Responsum: On Circumcision

We circumcise in the synagogue. . . . Rabbi Isaac ben Judah was asked, “What happens when a circumcision is held on a communal fast day, like the seventeenth of Tammuz or the third of Tishri? Do we say all the supplications and penitential poetry, including the confession and recitation of God’s pardoning attributes? And if we say the blessing over…

Please login or register for free access to Posen Library Already have an account?
Engage with this Source

This Hebrew responsum, preserved in the Maḥzor Vitry, a liturgical compilation by a prominent student of Rashi, Simḥah of Vitry, addresses what happens when a (joyful) celebration of a circumcision, which takes place in the synagogue, occurs on a (somber) fast day: certain melancholy prayers should be omitted, while others should be retained. Isaac’s emphasis on the traditional practices of the local community as a source of authority is clearly on display in this brief passage. This text underscores not only the communal aspect of circumcision but also the fact that its rituals were fully integrated into the synagogue services in northern Europe.

Read more

You may also like