Listening again to the episode of the beheading of John the Baptist, as part of the Gospel reading today, a couple of points that struck me:
That Herod could find his promise more demanding and compelling than the life of a person is strange. Is the worth of life lessor than a mere word, that too given to someone for a dance performance?! But it didn't take me long to realise that it was never about honour. Herod was not honouring his word; he was merely giving in to his fear. He had already decided to kill John the Baptist; he just didn't have 'sufficient reason' to justify his plan. The promise was a mere excuse, to actually carry out what he had already made up his mind about!
On a totally different note, the concluding lines of the Gospel speak about the disciples of John the Baptist, burying him and then informing Jesus about it. What suddenly hit me was Jesus' response. Of course, there certainly would have been an emotional response; but the text says nothing. Whereas when Lazarus dies, Jesus weeps. Here the death was of his own cousin; someone he had known all his life. Surely, this would have been a very sad moment for Jesus. If Lazarus' death could move him to tears, I'm sure John's death would have been no less a tragic moment.
Or did the Biblical authors perhaps skipped recording that emotional response, lest they show him 'human'. Or maybe they did not want to show his affinity to family more than his mission? Too many may be's!!
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| Beheading of John the Baptist (by Caravaggio) |

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