Feast of the Holy Innocents 2006
- Today the
Church remembers and honours the little children who were
murdered by King Herod in his futile search for Jesus. The
Church calls these children the Holy Innocents and honours
them as martyrs. They are honoured as martyrs because their
blood was shed as a witness to the new-born Jesus whom we
acknowledge to be the incarnate Son of God, the Emmanuel,
God-with-us. The mystery of Christmas, then, is fully
present in the liturgical feast of the Holy Innocents, and
again, today, we worship Jesus born of Mary.
- The
children we call the Holy Innocents were murdered for
political motives. King Herod feared the expected Messiah.
His Roman masters allowed him to have some power over the
people of Palestine. He enjoyed that power and did not want
to risk losing it to the person who would come as God’s
anointed one. Once he learned that the Holy One would be a
boy-child, he resolved to kill him. The savage and unlawful
killing of the Holy Innocents was the result of his
murderous political ambition.
- This feast
also has a symbolic power. The Holy Innocents are symbols of
all children who are mistreated, abused, and killed because
of the twisted needs, ambitions and convenience of people
who have power over them, and they cry out to the world to
respect and protect the innocence of infants and children.
Above all, the Holy Innocents have become symbols of those
innocent unborn babies whose lives have been done away with
by legalised abortion. Since abortion was legalised in 1967,
there have been almost 7,000,000 abortions in the UK.
Figures in England & Wales, and in Scotland for 2005 show an
increase over 2004. Without labouring the statistics, we
can say that in effect we have abortion on demand.
Tragically, the lives of unborn children are done away with
for reasons mostly of choice and convenience, and successive
governments have connived at this to protect and enhance
their political power. As the Holy Innocents show us,
convenience, ambition and power can be a deadly combination
for children and especially for the unborn.
- In this
context, the work of the Society of the Innocents and other
similar organisations which defend and protect the lives of
unborn children is essential to our society as a witness to
the sacredness of unborn life. It is very important also
that you are there to offer women an alternative to abortion
and to give them support both before they have their child
and afterwards. On behalf of the Church, I want to thank
you, support you unreservedly and encourage you in your
work.
- The feast
of the Nativity of the Lord is always a source of new hope
for those who believe in Jesus because He is the Emmanuel,
God-with-us. As we adore the baby Jesus, born of Mary, we
humbly ask his pardon on behalf of our contemporaries for
the sin of abortion; trustingly we commend the souls of
these innocent ones to his care; and we ask prayerfully for
his help to continue to hope and work for a change of heart
in human beings so that the right to life of inborn children
will be protected and respected.
Holy Family, Port Glasgow, 28th December 2006
|