Santa Explains About King Herod and His Worried Throne


Ho ho ho! Now, every good story has a moment of suspense, doesn't it? A bit of tension. And the Christmas story is no different. So let me tell you about a fellow named King Herod — and I'll warn you now, he is not one of the heroes of our tale.


You see, as the wise men traveled, following that bright star, they made a perfectly sensible stop. They arrived in the great city of Jerusalem and started asking around. "Where is the one who has been born King of the Jews? We saw His star in the East, and we have come to worship Him."


Now, that's a fair question to ask in a big city. But it was exactly the wrong question to ask in front of the wrong king. Because the king on the throne in those parts was Herod — and Herod did not like the sound of a new king one little bit.


When word reached Herod that strangers were wandering about asking after a newborn King, he was deeply troubled. And the Good Book tells us that all of Jerusalem was troubled with him, because when a nervous king gets upset, everybody gets nervous right along with him.


Here's the thing about Herod, my friends. He was a man who loved his power. He clung to it. He guarded it. The very idea that someone — anyone — might come along to share the spotlight filled him with worry and jealousy. And jealousy, let me tell you, is an ugly thing. It can turn a person's heart cold and clever in all the wrong ways.


So Herod did something rather sly. He gathered all his advisors and scholars together and asked them where this special child was supposed to be born. They told him: Bethlehem, just as the old prophecies had foretold.


Then Herod called the wise men in for a quiet, private meeting. And oh, he was charming. He was friendly. He smiled and told them, "Go and search carefully for the child. And when you find Him, come back and tell me, so that I too may go and worship Him."


Now, that sounds lovely on the surface, doesn't it? But Santa has been around long enough to know the difference between a true smile and a sneaky one. And Herod's was the sneaky kind. He had no intention of worshiping anybody. He saw the new King not as a wonder to celebrate, but as a rival to be removed.


It's a good reminder, my friends. Not everyone who smiles at you has good intentions. The world has its Herods — people so worried about losing their little patch of power that they'd rather snuff out something beautiful than share the stage with it.


But here's the comforting part, and I promise we'll get to it: you cannot outsmart heaven. Herod thought he was the cleverest man in the room. He was about to find out he was not.


Stay tuned, my friends.


Merry Christmas, everyone! Ho ho ho! https://santaclaus.top/king-herod-and-his-worried-throne/

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