
Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.
Chapter 17 represents a crucial juncture in the unfolding narrative of Genesis. It serves as the entrance to a covenant with YHVH and sets the stage for the joy that will accompany Isaac’s birth. But before this promise can be fulfilled, Abraham and his family must cross a threshold that is spiritual, symbolic, personal, and physical. The story in Genesis 17 features a significant insight almost always missed by us in our readings. But before we refer to it, a few introductory remarks are in order.
The Revelation of El Shadai
The chapter opens with a theophany that redefines the very nature of the God. The Holy One appears to Abram (Avram, אַבְרָם) and introduces Himself by a new name: El Shadai (אֵל שַׁדָּי). Our Bibles often translate this term as “God Almighty”—a title of raw, omnipotent power, drawing on the root shadad (שָׁדַד), meaning to overwhelm or destroy. But the Hebrew allows for a different translation. The same consonants point to shadayim (שָׁדַיִם), the Hebrew word for “breasts”—an ancient and powerful symbol of nurture and the capacity to sustain human life. In this light, God’s self-revelation as El Shadai becomes less about an overwhelming force (“God Almighty”) and more about being the “All-Sufficient One”—the God who nourishes and sustains, who makes good on His parental promise.
A New Identity
In Genesis 17, God speaks a new reality into existence. The name Abram, which means “exalted father” from av אָב (“father”) and ram רָם (“high”), becomes Abraham, which means “father of a multitude,” from av אָב (“father”) and hamon הָמוֹן (“many” or “a multitude”).
In a stunning declaration, God calls things that are not yet as though they already were. Abraham, still childless at ninety-nine, is redesignated as the progenitor of many nations. But more than that, the Holy One adds the Hebrew letter “hei” (ה) to Abram’s name—a signature letter from the Divine Name, YHVH (יהוה). The very Hebrew letter (ה) that symbolizes both God and the life He gives was now inserted into the name “Abram” (אַבְרָם) to transform it into “Abraham.” (אַבְרָהָם)
The Sign of Covenant
The LORD (YHVH) tells Abraham that the sign of the covenant between Him and Abraham and his offspring will be the sign of circumcision (brit milah, בְּרִית מִילָה). In doing so, God takes the very organ of human procreativity—the locus of man’s power to control his future, to build his dynasty, and to establish his name—and marks it as His own.
It is a sign inscribed in the flesh (ot bavasar, אוֹת בַּבָּשָׂר): a permanent mark, not merely recorded on paper or even carved in stone, but bearing a weight far greater than either. It stands as an enduring reminder—passed on from generation to generation—that the highest creative capacity of a man (making a child) must yield to the authority of the LORD.
What is important, however, is that the command extends beyond Abraham. YHVH instructs him:
“Every male among you shall be circumcised… he who is born in your house and he who is bought with money from any foreigner who is not your descendant.” (Genesis 17:10–12)
The covenant embraces not just the biological line but also the entire household—the whole community that dwells with Abraham. Every male, from heir to servant, must bear this mark. It is a profound leveling, demonstrating that belonging to God is not a matter of pedigree alone but of being incorporated into the household of faith.
In a Single Day
What happens slightly later is the ultimate proof of Abraham’s trust. That very same day, without hesitation or strategic delay, Abraham took Ishmael and every male born in his house and bought with his money and “circumcised the flesh of their foreskins” (Genesis 17:23).
His obedience was not only thorough but also immediate, seemingly without consideration for dangerous consequences.
Why would the timing matter? Because by circumcising every male in his household on a single day, Abraham rendered his entire encampment completely defenseless, trusting that the LORD (YHVH), now also known as El Shadai, would keep everyone safe. He remembers God’s promise given earlier. (Gen 15:1). There we read:
“Do not fear, Abram (אַל־תִּירָ֣א אַבְרָ֗ם), I am a shield to you (אָנֹכִי֙ מָגֵ֣ן לָ֔ךְ); Your reward shall be very great. (שְׂכָרְךָ֖ הַרְבֵּ֥ה)” (Gen 15:1)
It is clear that Abraham had to have recalled this promise when he considered the great danger to which his entire clan would now be exposed in the hostile environment of the ancient Middle East.
To understand this peril, we need only look ahead to the tragic story of Dinah in Genesis 34. There, after Shechem, a Hivite prince, violates Jacob’s daughter, he seeks to marry her. Her brothers, Simeon and Levi, respond with cunning deception. They insist that intermarriage can only occur if every male in Shechem’s city undergoes circumcision.
Hamor and Shechem persuade their townsmen to comply. But on the third day, when the men are “in pain” (Genesis 34:25)—at their most physically vulnerable and incapacitated—Simeon and Levi descend upon the city and slaughter every male.
So, coming back to our earlier story, Abraham, the seasoned and wise warrior, was surely aware of the realities on the ground. He had recently led his 318 trained men to rescue his nephew Lot and his family from being kidnapped, demonstrating his strategic capability (Genesis 14). He was well aware that a fighting force of incapacitated men would be no help at all.
By ordering a mass circumcision on a single day, Abraham was not just performing a ritual; he was fulfilling God’s command at the high cost of personal and communal security. He knew that for up to two weeks, every fighting man would be incapacitated, leaving the camp’s flocks, wealth, and families utterly defenseless against any vengeful neighbor or passing nomad. In that moment of profound vulnerability, he was placing his entire future—his wealth, his family, and his very life—into the hands of El Shadai, the All-Sufficient One.
From Abraham to Christ
This powerful moment of Abraham’s complete vulnerability finds its ultimate fulfillment in the ministry and death of Jesus. Just as Abraham rendered his entire household defenseless, trusting in El Shadai’s protection, Jesus would later strip Himself of divine privilege and power, making Himself utterly vulnerable on a Roman cross. The parallel deepens when we consider the words Jesus spoke from that cross: “Father, into Your hands I commit My spirit” (Luke 23:46). These are not merely words of resignation but of profound trust—the same trust Abraham demonstrated when he placed his entire camp’s safety into God’s hands. Where Abraham surrendered his capacity to protect his household through military might, Jesus surrendered His very life, trusting the Father to both receive His sacrifice for the world and to resurrect Him in three days. In other words, just as Abraham’s obedience on that single day opened the door for the creation of Israel as a family, Jesus’s complete self-surrender on the cross opened the door for the entire new creation (Rev 21:5).
Conclusion
This represents the forefront of our faith in the modern era. We are all, in some way, tempted to build our own security—whether through strategic planning, financial safety nets, or personal ability. But God still calls us to a place of sacred vulnerability, where we lay down our self-sufficiency and trust Him with the things we cannot control. It is in that space of our surrendered power that His power becomes manifest.
We are not called to strategize our way to safety but to trust the All-Sufficient One enough to make ourselves vulnerable to His promise and power. This is the path Abraham walked, the path Jesus perfected, and the path you and I must take.
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Thank you Rabbi for such a timely word. For what I have endured for the last 18 months, it is only El Shaddai who is able to transform me and conclude His covenant. His promise I have heard so often during these last six months.
I have made the decision to trust in El Shaddai with my very being. I ask that you shall stand in prayer with me. That Ru’ach of Elohim be my guide. That in my vulnerability I find myself in Elohim.
Oh YHVH I stand before You.
You and You alone know my heart.
Blessed is El Shaddai
Amen!
Very rich and alive words.i can even see life ahead of this message.Thank you Rabbi
Blessings and peace!
Check your article for consistency with spelling…Shadai or Shaddai.
done. thank you.
I can’t see any needed correction. Only thanks 🙂
Thanks back for checking the post for errors!
Thank you. Would you say that a covenant promise can be revoked? Say if the person’s faith is not fully strengthened to stay in it? Not a part of this discussion, but asking.
A covenant with YHVH can’t be exited. It can either be broken or upheld.
Great insight! Love it , specially when revealing El Shaddai, as the All-Sufficient One. Then, the fact that man’s “power” needs to be “remove” in the outwards reminds me of Jacob’s limps. Hahah we need to decrease so He will increase… love it all.
Blessings!
An absolutely phenomenal article Dr Eli.
I really enjoyed this. Thanks so much for challenging us to 🤔 think!
Re: God Almighty- El Shaddai : would you consider “God of all impossibilities” (beyond plausibility) as an apt perspective?
Will consider.
A thought provoving article.
Thank God for Abraham’s faith. Still inspiring us all today.
It would seem that the Holy Spirit moved Abraham to circumsize the men.
Could it have been divine intervention to bring this action about?
It is always God’s action and responce of men.
Love these posts
Can I point out a typo?: “He remember God’s promise given earlier.” should read “He remembers…”
Thanks for all your insights which always cause me to stop and think, usually about things that I’ve never before considered.
Thank you for this correction, Margaret! Fixed! Appreciate positive feedback very much!
BLESSINGS Dr Eli..!
Thank you very much for sharing this article with us. It is indeed a profitable one to me. Abraham was genuine in his walk with God, the “leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy”, had not been presented then.
I pray that God would give me that kind of faith. This year 2026 marks a 9th year since God gave me a promise. In all these years I am experiencing affliction after another. When I enquire from the Lord about them, He says they are each a part of the process. However, He has never left me and given me in the hands of the adversary. He is always there for me in times of need.
Thank you Servant of God for encouragement and God bless you and everyone connected to you, just as He did to the patriarch Abraham.
Thank you so much for writing!
Praise the Lord. Amen.
So it’s just the same as Elisha seeing innumerable angel warriors while his servant could not.
Faith in Him is always the best strategy so far.
Praise the Lord.
Indeed, Eddie! We can’t go wrong by trusting YHVH!
Loved the parallels between Abraham’s vulnerability- which I hadn’t considered before; and Christ’s extreme surrender. Love these insights, thanks for sharing!
I am deeply grateful!
I did not notice the importance of “in one day” at all before! This was a discovery for me as well. We are learning together.
Dr Eli. We thank God Almighty for your life, family and ministry. The depth of your Hebraic interpretation cannot be overemphasized. But know for certainty, you’re touching lives, Hermeneutics is colorful. Bravo to you sir
Amén!
Thank you, once again, Dr. Eli. It reminds me of this verse: “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Corinthians 12:19).
Indeed a wonderful Scripture that comes to mind!
God makes Himself vulnerable to people by giving His Holy Spirit to sinners.
“Who among men knows the thoughts of a man, except the spirit of the man that is in him? Even so, no one knows the thoughts of God, except the Spirit of God”. 1 Corinthians 2:11
This Creator, who is Spirit, creates matter out of nothing. Should true followers entrust their entire existence to the living God? This God has made an eternal covenant only with Israel.
Yes, vulnerability works both ways. And perhaps God’s greatest expression of vulnerability is giving us His Son!
Yeshua is also vulnerable because he always carries out God’s will, even though he puts aside all his own interests for the sake of his neighbor. On the cross, however, he could no longer bear to be completely abandoned by God, but before he died, he cried out, “It is finished”! and surrendered his life’s spirit into God’s hands. A dead person can DO NOTHING, while Yeshua, during his life, surrendered himself completely as an instrument of the holy Spirit. He could have been freed by God’s angels, but he didn’t, because during his life he only carried out God’s will. However, the holy Spirit remained in his dead body, so that after three days he rose from the dead. With a loud cry of victory, he died.
Thank you, Ron, for your comment.
I so deeply appreciate the way you drew out the richer nuance in El Shaddai, especially your willingness to explore the resonance with shadayim and the imagery of nurture and sustaining love. Your teaching consistently invites us to see beyond inherited translations and to encounter the Holy One not merely as overwhelming power, but as the All Sufficient, life sustaining Presence who keeps covenant through tenderness as well as strength. I am grateful for how you are always attentive to the parental, compassionate dimensions of God’s character, and how you gently illuminate those threads in the Hebrew text so readers can see the caring heart of God more clearly. Your work helps restore balance to the picture of God’s nature, and I find that deeply meaningful and encouraging.
Kathy, I am truly grateful for your encouragement! Thanks be to God!
Thank you very much Rabbi! May God bless you!
Blessings and much peace!
I am so sorry thar I won’t be able to read your wonderfully lessons. I am 97 yrs old and now having multiple health problems. No energy, sight or time to read them. Keep up the good work. May the Lord bless you always.
Connie, May the Lord be with you as you continue to walk with him faithfully! You are true example of faith to all of us!
That is why Yeshua needs to be placed within the context of covenant and re-rooted back to Torah. Thank you Tabbi Eli. Bless you and Bless Elshaddai.
My dear brother Joseph, thank you for your support and encouragement! May the Lord richly bless you!
Dr Eli do you think it’s possible: back from Greek universalization of Jesus (and spiritualization of Israel as a distant place) to re-rooting Jesus to Jerusalem and the Torah – the context he had emerged?
I do believe so, and this ministry is certainly part of this important effort!
Dear Dr. Eli,
Thank you always for your guidance. As I continue studying the Scriptures, I have often wondered about the meaning of circumcision beyond the promises of distinguishing the people from other nations and ensuring the prosperity of their descendants. In particular, I have been pondering what it truly means for us Gentiles to receive “circumcision of the heart.”
Today, I am deeply grateful to have received your teaching on this matter. I will be sure to share it with my brothers and sisters in the LORD. Thank you very much indeed.
Dear Yoriko,
I am deeply grateful for your support and encouragement. This is such a joy to know that my humble teaching is also reaching the nation of Japan. May the Lord continue to give us His light. I do have another article on circumcision; perhaps it too will be helpful – https://drelisblog.com/rethinking-circumcision/
Thank you so much for your in depth teachings. Every time I get one I email it to my Bible teacher at my church.
My Bible teacher asked me to ask you if you would give your analogy on Judges 19. I have read many commentaries on this chapter but your knowledge is so profound I just wish you would do Judges 19 please?
Sharon, thank you. I may tackle it one day. Thanks for the idea. I am looking for these kinds of ideas especially Old Testament difficult passages.
Dr Eli, this is a great teaching. Shaddai can be “My Breast” can it not? Meaning My Provider, for Eloheinu provides not only everything we need, because even concrete and steel come from our mother, the Earth. Adama. So, the Almighty Provider, and your way of saying the All-Sufficient One also fits excellently.. but that whole paragraph is a teaching that all believers should know, because in many Hebrew words, there are different meanings for the same word.
Avraham fulfilled his name, given by the All Sufficient One; was obedient, and prospered, and he was mighty in faith, and obedience, and his seed has been good to all the earth; Amen.
Bless you, my brother, and may you prosper. You’re a great teacher, and I love how you teach through the languages.
I am very grateful, Danny.
This is a wonderful composition, Dr. Eli! I particularly liked your Hebrew word analysis and the bits about Abraham not delaying execution of God’s instructions, despite the arguably compromising situation it presented when viewed through a pragmatic lens. I was hit rather hard today by how many people are swiftly turning to the new machine hailed as “AI”, which is completely devoid of the true intelligent and curious nature of God’s creation. Your articles are a testament to the Lord’s handiwork and the unique gifts He has bestowed upon us! Nothing else can replicate Him or the divine inspiration He gives to those who earnestly seek Him! God bless!
Dear Adam, Thank you both for thoughtful comments and for all you do behind the scenes to make this ministry a profound success!
Thank you, had not heard the explanation like this previously
Enjoy!
Thank you so much for the insight into this name and the meaning behind the circumcision. Very very interesting !
Glad to hear! Enjoy!
This is so enlightening! You give me much to ponder. Thank you so much!
Glad to hear. Let us grow!
Greetings.
Thank you very much for the studies about Abraham. Covenant of God 🙏
God bless you!
Hallelujah! I am so blessed!
So glad!
Thank you so much – I needed to hear this – it has given me understanding and encouragement to continue in full trust of Jesus and His Word.
Amen!
Do not most Muslims also circumcise their boys?
Yes, all of them do. Islam has strong connections to Judaism. This is one of them. (As strange as it may sound) 🙂
This does not make them party to the Abrahamic covenant, does it ??
of course not. By the way, Egyptians did circumcisions too.
Almighty God is our strength and rock . Every knee shall bow down and every tongue shall confess that he is the Lord and God .Amen
Indeed!
A couple of clarifications please.
Did God make an everlasting covenant with Abram?
And “father of a multitude”. This sounds singular. I was under the understanding he (Abraham) was to be the father of many nations.
George, I mean father of many nations/peoples.
That was such a Powerful writing. Thank You for Sharing it.
Can you follow up with how these verses Strengthen and carry thoughts on Circumcision further?
Deuteronomy 10:16 “Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no longer stubborn.”
Deuteronomy 30:6 “And the Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart, and the heart of thy seed, to love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, that thou mayest live.” This highlights God as the agent of this change.
Jeremiah 4:4 “Circumcise yourselves to the Lord; remove the foreskin of your hearts, O men of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem…”
Romans 2:29 “But a Jew is one inwardly, and circumcision is a matter of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the letter.”
Paula, hi. Thanks for your comment. I recommend reviewing these: https://drelisblog.com/is-he-really-a-jew-who-is-one-inwardly/
Thanks you.
Blessings!
Dr. Eli
You never dissappoint in opening eyes to “hidden” things in scripture. Thank You.
Thanks, Mike! God bless you! Thank you for all the support!
Hi Dr Eli,
Whilst on the topic of rituals ( as in the circumcision), I would like to ask if you are aware of a Hittite ritual called the Tunnawi ritual by scholars of Hittite language. It is a cleansing ritual with echoes of Abram, Sarah and also the Osiris myth, it kind of stood out as a canaanite perception of cleaning the spirit and body.
Jon, the Tunnawi ritual is a Hittite purification ceremony performed by an “Old Woman” priestess. It involves washing a patient with water and using symbolic materials like wool, red yarn, and dough to absorb impurities, which are then disposed of—often in a river. This concept of transferring uncleanness onto a substitute carrier echoes themes found in Canaanite and early Hebrew culture.
The ritual’s concern with fertility and cleansing mirrors the biblical stories of Abram and Sarah, who struggled with childbearing and received divine purification promises. Its use of water as a spiritual boundary also faintly echoes the Osiris myth’s connection between water, death, and renewal. While distinct, the Tunnawi ritual reflects a shared ancient Near Eastern worldview where physical cleansing, spiritual impurity, and the hope for new life were deeply intertwined.
Abraham was not in captivity. The Sanhedrin did not have the authority to send Yeshua to the cross. Pontius Pilate was corrupted by his power. Yet in the New Testament, the oppressor (Pontius) becomes a reasonable man, while the traumatised victims, against whom sin is committed (Jews), become the intolerable sinners. In reality, Pontius was a powerful, immoral man who crucified, rather than delegated his authority to, the people he oppressed. Yeshua did not choose to die for our sins, just as 6 million Jews did not choose to march into the gas chambers for our sins. Yeshua’s crucifixion was the work of El Shaddai. El Shaddai has shown humanity that to be godly on earth, one must suffer. Suffering is the foundation of human goodness and morality. True salvation comes from an unwavering desire to carry the Kingdom of God within you – to do the Mitzvot all your life.
Joseph, hi. Have trouble with your suggestion here because of John 10:18: “No one has taken it away from Me, but I lay it down on My own initiative. I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it up again. This commandment I received from My FatherNo one has taken it away from Me, but I lay it down on My own initiative. I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it up again. This commandment I received from My Father.” What am I missing?
Thank for your wise analysis. We learn so much through your words!
I am so happy! Blessings, Connie!
I see that all of them have been changed to Shadai except one instance in the paragraph under from Abraham to Christ, which is spelled Shaddai
HUGE THANK YOU! fIXED.
Hi Dr Eli,
Yes,I inderstand the connection between the ancient Hebrew and Hittite having a similar root regardong their rituals.What I read was the ritual could be performed by a trained practitioner,male or female,if female she was called ‘Old Woman’, this made me wonder how much older the origin of the ritual really is. Also I read there was a tent of reeda beside a river and a black and a white gate that reminisced of Abram and Lot.
Regards
Jon, my knowledge is limited here, brother.
My Dear Brother, respecting your expertise, as for the Holy Land, what think you of this Isaiah 66:1 suggesting this whole Earth is Holy Land, Thus says the LORD, The heaven is my throne, and the earth is my footstool: where is the house that you build unto me? and where is the place of my rest?
And this, For he is not a Jew, which is one outwardly; neither is that circumcision, which is outward in the flesh:
But he is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter; whose praise is not of men, but of God. Romans 2
Ray, the eventual expansion of the land of Israel as “God’s country” to the entire globe makes perfect sense to me. About your second question do read – https://drelisblog.com/is-he-really-a-jew-who-is-one-inwardly/
Eli, I followed the link to find an article I missed reflecting your deeper understanding and nurturing for the Soul. Another excellent read!
Warm regards with Peace and Blessing!
Thank you, my brother! Blessinsg!
I often wondered why God didn’t choose a sign which could be applied to both men and women. Now I know! Thank you, Dr Eli, for your explanation of the meaning of circumcision. May El Shaddai continue to give you wisdom.
Thank you, David! Let us continue to look up for it only to Him!
David, The Lord left a sign by revealing Himself to the Women before he revealed Himself to the Male disciples.
And God created man in His image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.Genesis 1:27
Genesis 2:20-23 reveals the Woman was already in the man.
Medical Science confirms the Genesis record with the discovery Males have both the X & Y chromosomes, while Women have only X chromosomes.
I have wondered many times why God chose the odd rite of circumcision. Nobody had any answers. Yours sounds very true to Scripture and the nature of God. Thank you!
Yes, this makes sense.
It was divine providence that I should come upon your teachings today, when feeling very low and about to give up, when your teaching on Abraham so uplifted my spirit, and from feeling utterly lethargic, I rose high above as though I had wings. Also i look forward to these bible readings to increase my knowledge of God and get closer to Jesus.
Whilst writing to you to thank you for your writings and the wisdom u impart to us, your students, can u please explain to me if the circumcision of the male Muslims has the same connotations as the Jewish circumcision? Thank you Dr Eli for all your work
May God continue to raise you up through the power of His word! Islamic circumcision, known as Khitan, is a ritual signifying cleanliness (tahara), belonging to the Muslim community (Ummah), and following the tradition of Prophet Abraham. It is considered an act of fitrah (natural disposition) and is obligatory in most Islamic schools of thought. The procedure is often performed in a clinic at any age from a few days to puberty but is not tied to a specific religious ceremony.
Jewish circumcision, or Brit Milah, is fundamentally a covenant with God. It is a mandatory religious commandment performed on the eighth day of life during a ceremonial ritual involving a mohel (trained practitioner). While both share Abrahamic roots, the key differences lie in theological meaning and the strict timing and ceremonial nature of the Jewish practice.
Thank you Brother. Praise God for your work. May the Lord continue to bless you.
Blessings!
In that moment of vulnerability, Abraham placed his very life, wealth and family into the hands of El Shaddai , the all -sufficient God.
I pray that, a day at a time, I will surrender my all into the hands of the all- sufficient God
Amen, Faustina!