Circumcision - the best thing for your son?
74For thousands of years, procedure considered 'healthy'
There are many facets as to why circumcision is still adhered to along the east coast U.S.A. (it's not really found elsewhere in the world anymore). Here's what I've collected as reasons:
1) Religious requirements for fundamental Christians and Jews/Judaism.
2) Considered healthy because of years of poor explanation blindly followed by many.
3) Aesthetics
Now the irony of the entire situation is that, primarily, health issues arise as the first explanation. There are more common and more subtle reasons to the madness, however. First, look at it from Judaism's viewpoint: God had at one point told Abraham to circumcise his sons as a mark of the people of YHWH. He did, and did so to himself (adult) and sons (adult). Not a fun thing to do to yourself, cut off that foreskin...ouch! As a male and as a circumcised unbotched male, I find this somewhat unappealing. So the jews have ample reason to believe this, because they believe the covenant of Abraham is unaltered andthe messiah has yet to come and receive His people.
Fundamental Christians, however, see it much differently. They don't hold to any covenant standpoint in theology, they hold primarily to a dispensational. Why on earth, then, do they religiously hold that circumcision still is a marking of God on His people? The covenant Christians hold that Christ's mark is in baptism, and a few groups of the Fundies do as well, albeit few and far between. I grew up fundie and I learned that because God commanded Abraham, it must be healthy, and therefore it must be adhered to as a scritpural commandment to follow Christ.
This is simply not true.
First, circumcision is not the same today as it was in Abraham's day. The procedure now is over the top and excessive, removing far more fold than necessary. In 1442, the church issued papal ruling that forbid circumcision of its members. The Renaissance was an era where no men were circumcised at all, it was completely nonexistent. There is thus this gap in European culture that spans the ancient Roman Empire to roughly 1500 years later, where the procedure is then picked up again.
Why is this alarming? Because if a procedure is unpracticed for 1500, can you imagine that it would resemble the same exact practice one and a half millennia later? Try this with a carriage: allow a culture to go without horse drawn vehicles of any sort and then show thema picture 1500 years later and expect them to replicate it. Simply not going to happen. The same thing has happened with the practice of removing the foreskin.
The practice of circumcision thus ended physically and began spiritually in the Bible from the point of the new covenant on. In parallel with the lack of the practice after 1442, it did not pick up again until the very very late 19th century, because the foreskin was considered a vital part of male maculinity.
Now arise the health concerns.
Since 1950: (excerpt from Wikipedia, up to date information)In 1949, a lack of consensus in the medical community as to whether circumcision carried with it any notable health benefit motivated the United Kingdom's newly-formed National Health Service to remove routine infant circumcision from its list of covered services. One reason may have been Douglas Gairdner's famous study, The fate of the foreskin, which revealed that for the years 1942-1947, about 16 children per year in England and Wales had died because of circumcision, a rate of about 1 per 6000 circumcisions. [15] Since then, circumcision has been an out-of-pocket cost to parents, and the proportion of newborns circumcised in the hospital has fallen to less than one percent.
Similar trends have operated in Canada, (where public medical insurance is universal, and where private insurance does not replicate services already paid from the public purse) Individual provincial heath insurance plans began delisting non-therapeutic circumcision in the 1980s. Manitoba was the final province to delist non-therapeutic circumcision which occurred in 2005 [16]. The infant circumcision rate in Canada has fallen from roughly half in the 1970s to its present value of 11%, albeit with strong regional variations.
In South Korea, circumcision was largely unknown before the establishment of the United States trusteeship in 1945 and the spread of American influence. More than 90% of South Korean high school boys are now circumcised, but the average age of circumcision is 12 years, which makes South Korea a unique case [17].
In some South African ethnic groups, circumcision has roots in several belief systems, and is performed most of the time on teenage boys:
"...The young men in the eastern Cape belong to the Xhosa ethnic group for whom circumcision is considered part of the passage into manhood... A law was recently introduced requiring initiation schools to be licensed and only allowing circumcisions to be performed on youths aged 18 and older. But Eastern Cape provincial Health Department spokesman Sizwe Kupelo told Reuters news agency that boys as young as 11 had died. Each year thousands of young men go into the bush alone, without water, to attend initiation schools. Many do not survive the ordeal..." [18].
Prior to 1989, the American Academy of Pediatrics had a long-standing opinion that medical indications for routine circumcision were lacking. This stance, according to the AMA, was reversed in 1989, following new evidence of reduction in risk of urinary tract infection. [17] A study in 1987 found that the prominent reasons for parents choosing circumcision were "concerns about the attitudes of peers and their sons' self concept in the future," rather than medical concerns.[19] A 1999 study reported that reasons for circumcision included "ease of hygiene (67 percent), ease of infant circumcision compared with adult circumcision (63 percent), medical benefit (41 percent), and father circumcised (37 percent)." The authors commented that "Medical benefits were cited more frequently in this study than in past studies, although medical issues remain secondary to hygience and convenience."[20] A 2001 study reported that "The most important reason to circumcise or not circumcise the child was health reasons."[18] A 2005 study speculated that increased recognition of the potential benefits may be responsible for an observed increase in the rate of neonatal circumcision in the USA between 1988 and 2000.[21] In a 2001 survey, 86.6% of parents felt respected by their medical provider, and parents who did not circumcise "felt less respected by their medical provider".[18]
In the United States, statistics (1999) collected by the National Center for Health Statistics show that the overall rate of neonatal circumcision had remained near 65% since data collection began in 1979 [22]. However, strong regional differences in the circumcision rates have developed during this time. While more than 80% of newborn boys are circumcised in the Midwest and South, circumcision rates have declined to about 37% in the West in 1999. [23]. This has been attributed in part to increasing births among Latin Americans, who usually do not circumcise [24].
________
So, now it is entirely in the "interests" of the parents to decide for their children. There is no health benefit, the aesthetic benefit is an entirely mental affair, and the religious significance applies only to the jews.
What now?
Don't get your sons circumcised. If you're an east-coast American male, it's probable you are circumcised. If you're female, you're more than likely under the conviction that it's a healthy endevor for your son. As a couple, you're even more convinced because you'd never have a son not have what you have. Amazingly America is the only nation in the world with circumcisions amounting to over 50% of the male population. In Europe and Australia, the numbers are under 14%.
Take the stand. My brother had a botched circumcision that required that he undergo the operation once again, a failure that to this day my mother has not forgotten. I know I won't be allowing the doctors to cut my son's extension. The scariest part is the possibility for the individual to contract HIV from the operation itself, which is the most alarming possibility of them all.
In review:
1- the new covenant of Christ determines that circumcision is NOT a good thing,
2- Baptism replaces circumcision as a mark of the messiah's people
3- the health benefits are zero
4- the health risks (in Europe) are about 1 in 6000 cases, about 16 per year in England
5- The aesthetics are a very postmodern viewpoint. It was considered unmasculine to be circumcised in Europe and America up until 1949.
There are other reasons, but the health benefits have been proven false time and again. Do you want to be a part of something as useless and potentially harmful as circumcision? Take the stand and don't circumcise your sons.
--TK
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Just wanted to share that I personally know 2 people (different families) who had to have their sons circumsized at age 9mos and 6yrs because of constant UTI's and problems. Their doctors were not necessarily pro-circumcision but it was necessary in those cases.
I think it is a personal decision for each family to make and not that big of a deal (in the grand scheme of things). But having known those 2 people and knowing that their kids REMEMBER having to go through that procedure. No thanks!
I'd rather my sons have it done when they are first born (when the nerve endings down there haven't developed yet) and be done with the nonsense. On top of that I think the thought of digging (okay gently cleaning) around in there every time the baby has a poopy diaper is GROSS and I for one am not interested (and if you have any idea of how many poopy diapers newborns have you'd take pause too!). That's just my take on it. If a parent is willing to take the time to keep it clean and making sure their sons learn how to care for it properly good for them... I am not comfortable with dealing with that aspect of parenthood every few hours for the first several months (at least with a breastfed baby their BM's are soupy and disgusting). Sorry for the TMI.
Not convinced either way myself...but your reasoning doesn't seem to make sense. The Wikipedia exerpt addresses how medical opinion has waxed and waned on the advantages. However, the last paragraph you give says this:
"Prior to 1989, the American Academy of Pediatrics had a long-standing opinion that medical indications for routine circumcision were lacking. This stance, according to the AMA, was reversed in 1989, following new evidence of reduction in risk of urinary tract infection. ... A 2005 study speculated that increased recognition of the potential benefits may be responsible for an observed increase in the rate of neonatal circumcision in the USA between 1988 and 2000."
You then say in your next paragraph:
"So, now it is entirely in the "interests" of the parents to decide for their children. There is no health benefit."
Maybe so, maybe not, but it seems like the most recent research cited in the article does show some medical benefit.
Good post. Perhaps you could clean it up a little bit, but your observations are right on. In fact, circumcised people have quite a few things that they're missing. Thankfully, doctors have started to not amputate the tendon along with everything else...but it still exposes a mucous membrane and makes it more prone to infection and irritation, robbing it of the antibodies and cleansers and stuff it's supposed to produce. All in all, not a wise health choice.
Yeah, it makes cleaning a little rougher (though don't go with those health sites that don't know what they're talking about and tell you to clean "under" in infancy...this would be like ripping off a fingernail and can only be done after natural separation, which usually happens before the child is 10...), but I like the observation I heard from a child who was having circumcision explained to him. The explainer said, "people do that sometimes because that part of the body can get dirty."
The uncut child said, "that's stupid! Why don't they just cut their butts off?"
Indeed.
Our sons pediatrician in Hawaii tried to discourage us from circumcising our boys...I would have been completely fine w/ them remaining uncircumcised having known a few men from my past who were indeed uncircumcised.
What's important as I believe you were attempting to point out from a Biblical context is the circumcision of the heart - in regards to devotion, commitment, obdience to God; in regards to sin - having a heart willing to receive conviction from the Spirit, 'cutting it away' as part of repentance.
I think many men though, particularly not having this conviction, (we were new Christians when our youngest was born) want their sons to resemble them....
All passages in the NT regarding the topic were of course inspired by God, but were penned by Paul...Rom:2:25-29, 1 Corinth. 7:19, Galatians 5:2-3
Oh, and what's a fundie?
I asked my son's pediatrician about the medical reason for having him circumcised. He said there is no reason to have it done. So my son is uncircumcised to this day.
I like the article you wrote. I agree with Christine about cirumcising the heart also. We must remove that foreskin to allow the love of Christ to come in.
Thanks T.
i am a christian and i think circumcision is an option. but you have to understand that in my country, an uncircumcised man or boy is a "laughing stock" in our society. When i have a son someday i would still encourage him to have a circusiom, anyway the pain is very temporary.
True, in the Philippines the situation is a difficult one...
I'm a woman so my view is slightly skewed, but I'm also a Christian. I was raised in a mildly fundamental church, but it was never taught that circumcision was a religious act or anyway needed from the church standpoint. We did it out of tradition and the believe of medical benefits which at the time would be the "smart" way to go when concerned about your child's health. In studying the old testament and so many of the laws the Lord gave Moses and the Hebrews, many of them in addition to having huge religious connotations, had big health reasons behind them. We know that now as science as advanced, and we've learned more. That is one of the ways they stood out from the other cultures. They had a god that was watching out for them even when they had no full understanding the how. I think that over time we'll discover that there are huge benefits to this just like we are going back and changing stances on several so called "medical facts". It's always good to challenge these practices though just to make sure that you are on the correct path (challenging something does not mean that it is wrong - it means that we are wise). The Lord knew what He was doing and still does.
Side note: I think that one of the reaons some people might say that as Christians we are not supposed to is from the words of Paul when he talks about the circumcision of the heart being more important that the physcial circumcision (Romans 2 starting in verse 25). But as with so many things it can be taken out of context. You are right that the physical does not save, but it might not be wrong.
What ever decision you make with your child(ren), be strong and sure and willing to challenge....
Another great piece.













R Burgett 3 years ago
Where is that passage located where Jesus says that about circumcision?