Guest: Jonathan Inman. What is circumcision really about in Genesis 17?
Drawing on biblical scholarship, anthropology, and close textual reading, we examine why circumcision became the covenantal sign given to Abraham and how it relates to the central drama of Genesis 17: Abraham's struggle to believe that God's promise of a son could still come true.
The conversation moves beyond sociological explanations of circumcision and uncovers a profound theological message. The covenantal mark on Abraham's body is not simply about identity or membership—it is a sign of faith in God's ability to bring life, descendants, and a future where human possibility seems exhausted.
Along the way, they revisit Abraham's laughter, the birth promise of Isaac, and the recurring tension in Abraham's life between trust and doubt.
In This Episode
Why scholars have proposed so many different explanations for circumcision
Circumcision in ancient Egypt and the broader ancient Near East
The strengths and limits of anthropological approaches to biblical rituals
The structure of Genesis 17 and the covenant of circumcision
Abraham's laughter: skepticism, amazement, or something in between?
The significance of God's promise that Sarah will bear Isaac
How circumcision functions as a sign of faith in God's future promises
The relationship between the covenant sign and fertility, descendants, and continuity
Abraham as a model of both faith and doubt
What Genesis 17 teaches about trusting God when fulfillment seems impossible
The discussion is based on, Jonathan D. Inman “Abraham’s Circumcision: An Ironic Mnemonic Device,” Journal for the Study of the Old Testament49, no. 4 (2025): 507–520
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