Matthew
2:13-23
13 Now after they had left, an angel of the Lord appeared to
Joseph in a dream and said, "Get up, take the child and his mother, and
flee to Egypt, and remain there until I tell you; for Herod is about to search
for the child, to destroy him." 14 Then Joseph got up, took the child and
his mother by night, and went to Egypt, 15 and remained there until the death
of Herod. This was to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the
prophet, "Out of Egypt I have called my son." 16 When Herod saw that
he had been tricked by the wise men, he was infuriated, and he sent and killed
all the children in and around Bethlehem who were two years old or under,
according to the time that he had learned from the wise men. 17 Then was fulfilled
what had been spoken through the prophet Jeremiah: 18 "A voice was heard
in Ramah, wailing and loud lamentation, Rachel weeping for her children; she
refused to be consoled, because they are no more." 19 When Herod died, an
angel of the Lord suddenly appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt and said, 20
"Get up, take the child and his mother, and go to the land of Israel, for
those who were seeking the child's life are dead." 21 Then Joseph got up,
took the child and his mother, and went to the land of Israel. 22 But when he
heard that Archelaus was ruling over Judea in place of his father Herod, he was
afraid to go there. And after being warned in a dream, he went away to the
district of Galilee. 23 There he made his home in a town called Nazareth, so
that what had been spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, "He
will be called a Nazorean."
This year, the church readings are a little jumbled up. In two weeks, we will read the story of
Epiphany where the wisemen follow the star first to Jerusalem and they ask King
Herod the Great about this new King of the Jews that has been born. Herod is flummoxed and anxious, but plays it
smooth and slyly says to the wisemen,
“yes, yes, follow that star and when you find the child,
bring him back here to me so I can worship him.”
The wisemen leave and follow the star to Bethlehem where
they find baby Jesus wrapped in swaddling clothes in the manger. God then warns them in a dream not to return
to Herod and they bypass Jerusalem on their return trip back to the East.
Today, just when we’re settling into the peaceful afterglow
of Christmas, our Bible story picks up Joseph has a dream. And he knows, he knows, that there is
danger on the horizon. He tells Mary that
they have to leave. They are not safe here. They have to go. You can almost feel the hair on Mary’s arms
rising as they pack what they can and flee the terror in the middle of the
night. Joseph acted well on his
dream. Because Herod goes off the rails
and orders a genocide of all the boys under the age of two. Mary, Joseph and Baby Jesus are already on
their way fleeing as the violence enshrouds Bethlehem.
It’s not hard to make Herod out as a madman. In many ways, he was. The ancient historian, Josephus writes that
Herod ordered that when his own time came and he himself died, that the state
was to assassinate all of the beloved political prisoners just to assure
that there would be widespread mourning and grief in every household at the
time of his death. [i]
We know factually that Herod was obsessed with who would
succeed him. He had seven wills, lots of
family problems and sibling rivalries—he ended up executing his favorite wife
and three of his own children. He
drowned one of the high priests he didn’t get along with in a pool in
Jerusalem. It’s not hard to imagine that
he would have gone off the rails to hear the news of a King of the Jews who
would have been born in Bethlehem.
However, the thing is that Herod the Great[ii] was
that as a politician and as a ruler, he was, as Matt Skinner calls him, “a
mixed bag.”
For starters, he was a Jew.
I don’t know that historians would say he was the world’s most pious
Jew. But he was appropriately devoted to his ancestors, the temple in
Jerusalem, and worship of Yahweh. Herod
the great is, in fact, credited with rebuilding the Jerusalem temple over a
period of many years. He worked closely
with the chief priests and innovated new things like special courts for women
and gentiles within the temples which likely won him some points.
While some folks were critical of how much money was spent
on the temple, no one could deny that it was staggeringly beautiful. Some sources say that over the long period of
rebuilding, up to 18,000 people were employed in the city of Jerusalem (speaking
of winning points). The Pax Romana
meant that there was more travel to Jerusalem for festivals and that pilgrims
had more disposable income to pay for lodging and buy animals like turtledoves
to sacrifice. All of this was a solid
boom to the ancient economy.
Herod won a lot of good will with his support of the
temple. And truthfully, being the savvy
politician he was, “that fox” as Jesus famously called his son, Herod Antipas, Herod
the Great knew how to win good will in all the right places. He threw a little support to the other
religious groups that worshiped, Apollo or Ba’al, or the gods of Olympia and
Athens. He also built three other spectacular
temples for worship of the Roman emperor (who incidentally was also known as
the prince of peace). As a good
diplomat, Herod built these temples for the emperor in Jewish areas of that
weren’t likely to offend anyone. Historians
and commentators say that Herod loved beautiful spaces: he built public
theaters, amphitheaters, baths, gardens and pools. In the city of Tyre, He repaved the main
street and fitted it with colonnades to create the first known covered/paved
shopping street.
Under his governance, the economy was booming. He developed new trade routes with Damascus
and beyond that to Syria and the area known as the fertile Crescent. He made roads, reservoirs and aqueducts to
modernize the cities. Josephus praises the sewers Herod constructed in the city
of Caesarea calling them an “engineering marvel.” (I get it. I would probably
have kind things to say about effective sewers too).
There was much to export from the region under his reign. There was fertile farmland that produced
consistently healthy crops of grapes, grains and olives. There were all sorts of tradeable goods from
perfumes, ointments, date wines, pharmaceuticals, and cosmetics.
To maximize trade, Herod created several new cities
including Caesarea Maritima (the city with the sewers) where he developed the
largest harbor in the Mediterranean Sea with one of the home ports for the
Roman Navy. In support of trade, he
developed warehouse facilities and commercial space. All of this effectively worked to rearrange
economic trade patterns across the entire region.
He was called Herod the Great for a reason. A couple hundred years before Herod the Great
(and his father before him), Jerusalem was an impoverished, dusty city, but
during Herod the Great’s reign, archeological excavations show that in
Jerusalem had large concentrations of wealthy and elite people as did some of
the other larger cities. Herod was high
on Rome’s A-list. He preformed well. He demonstrated
that he was committed to Rome’s policies and was rewarded as an effective governor. Herod was savvy, diplomatic, a smart
politician and he knew how to play his cards.
He had lots of powerful friends and people loved him. He was the best of all rulers in what he did
for the land—he was powerful, visionary, arrogant, and paranoid.
Into that mix, some exotic wisemen—perhaps Zoroastrian astrologers?--come
from the East to pay homage to a new King of the Jews—in Bethlehem? what in
the world? Someone who would upend
all of this Roman glory? Bah. The idea was almost comical. Best to eliminate
and kill all possible threats. To squash the idea like a flea between his
fingers. And Herod orders the genocide of all baby boys under the age of 2 in
and around the tiny, dusty agricultural hamlet of Bethlehem. Given the size of little Bethlehem and the
infant mortality rate, this probably would have been a couple dozen baby boys.
Although Herod’s order or murder of the babies is one of a
lunatic, he was so popular in some circles, and his world was so opulent, that you
could almost imagine some folks saying, “ah boy, that’s a tough one, (sigh) but
that’s just the cost of doing business.”
So they say, as Joseph, Mary, and Jesus flee through the
night to Egypt where they will find refuge.
In the genocide that we know of from the book of Exodus, at Pharaoh’s
order, the Egyptians kill the Israelite babies.
(this is the part where Moses’ mother hides him in a basket in the
river). But in our Bible story today, its’s
the Judeans killing their own people, their own babies under Herod’s orders. Lest a new King rise out of Bethlehem to
challenge Herod’s Kingdom, all baby boys under the age of two are to be killed.
Because that is the power of sin and its’ ability to seep
into our systems. That is the power of sin: that we are transformed us into the
very worst versions of ourselves. That
is the power of sin: that we become what we hate and critique. And we are complicit and trapped.
For the several years that I was in Honduras, I worked with
folks who worked for the Dole and Chiquita companies on the north coast. I know the impoverished salary that folks
make and sometimes now, I just find myself staring at the bananas in the
grocery story. And then I buy them. Sometimes, the best I can do is remember how
the pesticides made farmers so sick and buy the organic ones for them before I
rush back into my daily life.
Jesus was born in flesh to bring about a different
kingdom. We long to bring about the
Kingdom of God, to struggle for justice, to fight for those who have less than
us, to share what we have and yet, we are enmeshed in a system that suffocates
us.
Christmas, with all the tenderness and sentimentality and twinkling
lights and nostalgia has a dangerous side.
The story of Herod in the gospel of Matthew reminds us of how hard
it is to let the kingdom of God break into our world.
But God couldn’t wait, couldn’t wait, to break into
our broken and sin-infected world. God couldn’t wait to break Jesus into our
world and teach us what a different Kingdom looks like. To prompt us to let go of Herod’s Kingdom and
even turn it on its’ head. To teach us how to make things right and usher in
moments of salvation
here on earth while we stand in the promise of salvation beyond.
Christmas is God’s fiercest determination to be with us and make
things right in our lives and in the world. And we will not despair. We will not, because God is present here and
alive among us. God’s fingerprints are
all over our souls and God’s wisdom is leading us to reflect, often
self-critically, on our world today.
In the final verse of “Oh Little Town of Bethlehem,” we pray:
O holy Child of Bethlehem
Descend to us, we pray
Cast out our sin and enter in
Be born in us today
We hear the Christmas angels
The great glad tidings tell
Oh, come to us, abide with us
Our Lord Immanuel!
Descend to us, we pray
Cast out our sin and enter in
Be born in us today
We hear the Christmas angels
The great glad tidings tell
Oh, come to us, abide with us
Our Lord Immanuel!
[i] For
much of the research in this message, I lean on “Herod: King of the Jews and
Friend of the Romans,” by Peter Richardson, 1996.
[ii] (not
to be confused with his son Herod Antipas who ruled when Jesus was crucified)