The Feast of the Circumcision: A Blessed New Year!
While January 1 marks the beginning of the civil new year—and we
wish every blessing of the season to our readers—it also marks the Feast
of the Circumcision of our Lord, Jesus Christ.
On the eighth day after His Nativity, our Lord Jesus Christ was
circumcised in accordance with the Old Testament Law. All male infants
underwent circumcision as a sign of God’s Covenant with the holy
Forefather Abraham and his descendants (Genesis 17:10-14, Leviticus
12:3).
After this ritual the Divine Infant was given the name Jesus, as the
Archangel Gabriel declared on the day of the Annunciation to the Most
Holy Theotokos (Luke 1:31-33, 2:21). The Fathers of the Church explain
that the Lord, the Creator of the Law, underwent circumcision in order
to give people an example of how faithfully the divine ordinances ought
to be fulfilled. The Lord was circumcised so that later no one would
doubt that He had truly assumed human flesh, and that His Incarnation
was not merely an illusion, as certain heretics (Docetists) taught.
In the New Testament, the ritual of circumcision gave way to the
Mystery of Baptism, which it prefigured (Colossians 2:11-12). Accounts
of the Feast of the Circumcision of the Lord continue in the Eastern
Church right up through the fourth century. The Canon of the Feast was
written by St Stephen of the St Sava Monastery (October 28 and July 13).
In addition to circumcision, which the Lord accepted as a sign of
God’s Covenant with mankind, He also received the Name Jesus (Savior) on
the eighth day after His Nativity as an indication of His service, the
work of the salvation of the world (Matthew 1:21; Mark 9:38-39, 16:17;
Luke 10:17; Acts 3:6, 16; Philippians 2:9-10). These two events, the
Lord’s Circumcision and Naming, remind Christians that they have entered
into a New Covenant with God and “are circumcised with a circumcision
made without hands, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by
the circumcision of Christ” (Colossians 2:11). The very name “Christian”
is a sign of mankind’s entrance into a New Covenant with God.
No comments:
Post a Comment