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It’s the Sun in the Octave of Nativity, 2nd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “The Holy Innocents”, today’s news from the Church: “Poland: Religious Statistics Declining Except for Mass Attendance”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
The Feast of the Holy Innocents brings the Church face to face with one of the most sobering moments of the Christmas story. Celebrated on December 28, it remembers the children of Bethlehem who were killed by order of King Herod in his attempt to destroy the newborn Christ. Their story appears briefly in Saint Matthew’s Gospel, yet the Church has lingered over it for centuries, recognizing in these children the first martyrs associated with the Incarnation.
Herod’s fear was political, but his violence was absolute. When the Magi did not return with news of the Child’s location, he ordered the slaughter of the male children in and around Bethlehem. Scripture gives no names and no numbers. What it gives is lament. Matthew quotes the prophet Jeremiah, describing Rachel weeping for her children and refusing consolation. The Church has always heard in that cry not only ancient sorrow, but every grief that follows when innocence is destroyed by power and fear.
The Holy Innocents did not know Christ by sight or word, yet they are honored as martyrs because they died in his place. Saint Augustine would later say that they were baptized not by water, but by blood. Their death was not chosen, but it was caught up into the saving work of Christ. The Church places their feast within the Octave of Christmas deliberately, reminding us that the Child born to save the world entered it knowing its cruelty as well as its joy.
In the early centuries, devotion to the Holy Innocents grew quickly. Parents prayed to them for the protection of children. The Church came to see them as patrons of infants, the unborn, and all who suffer without defense. Their feast carried a penitential note even amid Christmas celebration, a reminder that redemption does not erase suffering, but transforms it.
Culturally, the day took on distinctive customs. In medieval Europe, it was sometimes called Childermas. In some regions, children were given special privileges or small gifts, reversing roles as a sign that the lowly are honored by God. In monasteries and schools, the youngest members were symbolically placed in positions of honor for the day. In other places, bells were rung in mourning, and prayers were offered for children who had died young. The customs varied widely, but the heart of the day remained the same: tenderness toward the vulnerable.
The Feast of the Holy Innocents teaches that Christmas cannot be separated from the cost of salvation. The Child in the manger is already marked by the shadow of the Cross. Yet the Church proclaims hope even here. These children, whose lives seemed to end before they began, are honored as living witnesses before the throne of God.
Holy Innocents, who died for Christ without knowing his name, pray for us.
By SSPX US District, Angelus Press5
66 ratings
It’s the Sun in the Octave of Nativity, 2nd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “The Holy Innocents”, today’s news from the Church: “Poland: Religious Statistics Declining Except for Mass Attendance”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
The Feast of the Holy Innocents brings the Church face to face with one of the most sobering moments of the Christmas story. Celebrated on December 28, it remembers the children of Bethlehem who were killed by order of King Herod in his attempt to destroy the newborn Christ. Their story appears briefly in Saint Matthew’s Gospel, yet the Church has lingered over it for centuries, recognizing in these children the first martyrs associated with the Incarnation.
Herod’s fear was political, but his violence was absolute. When the Magi did not return with news of the Child’s location, he ordered the slaughter of the male children in and around Bethlehem. Scripture gives no names and no numbers. What it gives is lament. Matthew quotes the prophet Jeremiah, describing Rachel weeping for her children and refusing consolation. The Church has always heard in that cry not only ancient sorrow, but every grief that follows when innocence is destroyed by power and fear.
The Holy Innocents did not know Christ by sight or word, yet they are honored as martyrs because they died in his place. Saint Augustine would later say that they were baptized not by water, but by blood. Their death was not chosen, but it was caught up into the saving work of Christ. The Church places their feast within the Octave of Christmas deliberately, reminding us that the Child born to save the world entered it knowing its cruelty as well as its joy.
In the early centuries, devotion to the Holy Innocents grew quickly. Parents prayed to them for the protection of children. The Church came to see them as patrons of infants, the unborn, and all who suffer without defense. Their feast carried a penitential note even amid Christmas celebration, a reminder that redemption does not erase suffering, but transforms it.
Culturally, the day took on distinctive customs. In medieval Europe, it was sometimes called Childermas. In some regions, children were given special privileges or small gifts, reversing roles as a sign that the lowly are honored by God. In monasteries and schools, the youngest members were symbolically placed in positions of honor for the day. In other places, bells were rung in mourning, and prayers were offered for children who had died young. The customs varied widely, but the heart of the day remained the same: tenderness toward the vulnerable.
The Feast of the Holy Innocents teaches that Christmas cannot be separated from the cost of salvation. The Child in the manger is already marked by the shadow of the Cross. Yet the Church proclaims hope even here. These children, whose lives seemed to end before they began, are honored as living witnesses before the throne of God.
Holy Innocents, who died for Christ without knowing his name, pray for us.

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