Jesus & Christmas part 9 -
The horror of Christmas?
‘...weeping and great mourning…weeping for children…[mothers] refusing to
be comforted because they are no more.’
That could easily have been taken from any number
of newspapers or media scripts over the last week describing the horrific
realities of Newtown, USA. Horrors that
should have stirred our compassion and anger and tears and prayers. But it is not. It is taken straight from Matthew’s account
of Jesus’ birth. It’s from the Christmas
story! Not joyful songs of a birth but
the bitter weeping of innocent deaths and bereaved mothers.
Evil in the Nativity
We are familiar with many of the nativity
characters – angels and shepherds and Mary and Joseph and the donkey. Our cute Christmas story books and children’s
nativity sets and much-loved carols are full of these characters. But one character is often forgotten, perhaps
as we unconsciously swerve away from his repulsive actions? He’s not in any toy nativity or pre-school
drawing or popular carol. Yet in God’s
version of events in Matthew 2 he makes up a major portion of the story (10 of
33 verses, or 30% - more than Mary and Joseph put together). He is sinister and evil and dark. He is filled with hatred and fired by
jealousy. He is power hungry and
ruthless. Secular history knows him as
brutal and heartless with no mercy or love.
His name is King Herod. Insecure
and threatened by the birth of a new king yet unable to identify precisely who
Jesus is nor to hoodwink the wise men to reveal his location he sets about the
systematic slaughter of all boys under the age of 2.
‘When Herod realized that he had been outwitted by the Magi, he was
furious, and he gave orders to kill all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity
who were two years old and under, in accordance with the time he had learned
from the Magi. Then what was said through the prophet Jeremiah was fulfilled:
“A voice is heard in Ramah, weeping and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her
children and refusing to be comforted, because they are no more.”’
(Matthew 2:16-18)
Humanity's Desperate Need
Recent events make it easier to imagine the horror
of that moment 2000 years ago; a moment so similar to Newtown. Human nature has not changed. The world is still as it was – broken, filled
with evil and wickedness. And as
desperately in need of a Saviour now as it was then. Peter encourages us to be ready to give a
‘reason for the hope that we have’ (1Peter 3:16). Hope we can offer even in the midst of the
most horrific of events. The world needs
a Saviour, and God loves us so much that in Jesus he has come as that
Saviour.
Making more of Christ at Christmas
Certainly and essentially fill
your Christmas this year with joy and gladness and celebrating. But perhaps also this year allow the full
story; all its characters including Herod to inform your understanding of
Christmas. There is a reason God allowed
Herod’s actions and a reason God had it recorded into the biblical
account. A brutally stark reminder that
the world is broken and needs a Saviour.
And God came into the very heart of that evil and wickedness as
Saviour. Herod and his actions should
repulse us, as should the realities of the tragedy in Newport. Both should drive us with joy and desperation
to Jesus, God with us, the Saviour the world and we so urgently need.
Brilliant connection!
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