Revelation, support, new Way and new People
(Mt 2:13-18)
The cruelty of Herod - an exasperated egomaniac - became proverbial even in Rome.
In his last years, absurdly withdrawn into a restless adherence to himself, he caused three of his sons to perish and issued a decree [not executed due to his death] by which he ordered the most influential among the Jews to be eliminated - both to wipe out the (supposed) pretenders to the throne and the dissenters on the territory.
In the Gospel passage the king is an icon of the will to power that kills those who recall the spirit of Christ's childhood: the Son of God placed his being in the Father's Mission.
[Such decentralised humility not only saves us in the order of grace, but also in that of human equilibrium].
Mt wrote his Gospel in response to the situation the Church was experiencing at a very critical time.
After the year 70, the only groups that survived the destruction of Judaism were the Messianic Christians and the Pharisees - both convinced that the armed struggle against the Roman Empire had nothing to do with the fulfilment of the Promises.
Not many years after the disaster in Jerusalem, it was precisely the sect of the Pharisees, now deprived of their place of worship - the centre of national identity - that began to organise themselves to centralise the governance of the synagogues.
Accused of betraying their particular culture and customs, the Judaizers who recognised Jesus as the Son of God were eventually driven out of the synagogues themselves.
Growing opposition and then explicit separation from the covenant people made the bewilderment of the faithful and the problem of the very identity of the early Assemblies of Faith acute; groups in obvious distress.
Mt encouraged them to avoid defections, supporting those who had received the sharp excommunication from the leaders of popular religiosity - hitherto admired for their strong devotion, and held in high regard.
To help overcome the trauma, the Glad Tidings addressed to the Judaizing converts set out to reveal Jesus as the true fulfilment of the Prophecies and the authentic Messiah - in the figure of the new Moses who fulfils the promises of liberation.
Like him, a persecuted man who had to relentlessly move and flee (cf. Ex 4:19).
According to a generalised belief in Judaism, the time of the Lord's Anointed One would have re-actualised the time of Moses.
But the ancient leader of "the Mount" had imposed a relationship between God and the people based on banal obedience to a Law.
The genuine and transparent Son, on the other hand, now proposes to the brethren of Faith a creative relationship of bliss and communion based on Likeness.
A relationship called to overcome the old righteousness of the Pharisees (Mt 5:20).
No fear then - even for us - of harassment, which must simply be taken into account.
On the contrary, taken as opportunities to witness love and strong involvement, in the Master's own story - reinterpreted in the first person.
Here is also indicated a new Path of seeking the Light or Star that guides our steps.
All like the Magi - strangers, yet authentic worshippers of the Lord.
They were able to avoid the vigilance of the ruler - thus they found their own dwelling place, deviating from the path already planned.
Like God's Envoy par excellence who experienced the same fate as his people, the churches of all times can experience in him an identical Exodus story.
An unprecedented journey, a forge of exploration and change of mentality; of consolation and more vivid hope - with inexorable contrasts.
Christ is the hidden and persecuted Messiah, founder of a new People, resigned and fraternal. Germ of an alternative society to the ruthless one in the field.
Crowning of the hopes of all men.
Denial of the Lord's way itself projects a dark atmosphere: it becomes preservation of the belligerent.
Rejection of humanisation... whose therapy lies in the trust of the 'little ones', in the youthful and 'childlike' audacity that does not know the impossible.
The innocent children of that extermination are the figure of the children of God of every century, as the 'peers' of Jesus, able to re-actualise the spontaneous time - contrary to violence and death.
They are the persecuted and taken out because of the paradoxical subversive force of their tender, outspoken faith.
The opposite of the servile and flattering, devoured by calculation; always ready for deference to the fierce holders of power. Intimidated by the possibility that a soft and puny life-form might destabilise their positions.
But in the event of severe anguish, even the energy of sadness that runs through painful events (vv.17-18) will rediscover what really matters.
This will allow for rebirth (in weeping, in darkness) separating us too from that kind of character.
To internalise and live the message:
In the realisation of yourself in Christ, how have you tenderly broken down the prison of common thinking, power and its fears?