AD SENSE

Dec 28th, Holy Innocents, Martyrs

 Christmas Octave: 28th December, Holy Innocents, Martyrs

1 John 1:5 - 2:2 / Matthew 2:13-18

We have been redeemed; Jesus' blood purifies us

There's a story about a man who dove into a raging river to rescue a drowning boy. Miraculously, the man survived; even more miraculously, the boy was saved. After the boy had recovered from the ordeal, he said to the man, “Thank you, sir, for saving me from the river.” The man put his hand on the boy's shoulder and said, "That's okay, son! Just make sure your life was worth saving.” What that man said to the boy, Jesus could say to each one of us here.

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How are we trying to live so as to make our life worth saving by Jesus? “I shall pass through this world but only once. Any good thing I can do, or any kindness that I can show a human being, let me do it now and not defer it. For I shall not pass this way again." (Attributed to Stephen Grellet, 1855)

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Today’s celebration shocks us into the realization that the birth of Christ was not all peace and joy. The coming of Jesus was the beginning of a struggle-to-death between the powers of evil and the kingdom of light, a struggle that would have its climax in the passion and death of Jesus. Herod stands here for the forces of evil. Even innocent children are often the victims of this enmity.

The story of the Innocents may very well be a theological illustration of Matthew on this climactic clash between good and evil that began with the birth of Jesus. Often the innocents have to suffer on account of so much evil in the world caused by people.

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The first day of Christmas, the Church celebrated the martyrdom of St. Stephen, the first Christian to witness to Christ with his life. (Though this year, being a Sunday, we had the Holy Family Feast on the 26th.) The second day of Christmas, the Church honoured St. John the Apostle and Evangelist, who emphasized the divinity of Christ. These two men went into Biblical history and Church history as men who were faithful to God and walked in His ways.

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Today, we come across a man who was a tragedy to himself and he caused tragic consequences. Because of his pathological state of mind and his paranoia, he ordered the slaughter of the infants at Bethlehem, and it counted as nothing for him. And this makes us reflect on the horrible deeds that are done to children and the unborn: child abuse, child labour, child pornography, abortion, infanticide. All this also counted as nothing for those who committed such atrocities and heinous crimes against children.

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The feast of the Holy Innocents does not just recall the innocent infants being martyred for Christ. Because their blood now cries out for the children of the world who are suffering and being traumatized. We will recall the 20 young children and 6 teachers who were innocently gunned down in Sandy Hook elementary school, Newtown, USA. The blood of innocent young children cries out for the children of the world and cries out to us. We have to teach and guide, protect and guard our children. If we cannot get that right, we will not be able to get anything right. 

May God bless the children who are entrusted to us and may we care for them and guide them in the ways of the Lord. May Mother Mary and St. Joseph help us in this mission.

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The massacre of innocent children was a gruesome reality unleashed by Herod as a result of his own insecurity, selfishness and hunger for power. The scenario hasn’t changed even after 2000 years. As much as we may demonize King Herod, let’s not blind ourselves to the Herods living among and within us. He was one man then, but now it’s an army of them today. He is resurrected in the pro-death choice of people opting for abortion, ethnic cleansing, state-engineered hatred, communal riots, pogroms of refugees, silencing of voices of dissent and policies that are divisive and politically master-minded. How do we sympathize with the innocent children? How do we empathize with the mourning parents? We do it by rooting out the Herod within us, and by making conscious pro-life choices–choices that oppose the culture of death and promote the right to life and the joy of living. Say no to abortion, no to mercy-killing, no to suicide, no to violence in any form– physical, psychological, social, or spiritual. What are the pro-life choices you are making today?

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Prayer

Lord our God, today’s innocent martyrs bore witness to you not by proclaiming your name in words but by laying down their lives for you, even though they were not aware of it. We pray to you on their feast that we may bear witness to you both by the words we speak and the way we live what we believe in. May we do so in the full awareness of what we are doing. We ask you this through Christ our Lord. Amen