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Three
Sinners
Mark
6:14-29
To
understand this story – which has been portrayed on stage many times – you
need a little history lesson first. There
are a bunch of “Herods” in the New Testament.
It gets a little confusing, so I will introduce only a few to you:
 | Herod the Great is the
father of the Herod in this passage. He’s
the one mentioned in the story of the nativity.
He’s the one who dealt with the Wise Men – and slaughtered all
the children under the age of two. That
will tell you pretty quickly just what kind of family we’re dealing with.
He’s a contemporary of Cleopatra, by the way – who tried to take
over his kingdom via Mark Anthony.
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 | Herod Antipas –
that’s the Herod in this passage – is his son. Dad willed him the rule of Galilee.
His two brothers got the rest of the kingdom.
One of them was so bad he was deposed by the Romans, who made Judea
an Imperial Colony (hence we get, eventually, Pontius Pilate).
The other brother was Philip, who was Herodias’ first husband.
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 | Herodias – she’s a
relative of all these folks by way of Herod the Great’s father –
divorced Philip for political reasons (her father was King Aretas, and he
seems to have arranged it). By
all contemporary accounts, she was a very good looking woman.
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 | Salome – her name is
not mentioned in the Bible, we get it from history – is Herodias daughter.
It is in some doubt, but most scholars feel she is the daughter of
Philip, not Herod Antipas. She
would be a young teen at this time.
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“Nothing
is ever a total loss – it can always be used as a bad example.”
This bunch fits that proverb quite well.
The
Holy Bible, New International Version
14King Herod heard about this, for Jesus’ name had become well
known.
Some were saying,£ “John the Baptist has been raised from
the dead, and that is
why miraculous powers are at work in him.”
15Others said, “He is Elijah.”
And still others claimed, “He is a prophet, like one of
the prophets of long
ago.”
16But when Herod heard this, he said, “John, the man I beheaded,
has been
raised from the dead!”
17For Herod himself had given orders to have John arrested, and he
had him
bound and put in prison. He did this because of Herodias, his brother Philip’s
wife, whom he had married. 18For John had been saying to Herod, “It
is not
lawful for you to have your brother’s wife.” 19So
Herodias nursed a grudge
against John and wanted to kill him. But she was not able to, 20because
Herod
feared John and protected him, knowing him to be a righteous and holy man.
When Herod heard John, he was greatly puzzled£;
yet he liked to listen to him.
21Finally the opportune time came. On his birthday Herod gave a
banquet for
his high officials and military commanders and the leading men of Galilee.
22When
the daughter of Herodias came in and danced, she pleased Herod and his
dinner guests.
The king said to the girl, “Ask me for anything you want,
and I’ll give it to
you.” 23And
he promised her with an oath, “Whatever you ask I will give you, up
to half my kingdom.”
24She went out and said to her mother, “What shall I ask for?”
“The head of John the Baptist,” she answered.
25At once the girl hurried in to the king with the request: “I want
you to give
me right now the head of John the Baptist on a platter.”
26The king was greatly distressed, but because of his oaths and his
dinner
guests, he did not want to refuse her. 27So he immediately sent an executioner
with orders to bring John’s head. The man went, beheaded John in the prison,
28and
brought back his head on a platter. He presented it to the girl, and she gave
it to her mother. 29On hearing of this, John’s disciples came and
took his body
and laid it in a tomb.
Salome
In
the movies, she’s usually portrayed as a misled, innocent little thing.
It goes well in Hollywood, but it’s not Salome.
Her mother’s apprentice
Her
mother, as we shall see, is an evil, scheming woman – who has taught her
daughter well. There’s a lesson
or two in that.
 | First, how important
it is to remember the example! This
child grew up in a palace of intrigue; how could she help but learn it?
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 | Second, it shows us
how values are formed in children. Principles
are the stands which cost us something;
can you imagine this girl sacrificing anything for the sake of
principle? Her mother never
did.
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 | This is particularly
important, I think, in girls.
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I
remember it well: my daughter (at
this writing, 18 years old) was two years old when I first saw the wiggle and
the wink. She smiled at me when she
did it. I thought to myself,
“There’s only one woman in the world with the right to look at me that way
– what am I going to do with two?” Can
you see now how she wrapped Herod around her little finger?
Perhaps the way a wife treats her husband is of some influence on her
daughters.
“Pretty girls just seem to find out early…”
… how to open doors with just a smile.
I live next to a college campus. My
wife works there, so I frequently walk through the campus to meet her.
When I do, I often see young women we refer to as “advertising.”
We categorize them in three types:
 | “For sale” –
obviously showing off their bodies.
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 | “For sale or rent”
– not just that, but clearly are looking for tonight’s bed partner.
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 | “Hourly rates” –
I leave to your imagination.
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These
young women have given in to the temptation to use sexuality as a tool.
Tools are just that: tools.
Each tool has a right use. The
right use of sexuality is to please a husband so that the marriage may be solid.
Abused – we can see the result. Evidently
the abuse is not just a modern phenomenon.
“Right now”
She
doesn’t want his head tomorrow, or when convenient – but right now.
Why?
 | She’s sized up Herod
pretty accurately. She
doesn’t want to give him time to repent.
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 | Besides, when you’re
a young teenager, everything is right now.
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 | But most of all,
it’s because Mom wants it.
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How
often do we give in to the strong personalities in our families, at the expense
of the weak ones?
Herodias
Usually
cast as the villainess (I’d love to see Walt Disney’s treatment of this
woman), Herodias is the power behind the throne, or so it seemed.
We can see something of ourselves in her.
Nursed a grudge
It’s
well put. She didn’t just have
one, she nursed it. A grudge can be
quite frail – at first.
 | It’s the great
danger of anger, that you nurse it in the night until it consumes you.
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 | We often do so,
thinking “no harm can come of it.”
But the harm is there, just waiting for the right circumstances.
Nurse the grudge long enough, the tempting moment will come to put
grudge into action. This
usually has consequences with long term regret.
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 | The end result of the
grudge may appear to be John the Baptist’s head – but it also is the
bitterness in her heart.
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Rich man’s war
During
our Civil War, the Confederate soldiers often said that it was “a rich man’s
war and a poor man’s fight.” My
mother used to put it this way, in settling our childish squabbles:
“This is a case of let’s you and him fight.”
We are ever inclined to send someone else to do the dirty work.
There are two points in here to remember:
 | In this extreme, her
own daughter was pushed to commit murder so that Mother might have her
revenge. This shows how a
grudge can override even the closest of family ties – yet another reason
to give it up.
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 | Often we send an
emissary to carry out our wishes – because if we went ourselves, we might
have to face the trouble. By
sending her daughter, she didn’t have to touch things.
The grudge stays intact.
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The trophy
It’s
not sufficient that the man be killed. She
wants his head – a trophy. Here
is a sign of a depraved mind.
 | First, it is the
desire of pride. Pride is
essentially competitive. I win
– which means you must lose. The
desire to see the other guy lose is the core of this.
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 | More than that, we
need to be able to crow about it. We
need to be able to strut our victory to show the world that we are better
than the loser.
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If
you think this doesn’t apply to us, have you ever felt the need to get a
better car, bigger boat, nicer house than someone else in your family?
Or at work? Perhaps this sin
isn’t confined to the pages of the Bible.
Herod
The
man is fascinating; all actors know
that the villain is the best part of the play (see Macbeth).
The man is not his own master
He
may be a king, but he is not a ruler. Others
rule over him, whether he likes it or not.
Think not?
 | Why is John in prison?
Herod likes to listen to this guy, he respects him and thinks him a
holy man. But he has this
wife…. And whatever Lola wants, Lola gets.
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 | How did he get this
wife? History tells us that he
snagged her from his brother – because of his lust for her.
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 | Why does he kill John
the Baptist? Listen to the
excuse: his oath.
Listen to the reason: the
peer pressure from his guests.
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Moth to the flame
Herod
is a moth to the flame; whatever
attracts him he hovers about. He
respects John; he imprisons him.
He resents John; he listens to him. Perhaps
it’s like Teddy Roosevelt said of Taft: he
means well – feebly. Courage is
still the foundation of virtue.
The fear of the holy
One
thing Herod is sure of: John is
holy. Herod fears that.
He gives us two evidences of that:
 | His reaction to Jesus
– his nemesis is back.
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 | He beheaded John in
his cell – not at the banquet. He
feared John’s tongue.
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How
many of us are like that? We fear
and respect that which is holy – but refuse to take the courage to become holy
ourselves.
Lessons for us
I
leave you with three questions for your soul:
 | Are you dealing with
others by manipulation, or in honesty?
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 | Are you living the
life of bitterness, or repentance and forgiveness?
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 | Are you ruled by
yourself, by others, or by Jesus Christ?
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Salome
no doubt had her excuses. Herodias
probably did too; Herod even
tendered his. Remember that excuses
and forgiveness are opposite ways of dealing with sin. You must pick one or the other.
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