Parashat Tazria
Better Than
God?
The ritual of
circumcision allows us to partner with God in the covenant and also in
perfecting creation.
By Rabbi David Goldstein
The following article is reprinted with permission from The Union of American Hebrew Congregations. For a free e-mail subscription to the UAHC’s
weekly Torah commentary, please
click here.
A cutting debate has been raging both within the Jewish
world and outside it concerning the issue of brit milah, ritual
circumcision, which is presented in the opening verses of Parashat Tazria.
The question most often posed about this subject is: Who ever heard of making
the central symbol of the covenant between Abraham and God and between
Abraham’s male descendants and God an issue? Brit milah is a mitzvah, an
absolute and sacred obligation practiced by our people from time immemorial.
So goes the argument of the practice’s proponents, while its
opponents charge that the pain and trauma inflicted upon an unwilling infant is
pure torture. Furthermore, they ask, “Why should this particular act become the
sine qua non of Jewish covenantal identity when other biblical expressions of
the covenant, such as the rigid observance of the Shabbat, have been
disregarded, if not altogether discarded, by many?” In this context the curious
and energetic student might well explore other biblical references to the brit,
covenant, that are unrelated to brit milah.
For most Jews, however, the ritual circumcision of an
eight-day-old boy is a moment of the highest religious meaning, linking him
with generations of people who date back to the first spark of Jewish
covenantal monotheism. We celebrate it as the mitzvah par excellence and view
it as almost a mystical event in our lives, sometimes difficult to explain but
emotionally compelling and even overwhelming.
In Hellenistic thought, however, circumcision was regarded
as an anathema--a rite that mutilated and distorted the natural perfection of
the human body, a diminution of unimprovable wholeness, and a reduction of
beauty.
During the Maccabean period, Greek influences became so
attractive to Jews that many Jewish young men, who were often ridiculed by the
cultivated Hellenists, attempted to disguise their circumcision by means of
excruciatingly painful and potentially life-threatening surgery. The Tannaim
(mishnaic rabbis) condemned such repudiation of Jewish tradition as worthy of
excommunication (Mishnah, Keritot 1:1).
According to the midrash (Tanchuma, Tazria 5),
Tarnus Rufus, the Wicked, once asked Rabbi Akiba: “Whose works are better,
those of God or those of creatures of flesh and blood?” Akiba answered: “The
works of flesh and blood are better.” To which Tarnus Rufus retorted: “Is that
why you Jews circumcise, to prove that you’re better than God?” To which Akiba
replied: ”I anticipated your second question in your first. God has given us
commandments for the sole purpose of enabling us to perfect [tikkun] the
divine works of creation, as God’s partners.”
And so it is with brit milah. The natural order does not
expect or even encourage circumcision. If it did, a baby boy would enter the
world circumcised, as Akiba reasoned. Hence brit milahis our distinct
mitzvah, an act we perform to elevate and even perfect the divine works of
creation, and in so doing, we elevate and perfect our distinctive corner of
God’s world.
Thus, by performing the act of circumcision, we complete
God’s plan. We become God’s partners not only in this expression of our ancient
covenant but also in the ongoing creation of the world.
David Goldstein
is the rabbi of Touro Synagogue in New Orleans, La.
The Union of American Hebrew
Congregations is the central body of Reform Judaism in North America,
uniting 1.5 million Reform Jews in more than 900 synagogues. UAHC services include camps, music and book
publishing, outreach to unaffiliated and intermarried Jews, educational
programs, and the Religious Action Center in
Washington, D.C.