To read the texts click on the texts: Lev 25:1,8-17; Mt 14:1-12
Herod
mentioned at the beginning of this story of the death of John the Baptist found
also in Mark 6:14-29 is Herod Antipas and the son of Herod the Great mentioned
in the Infancy narrative of Matthew (2:3).
Though Matthew has taken this story
from Mark, he shortens it considerably. Matthew’s reason for Herod wanting to
kill John is the same as Mark, John had objected to Herod having married
Herodias, his brother Philip’s wife. In Matthew, unlike in Mark, it is not
Herodias who wants to kill John, but Herod himself. When the daughter of
Herodias (who is not named) pleases Herod with her dance on his birthday, she
asks for the head of John the Baptist. After burying John, his disciples
go and tell Jesus about what had happened.
It is
not always easy for us to take a stand against injustice. Yet this is what this
text is calling us to do. In the process on taking a stand we might become
unpopular or sometimes the object of ridicule. The challenge is how much we are
willing to risk.
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