Choosing Tradition: A South Asian Feminist Reading of the Circumcision of Timothy Restricted; Files Only

Gabrielle, Haley (Summer 2023)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/vd66w1234?locale=en
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Abstract

In this dissertation, I argue that past interpretation of the circumcision of Timothy in Acts 16:1-5 has been fundamentally shaped by a perception of circumcision as a “tradition.” A false binary has too often been constructed between Oriental Judaism and Occidental Hellenism, which incorrectly degrades the former as backwards, legalistic, irrational, authoritarian, and the site of tradition. Previous readers of Acts have rarely considered the possibility that Timothy could have willingly participated in his own circumcision, more often bypassing his character completely while speculating only about Paul’s motivations. Instead, I explore the possibility that Timothy’s circumcision was part of an expression of his own agency.

To support my argumentation, I bring in four major insights from South Asian feminist interlocutors. First, Orientalizing discourse represents Eastern practices as irrational, traditional, and forced. Second, it is necessary to critique liberal notions of autonomy in order to create new space for subjects who act while also being entangled in norms, relationships, and systems of meaning. Next, histories of South Asian entrance into coalition can help us to understand how Timothy and other followers of the Way could enter into a multi-ethnic, multi-religious community while simultaneously preserving their own ethno-religious identities. Finally, a gendered analysis of traditional practices must be wary of the Orientalist presumption that Eastern people groups are fundamentally underdeveloped, hierarchical, and therefore patriarchal; instead, feminists can carefully describe a gendered mode of social organization without assuming the presence of a monolithic, racialized sexism.

Analyzing modern global discourses about circumcision reveals the West’s bias against non-infant and/or religious circumcisions, in addition to a long history of Christian bias against Jewish circumcision. Instead, I propose that we view Timothy’s circumcision in the context of a Lukan construction of circumcision as a joyful, communal act. I argue that Timothy’s circumcision is depicted as the self-expression of a Jewish follower of the Way, who proclaims in his body and with his speech the implications of the Jerusalem council decision for Jews and gentiles alike. The validation of both circumcision and uncircumcision creates space for multiple legitimate ways of embodying sexual moderation and appropriate masculinity.

Table of Contents

Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1

Chapter 1: Problematizing the Binary of Hellenism and Judaism .................................................. 9

Introduction ................................................................................................................................. 9

The Binary of Hellenism and Judaism ...................................................................................... 11

Non-Zero-Sum Hellenization and Diverse Judaism ................................................................. 17

Anti-Jewish, Orientalist Paradigms .......................................................................................... 21

Conclusion ................................................................................................................................ 28

Chapter 2: The Circumcision of Timothy Reconsidered .............................................................. 30

Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 30

The Ethnic Identity of Timothy ................................................................................................ 32

The Judaism of Timothy ........................................................................................................... 42

The Motives for Timothy’s Circumcision ................................................................................ 52

Conclusion ................................................................................................................................ 59

Chapter 3: South Asian Feminist Perspectives on Agency ........................................................... 61

Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 61

South Asian Biblical Interpretation .......................................................................................... 63

South Asian and Jewish Orientalisms ....................................................................................... 71

South Asian Feminism .............................................................................................................. 75

Orientalism ............................................................................................................................ 76

Agency .................................................................................................................................. 79

Coalition ................................................................................................................................ 85

Gender ................................................................................................................................... 90

Conclusion ................................................................................................................................ 95

Chapter 4: Orientalism: Western Discourse on Circumcision ...................................................... 97

Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 97

Modern Circumcision ............................................................................................................. 100

Jewish Circumcision ........................................................................................................... 103

Muslim Circumcision.......................................................................................................... 107

African Circumcision .......................................................................................................... 110

Ancient Jewish Circumcision ................................................................................................. 115

Conclusion .............................................................................................................................. 124

Chapter 5: Choice: Affirming and Problematizing Agency ....................................................... 126

Introduction ............................................................................................................................. 126

Circumcision in the Second Temple Period............................................................................ 128

Agency in South Asian Diaspora Life .................................................................................... 138

Agency in Circumcision in Luke-Acts ................................................................................... 152

Conclusion .............................................................................................................................. 169

Chapter 6: Coalition: The Way and South Asian Alliances ....................................................... 172

Introduction ............................................................................................................................. 172

Models for the Way in Acts .................................................................................................... 174

South Asian Models of Coalition ............................................................................................ 182

Timothy’s Circumcision within Coalition .............................................................................. 189

Conclusion .............................................................................................................................. 195

Chapter 7: Gender: Jewish and South Asian Feminisms ............................................................ 197

Introduction ............................................................................................................................. 197

Circumcision and Accusations of Jewish Patriarchy .............................................................. 199

Circumcision and Gender in the First Century ....................................................................... 207

Circumcision and Gender in Acts 16:1-5................................................................................ 215

Conclusion .............................................................................................................................. 221

Conclusion .................................................................................................................................. 223

Bibliography ............................................................................................................................... 226

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