Circumcision in Smiths Bible Dictionary
was peculiarly, though not exclusively, a Jewish rite. It
was enjoined upon Abraham, the father of the nation, by God,
at the institution and as the token of the covenant, which
assured to him and his descendants the promise of the
Messiah. Gen. 17. It was thus made a necessary condition of
Jewish nationality. Every male child was to be circumcised
when eight days old, Le 12:3 on pain of death. The biblical
notice of the rite describes it as distinctively Jewish; so
that in the New Testament "the circumcision" and "the
uncircumcision" are frequently used as synonyms for the Jews
and the Gentiles. The rite has been found to prevail
extensively in both ancient and modern times. Though
Mohammed did not enjoin circumcision in the Koran, he was
circumcised himself, according to the custom of his country;
and circumcision is now as common among the Mohammedans as
among the Jews. The process of restoring a circumcised
person to his natural condition by a surgical operation was
sometimes undergone. Some of the Jews in the time of
Antiochus Epiphanes, wishing to assimilate themselves to the
heathen around them, "made themselves uncircumcised."
Against having recourse to this practice, from an excessive
anti-Judaistic tendency, St. Paul cautions the Corinthians.
1Co 7:18
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