given to Abraham AFTER he was justified by faith alone.
Thus, when the Judaizers urged the Gentiles to receive circumcision, they were not in essence saying "you should receive the covenant sign like we did", but rather "you need to do this in order to be justified...oh and by the way, you also need to keep all the rites and ceremonies of the Mosaic law".
This in my mind, is one of the reasons that circumcision had to go. The early church was filled with Jews, and the Jews of the day did not understand God's covenant sign. A continuation of circumcision as the covenant sign would have brought in massive confusion to the churches, since many of the Jews viewed it as a "work" and not as a sign of faith.
Another reason I have heard is that circumcision was a bloody sign, and since Christ's blood was shed once for all, we no longer need to shed any blood. Therefore, we have a much cleaner sign in baptism.
These are a couple of reasons I can think of as to why circumcision was discontinued. What is your take on the issue?