“MURDER IN HIS HEART”
Some of my friends are not fans of the Christmas season because they see it as over-commercialized and too sentimental, with its emphasis on “sweet, little Jesus boy.” No argument from me on the commercialization issue – Christmas items started appearing in stores in the Atlanta area in late September, and many businesses count on the Christmas season to make their profits for the year. And, though there are many opportunities to make Christmas only a sappy holiday, the Biblical witness does not bear that out. In the Biblical Christmas stories, we get down and dirty, with feet on the ground, in all the riskiness and heartaches of human life – a teen-ager pregnant before marriage by someone other than her fiancé (subject to the death penalty), a baby born on the streets, with the first visitors being foreigners. Not much sap here – just scandalous and difficult stuff.
The final argument for the human realism in the Christmas story is found at the end of Matthew’s account of the narrative in the closing part of chapter two. As we saw last week, the magi come to visit the baby Jesus, and they engage King Herod on the way to Bethlehem. Herod indicates that he wants to worship the baby, too, but we know that he has murder in his heart. The wise magi visit Jesus, then they decide to go home by another way, rather than going back to Herod to tell where the baby is. They aren’t known as “wise men” for nothing.
Herod is infuriated that he has been beaten at his own game, and he returns to the murder in his heart as his endgame position. Not knowing who this baby his, he orders his soldiers to kill all the baby boys of Jerusalem who are two years old and younger. Joseph has had another vision from God, telling him to take his family and flee to Egypt, for the murderous Herod is coming for them. Joseph takes Mary and the baby Jesus to Egypt, where they enter the country as immigrants. Fortunately for us all at this time, Egypt does not have Donald Trump as its leader, and the Holy Family is welcomed and embraced as immigrants. The baby boys of Bethlehem do not fare so well – they are slaughtered by the man with murder in his heart. The scene is horrific – Matthew quotes the prophet Jeremiah to describe it: “A voice was heard in Ramah, wailing and loud lamentation, Rachel weeping for her children.”
Matthew’s account of the Christmas story does not end in sweet sentiment – it ends in fear and flight and murder and lamentation, a story close to our time. The birth of Jesus came not when everything was quiet and still and tranquil, but rather in the midst of the muck and murder and blood of human life. As we look into the new year and wonder how to use this Christmas story, let us recall that God came into our midst not as an escapee from the terror and violence of the world, but right into the midst of our fear and flight and murderous hearts. Matthew doesn’t waste any time in proclaiming that God has come into our midst in the places where we live and struggle and hurt one another.
And, in our time, we live in the midst of another leader with murder in his heart. Like Herod, the Trumpster believes that power and might and violence and death make the world go round, as his adviser Stephen Miller told us last week. Or, as the Trumpster himself put it, there is no limit on his presidency except his own morality – and there seems to be a severe shortage of such morality. From killing people in Venezuela in order to snatch its president and its first lady, to celebrating the murder of a mother in Minneapolis by his personal ICE agents (very similar to the soldiers of Herod), Trump seems to be the backhand of Herod in Jesus’ day.
“Murder in his heart” – so it was said about Herod, and now it is said about Trump, both of them being tyrants who believe that there is no check on their power. If you haven’t known it already, the past two weeks have taught us that we are led by a tyrant, who currently seems to have very few checks on his power. We are called to be witnesses to another way, the way seen in the Christmas stories, which knew just as much blood as we know. In those stories, there were courageous visionaries who heard a different voice and who chose a different way. They proclaimed in word and deed that love and justice and mercy make the world go round, and they made this proclamation not in a sweet and tranquil time, but in a time of blood flowing in the streets, blood shed by leaders with murder in their hearts.
We may not be Mary or Joseph or the magi or the shepherds, but we are called to seek visions from God, visions that will enable us to proclaim a different way in word and in deed. Just as Joseph felt an urgency to move to Egypt when he heard the vision from God, so too must we feel that urgency. It is time to act up and act out, to be witnesses in resistance to those with murder in their hearts.