On the Beheading of the Honorable Forerunner
By Archimandrite George Kapsanis
(Delivered in 1981 at Gregoriou Monastery of the Holy Mountain)
By Archimandrite George Kapsanis
(Delivered in 1981 at Gregoriou Monastery of the Holy Mountain)
We have noticed two contrasting images in tonight’s feast, described to us by the hymnography of our Church and the sacred Gospel we read (Mark 6:16-29).
On the one hand we have Herod, Herodias, the daughter of Herodias, that wicked banquet, the triumph of human wickedness and sinfulness. Promiscuity, illicit marriage, drunkenness, fearlessness of God, passions, anger, hatred, revenge, lack of repentance. In contrast to this image, so gloomy, stands the pure, holy figure of the Baptist, the Prophet, the man of God, the righteous man, Saint John the Forerunner.
Great indeed is the difference! In the person of the Honorable Forerunner we see the man of God, man as God willed him to be, the man of obedience, love, faith, hope in God, perfect devotion to the Lord, sacrifice. In the other persons, of the enemies of the Honorable Forerunner, we see the man who was enslaved to the devil, as he became because of his disobedience to God. On the one hand, we have the highest peak of holiness, and on the other hand, we have the lowest depth of sinfulness and the passionate state. These two images summarize the drama of man's salvation, the fall and holiness.