Bloodbath in Bethlehem
“When Herod realized that he had been outwitted by the Magi, he was furious, and he gave orders to kill all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity who were two years old and under…” — Matthew 2:16
Herod’s
decree stands as one of Scripture’s darkest scenes—a ruler so threatened by the
possibility of a rival that he unleashes violence on the most defenseless.
Matthew echoes Jeremiah’s lament: “A voice was heard in Ramah… Rachel
weeping for her children.” It is the sound of parents whose world has
shattered.
We often
imagine Christmas as peaceful: angels singing, shepherds kneeling, a star
glowing over a quiet stable. These images are beautiful, but they can also feel
disconnected from real life. Matthew refuses that distance. He reveals the
harsher backdrop: a paranoid king, terrified families, soldiers carrying out
horrific commands, and a village drowning in grief.
A World
God Chose to Enter
Matthew
places Herod’s massacre beside the miracle of Christ’s birth to remind us of
the world God stepped into—one marked by injustice, fear, and suffering.
Innocent lives were caught in the machinery of political ambition. Parents
buried children. Hope felt fragile.
By including
this tragedy, Matthew grounds the nativity in the real human condition. Jesus
was not born into a sanitized world but into one scarred by oppression. The
cries of Bethlehem’s mothers are not an interruption to Christmas; they are
woven into its fabric. Their grief reveals the depth of brokenness Christ came
to heal.
Many
families know what it means to face sorrow during a season that promises joy.
Loss, illness, strained relationships, financial pressure, or resurfacing
trauma can make celebration feel impossible. Matthew’s account assures them
that their pain is not out of place. The first Christmas was surrounded by
sorrow.
Hope That
Confronts Pain
Matthew
wants us to see that Christ’s coming does not erase suffering—it meets it head‑on.
The Messiah enters crisis, not comfort. His first breaths are drawn in a world
where children are unsafe and injustice is real. The “bloodbath in Bethlehem”
reminds us that Christmas hope is not naïve; it grows in the soil of suffering.
By refusing
sentimentality, Matthew offers a more truthful and compassionate story. Many
people approach Christmas carrying grief or fear. Some sit at tables with empty
chairs. Some face uncertainty or illness. Matthew tells them they belong in the
story. Their pain is not a disruption; it is part of the world Christ came to
redeem.
Light in
Real Darkness
The massacre
in Bethlehem shows that God’s light enters actual darkness, not an imagined
one. The God who came into a world of tears is not distant from ours. Matthew’s
choice is deliberate: the incarnation happens in a world already breaking.
Some people
enter the season grieving loved ones, navigating broken relationships, or
struggling financially. Others face anxiety, illness, or painful memories.
Matthew’s narrative tells them they are not failing to “feel the season.” Their
reality is part of the biblical story itself.
Matthew
refuses to pretend the world is better than it is. By placing Rachel’s weeping
at the center of the nativity, he honors every parent and every community that
has known loss. God does not wait for peace before entering the world; God
steps into its fractures.
A God Who
Draws Near
If God came
into a world marked by violence and sorrow, then God is not distant from those
who suffer today. The Christmas story becomes a sturdy promise: God is present
in the mess, the mourning, and the moments that feel anything but festive. It
holds both joy and lament.
Matthew’s
realism strengthens the hope of Christmas. It reminds hurting families that
Christ’s light shines in the world as it is—not as we wish it were.
That is where the compassion deepens. Because if God came into a world marked by violence, fear, and sorrow, then God is not distant from those who experience the same today. It is a story big enough to hold both joy and lament, both celebration and sorrow.
A Promise
for Hurting Families
This truth
matters deeply. It means:
- Your sorrow does not push God
away.
- Your questions do not disqualify
you from hope.
- Your wounds are seen,
remembered, and held.
- Your story is not beyond
redemption.
The love
that entered Bethlehem’s darkness is the same love that meets us in
ours—steady, present, and unafraid of the mess. Christmas matters not because
it promises a world without suffering, but because it reveals a God who refuses
to stop loving us in the midst of it.
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Pastor Godwin, FBC Danvers

When I read that , I think about the 21st.
ReplyDeleteWe are definitely an ancient times and it's coming to fruition revelation.It speaks loud and clear.Let's be prepared.
No more time to be cold lukewarm.We have to be on fire for the lord