At long last and
with great joy, we say, Merry Christmas! Joy to the world, the Lord
is come and we celebrate and rejoice. After the long and cold weeks
of waiting through the season of Advent, where we focused on the
small but potent image of the seeds of promise – the seeds of Hope,
and Peace, and Joy and Love – we’ve come to the season of
Christmas.
He
is born the holy child
Play the oboe and the bagpipes merrily!
He
is born the holy child
Sing we all of the Savior mild.
(French 18th
century)
With lights and songs, with gifts and feasting, with laughter and
family, we’ve come together, in our own homes and in our own ways,
to celebrate the joy and wonder of this day, to celebrate the gift of
God, redemption and salvation from heaven. The word became flesh and
lived among us. And we have seen his glory – the light that shines
into every darkness. Praise God and celebrate, amen!
I want to say more about the festivities and the celebration. I want
us to linger in the light and laughter, and love of this day but we
cannot. I’m sorry. Our scripture reading for this morning sends us
wham and whiplash into terror and screaming and slaughter. We are
dragged from delight into danger. We are dragged from the light back
into the darkness.
After the departure of the magi, who’d come to give homage to
infant prophesied to be the King of the Jews, King Herod realized
that he had been fooled. The wise men did not return to him to tell
him what they had found and where. And he furious, full of wrath. He
sent his soldiers to kill all the youngling boys in Bethlehem.
In some Byzantine liturgies, we are told that Herod’s soldiers
slaughtered some 14,000 of Israel’s sons. In a Syrian text the
number is 64,000. In some medieval texts the number is expanded to
144,000 to match those martyrs of Israel described in the book of
Revelation, sealed and preserved by God. But these are unnecessary
embellishments. Bethlehem in the first century was little more than a
hamlet, a few miles south of Jerusalem. The number of slaughtered
innocents could scarcely have been more than 20 at most. (Raymond
Brown, The Birth of the Messiah, 204) But even twenty is an
incalculable tragedy. One slaughtered innocent is too many to endure.
Saint
Augustine called these murdered children “the Church’s first
blossoms, matured by the frost of persecution during the cold winter
of unbelief.”
We have no historical evidence of this cruelty. Josephus, the Jewish
historian of those times, doesn’t mention it. There is no other
contemporary account of the slaughter outside of the book of Matthew.
But it certainly fits within what we know from other historical
records of King Herod’s character. He was a murderous and vengeful
king, who was fearful and paranoid and willing to have even members
of his own family killed in order to keep his grasp on the throne of
Israel. He ordered the deaths of chief priests and scribes and
members of the Sanhedrin, as well as his own brother, his own sister
and her husband, three of his sons, and his beloved wife Mariam. And
years later, when he was ill and knew that he was about to die he
ordered that several prominent Jewish leaders be rounded up and
executed at the moment of his death, so that the people of Jerusalem
would have reason to mourn his passing.
It’s a story that leaves us uncomfortable – and it should.
There’s no historical record of the slaughter of the boys in and
around Bethlehem. And we certainly don’t sing about it. Not often
anyway. We have hundreds – even thousands of Christmas carols,
songs, and hymns but how many of them are about this part of the
Christmas story? The Coventry Carol is somewhat familiar
Herod the King, in his raging,
Charged he hath this
day,
his men of might
in his own sight
all young
children to slay.
Then
woe is me, poor child for thee
and ever mourn and say
for
thy parting
neither say nor sing
by, by, lully, lullay.
(English 16th century)
But that might be the only one that most people know. After a bit of
digging around I found a Catalan carol entitled El Rei Herodes.
One
day Joseph resting, the Child by his side
heard shouting and
tumult that evil betide;
The wicked King Herod has made a
decree
for soldiers to kill ev’ry infant they see.
(Catalan
Traditional)
There are a few others, but not many – and none that are a part of
our usual Christmas festivities. We are reluctant to sing of this
cruelty. We rarely bring it to mind. We sing of the angels, and the
shepherds, and the star, and the magi. We sing of Joseph and Mary. We
sing of wassail and figgy pudding. We sing of holly and ivy. We sing
about partridges and pear trees and the whole assorted list. But the
slaughter of innocent children by a mad bastard of a king – no. We
rarely sing of that.
The Slaughter of the Innocents
When the solders came with sharpened swords
obeying orders
from a paranoid and murderous king
the holy family fled across
the sands to a pagan land.
Mothers screamed into the silent starry night
as their tiny infants bled out and died.
Rachel weeping for her children would not be comforted.
When
heavy booted soldiers come again with rifles and grenades
obeying
orders as patriotic soldiers always do,
when refugees flee
across barb-wire borders
when innocents are crushed beneath the rubble
when mothers
scream into satellite skies
how will they be comforted?
Matthew connects the story of Herod’s slaughter with a text from
the prophet Jeremiah
“A voice was heard in
Rama,
weeping and much grieving.
Rachel weeping for
her children,
and she did not want to be comforted
because they were no more.”
How dare we sing of
Santa in the face of that grief? How dare we sing of flying reindeer,
and magic snowmen and all the other innocuous traditions of the
holiday when Mother Rachel is crying out for her dead children?
And she is still crying even today. Still refusing to be comforted
for her dead children. Her weeping has not been stilled; her grief
has not be silenced. She is weeping in the face of war in the
Ukraine. She is screaming against the genocide in Gaza. She is
keening in Cambodia and Thailand after another explosion. She is
shrieking after every mass shooting in the United States. In the
gospel story, Mary and Joseph take the infant Jesus and flee into the
safety of Egypt. The immigrant family, refugees from horror and
death. But immigrants and refugees still face that horror here and
now.
How shall I rise in brightness while Mother Rachel weeps?
There is no magic escape here. There is no hallmark happy ending.
The children are slaughtered. Mary, Joseph and Jesus flee into the
night, barely escaping the violence themselves. They traverse across
desert terrain to the relative safety of a foreign land until they
hear that Herod the King has finally died himself.
But take comfort there. Tyrants die. Their power is not forever. Their
empires crumble. Their thrones are pulled down in disgrace.
And we sing the songs of despair. Lament is not faithlessness.
Lament is resistance to tyranny. We refuse to normalize the
slaughter. We refuse to accept the violence. We refuse to turn a
blind eye and deaf ear to Mother Rachel still weeping today in every
land, across every border.
This mystery of glory
that joy and pain come mixed
is
like frankincense perfume,
a bittersweet fragrance.
O
Lord of light and glory
bright shining star of dawn
the
myrrh that anoints in death
gives way to heaven’s gold.
Jesus,
the word of God become flesh and living among us, inhabits the lowly
plains of this dark world with us. God with us. God with the mothers
of Ukraine. God with the mothers in Gaza and Thailand and Cambodia
and in a hundred other
places. God inhabits our
tragedy with us. God is here, the light that shines into every
darkness.
We
will sing another couple of hymns this morning. We will pray our
prayers and go back to our lives. Back to our homes. And we will go
back to the joy and celebration of Christmas. And we should. This is
indeed a time to celebrate and merry – even if that delight is
mixed with pain and grief. Sing the songs of joy. Sing the songs of
woe. God hears them all.
How Shall I Rise in Brightness
How shall I rise in brightness
while mother Rachel
weeps?
And how accept the gifts
of magi from the east?
O
Lord of light and glory,
bright shining star of dawn,
bring
light to those in darkness,
bring light to all our hearts.
This mystery of glory
that joy and pain come mixed
is
like frankincense perfume,
a bittersweet fragrance.
O
Lord of light and glory
bright shining star of dawn
the
myrrh that anoints in death
gives way to heaven’s gold.
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