Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Genesis 17:13

He that is born in thy house, and he that is bought with thy money, must needs be circumcised: and my covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant.

Verse 13. He that is born in thy house] The son of a servant; he that is bought with thy money – a slave on his coming into the family. According to the Jewish writers the father was to circumcise his son; and the master, the servant born in his house, or the slave bought with money. If the father or master neglected to do this, then the magistrates were obliged to see it performed; if the neglect of this ordinance was unknown to the magistrates, then the person himself, when he came of age, was obliged to do it.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

So it was, and is properly in regard of the thing signified to all true believers; and for the sign, it is so called because it was to endure through all generations till the coming of the Messias; the word olam, here and elsewhere rendered everlasting, or for ever, being oft used to express not only simple eternity, but any long continuance, for many ages, yea, sometimes for a mans life. See Exo 21:6; Deu 15:17; 1Ki 9:3.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

He that is born in thine house, and he that is bought with thy money, must needs be circumcised,…. Or “in circumcising shall be circumcised” l, shall certainly be circumcised; this is repeated to denote the necessity of it, and what care should be taken that this be done, because there was to be no uncircumcised male among them,

Ge 17:10; nor any conversation and communion to be had among them, especially in a religious way.

And my covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant; circumcision was to be seen in their flesh, and no methods were to be taken to draw over the foreskin again, but it was to continue as long as they lived; and so in their posterity, in all succeeding ages, as a sign of the covenant and promise which should remain until the Messiah’s coming.

l “circumcidendo circumcidetur”, Pagninus, Montanus &c.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

13. For an everlasting covenant The meaning of this expression may be twofold: either that God promises that his grace, of which circumcision was a sign and pledge, should be eternal; or that he intended the sign itself to be perpetually observed. Indeed, I have no doubt that this perpetuity ought to be referred to the visible sign. But they who hence infer, that the use of it ought to flourish among the Jews even of the present time, are (in my opinion) deceived. For they swerve from that axiom which we ought to regard as fixed; that since Christ is the end of the law, the perpetuity which is ascribed to the ceremonies of the law, was terminated as soon as Christ appeared. The temple was the perpetual habitation of God, according to that declaration,

This is my rest forever, here will I dwell,” (Psa 132:14.)

The Sabbath indicated not a temporal but a perpetual sanctification of the people. Nevertheless, it is not to be denied, that Christ brought them both to an end. In the same way must we also think of circumcision. If the Jews object, that in this manner, the law was violated by Christ; the answer is easy; that the external use of the law was so abrogated, as to establish its truth. For, at length, by the coming of Christ, circumcision was substantially confirmed, so that it should endure forever, and that the covenant which God had before made, should be ratified. Moreover, lest the changing of the visible sign should perplex any one, let that renovation of the world, of which I have spoken, be kept in mind; which renovation — notwithstanding some interposed variety — has perpetuated those things which would otherwise have been fading. Therefore, although the use of circumcision has ceased; yet it does not cerise to be an everlasting, or perpetual covenant, if only Christ be regarded as the Mediator; who, though the sign be changed, has confirmed the truth. And that, by the coming of Christ, external circumcision ceased, is plain from the words of Paul; who not only teaches that we are circumcised by the death of Christy spiritually, and not through the carnal sign: but who expressly substitutes baptism for circumcision; (Col 2:11😉 and truly baptism could not succeed circumcision, without taking it away. Therefore in the next chapter he denies that there is any difference between circumcision and uncircumcision; because, at that time, the thing was indifferent, and of no importance. Whence we refute the error of those, who think that circumcision is still in force among the Jews, as if it were a peculiar symbol of the nation, which never ought to be abrogated. I acknowledge, indeed, that it was permitted to them for a time, until the liberty obtained by Christ should be better known; but though permitted, it by no means retained its original force. For it would be absurd to be initiated into the Church by two different signs; of which the one should testify and affirm that Christ was come, and the other should shadow him forth as absent.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(13) He that is born in thy house . . . Two things follow from this wide extension of the rite of circumcision: the first, that all members of Abrams household, being thus sharers in the covenant, were also numbered as belonging to the nations that sprang from him. We have seen that even in early days his followers must have numbered six or seven hundred men (Gen. 14:14), and they were growing in multitude all the rest of his life, and during the lifetime of Isaac. They were then divided between Esau and Jacob at Isaacs death (Gen. 35:27; Gen. 36:6-7), but the diminution in the number of Jacobs family thus caused must have been compensated by those whom he gathered for himself in Mesopotamia (Gen. 30:43). All his household went down with him into Egypt, as part of his taf, translated little ones in Gen. 46:5, but really signifying the whole body of dependents, men, women, and children. Placed there in the fruitful Delta, they would be counted as members of that tribe to the chief of which they belonged, and would swell the numbers of the vast host which left Egypt (Exo. 12:37). The second point is, that as all who were circumcised were regarded as Israelites, so also circumcision was confined to the Israelites. It was not a catholic ordinance, intended, like baptism, for all people and all times. Nor was it primarily a religious institution. The bought slave was circumcised first, and instructed afterwards. No profession of faith was required, but he was admitted to the privilege in right of his master. The reason of this was that it was an admission into the Jewish nation first, and by consequence only into the church. It is one of the many points which distinguish slavery, as practised among the Jews, from the degrading form of it which existed in modem times, that from the days of Abram onwards the slave by being circumcised was proclaimed to be one of the same race and nation as his master, and thereby entitled to share in his national and religious privileges.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

13. He that is born in thy house The bond slave of a patriarchal family as distinguished from one bought or taken in war . Comp . Gen 14:14.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Gen 17:13 He that is born in thy house, and he that is bought with thy money, must needs be circumcised: and my covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant.

Ver. 13. He that is born in thy house. ] Householders must see to it, that their families fear God. They walk not “in a perfect way” that do otherwise, Psa 101:2 that look not

“Aedibus in propriis, quae prava, aut recta gerantur.”

My covenant shall be in your flesh. ] That is, the sign of my covenant (by a metonymy of the subject), seem it never so simple, and prove it never so painful and shameful. The foolishness of God is wiser than men, that cry, Credat Iudaeus Apella ,& c.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

flesh. Figure of speech Synecdoche, for the whole person. App-6.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

born: Gen 14:14, Gen 15:3, Exo 12:44, Exo 21:4

bought: Gen 37:27, Gen 37:36, Gen 39:1, Exo 21:2, Exo 21:16, Neh 5:5, Neh 5:8, Mat 18:25

Reciprocal: Gen 9:16 – everlasting Gen 48:4 – everlasting Exo 6:4 – established Lev 10:15 – for ever Lev 22:11 – his money Psa 25:14 – he will Ecc 2:7 – and had Isa 24:5 – broken

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge