Friday, March 27, 2026

The Vision: For we are the circumcision

 


Image: Richard Lithgow, Apostle Paul in prison (2022), Pencil.

Note: Devotion based on last Sunday's sermon on Philippians 3:1-7.

"For we are the circumcision...."(Philippians 3:3a).

In Philippians 2:19-30 the apostle Paul commended to the saints at Philippi two men, Timothy (vv.19-23) and Epaphroditus (vv. 25-30), as faithful ministers. This was a positive commendation. In Philippians 3:1-3, however, Paul offers a sober warning against false teachers.

In 3:2 he offers a staccato threefold warning: Beware… Beware… Beware….

First, “Beware of dogs!” Did Paul have something against dogs? No. The dog is indeed a wonderful animal. This is a figure for false teachers, because in Paul’s day there were many feral dogs that roamed the streets, mangy and diseased. Some had rabies. If you saw dogs of this kind, you had better beware.

Second, “Beware of evil workers.” They should have been doing good, but instead they were working evil.

Third, “Beware of the concision” (or “mutilation”). A look ahead to the next verse makes clear that these dogs/evil workers were those who were teaching that circumcision was necessary for the living of the Christian life.

There was a massive controversy over circumcision in the early church. In Acts 15 we read how false teachers had stirred up controversy in the church at Antioch, teaching, “Except ye be circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be saved” (Acts15:1). Paul and Barabas opposed this false doctrine and appealed to the apostles and elders of the church at Jerusalem, who supported their stand against the false teachers (see Act 15).

We also see this controversy at the heart of Paul’s letter to the churches of Galatia. Paul warned against false teachers who had troubled the believers and perverted the gospel of Christ (Gal 1:7). He made clear that “a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ” (Gal 2:15), finally stating, “For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth any thing, nor uncircumcision; but faith which worketh by love” (Gal 5:16). Believers are not justified by circumcision but only by faith in Christ alone.

Paul was warning the Philippians about this same false teaching. In Philippians 3:3 he declares, “For we are the circumcision….”

What does this mean? Notice that Paul does NOT say, “For we all HAVE BEEN CIRCUMCIZED.”

Notice also that Paul does NOT say, “For we CONTINUE to practice circumcision that we might be justified before God, according to the covenant that was given to Abraham in Genesis 17.”

No, the apostle says, “For we ARE the circumcision.”

Who are the “we”? This includes Paul himself and his co-workers, alongside all the saints at Philippi. Timothy had a Christian mother and a pagan father, but he was not circumcised till he reached adulthood (see Acts 16). Paul was raised in a pious Jewish home and was circumcised on the eighth day (see Phil 3:5). Epaphroditus was likely a full pagan (his name meaning “from the goddess Aphrodite”) and was never circumcised (like Titus, cf. Gal 2:3).

No matter Jew or Greek, or of mixed ethnic heritage, no matter physically circumcised or not, Paul declares that Christians ARE the circumcision.

The Old Covenant circumcision instituted by Abraham set apart the Jewish males physically as Jews. Paul said that New Covenant believers, however, are not those set apart by their outward appearance but by an inward transformation. Not by an outward bodily surgery, but by an inward spiritual surgery.

The prophets had anticipated this. Moses wrote, “Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiffnecked” (Deut 10:16). Jeremiah wrote, “Circumcise yourselves to the Lord, and take away the foreskins of your heart” (Jer 4:4a).

The true circumcision, the circumcision of the heart, takes place through regeneration. It is a transformation from the inside out, not the outside in. It is being born again. Paul takes up this same metaphor in Colossians when he said, “ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands” (Col 2:12).

Every genuine believer has experienced this circumcision, and we should beware anyone who suggests we need add anything to this for salvation.

Need circumcision? No. We ARE the circumcision.

Grace and peace, Pastor Jeff Riddle

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