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Friday, December 28, 2018

Friday, December 28, 2018 The Feast of the Holy Innocents

                         ______________Collect of the day
      

  Receive,
  we pray,
  into the  
      arms  
         of 
      your 
    mercy 
    all innocent victims; 
      and by your great might
        frustrate the designs of evil tyrants and 
          establish your rule of justice, love and peace  

OK, so it’s kind of weird that today is the Feast of 
the Holy Innocents if you are into chronology, but 
it its with the infancy narrative, so here we go.

Re-enter the story, post Christmas eve where all is calm, all is bright. Three magi “from the east” (As-
trologers? Seers? Wise men? Not kings though!) 
have seen a new star in the sky and have set out,
 following it to see where it leads them. (Hence 
the phrase “Follow your star.”) 

En route they stop at the court of King Herod 
to ask what he knows about a king being born. 
He says he hasn’t a clue but he tells them to 
be sure to stop on their way back and tell him 
here this  king is ,so “I too may worship him.”
 Being a good (meaning bad) Middle Eastern 
dictator, he sees this news as a direct and dire  
threat to his power and plans to neutralize the 
threat by killing him. 

At long last the the magi arrive at the manger 
(which we celebrate January 6th as the Epiphany, 
the showing forth of Christ to the Gentiles, which 
ends  the 12 days of Christmas.) Having reached 
their journey’s end, they present their 3 symbolic 
gifts of “gold as to a mighty King, frankincense 
as to the true God, and myrrh to foreshow his 
burial.” We have no idea how long they actually 
stayed, but when they headed back, “being warn-
ed in a dream” they go by a different route home. 
Herod finally figures this out and enraged, sends 
his minions out to kill all the little boys below the 
age of 2 in the region in the hopes of neutralizing 
the treat. However, having been warned in a dream 
himself, Jospeh has taken Mary and Jesus and 
they have fled to Egypt as refugees. 

This story is always hard to read and 
to contemplate. But this year it 
seems more poignant, im-
minent disturbing 
than ever in my
 lifetime. 



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