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Home » Free Books » Bonar, Horatius » Light & Truth: The Gospels !
Chapter 13 - Matthew 19:6 - Herod's Ball-Room Light & Truth: The Gospels by Bonar, Horatius
Quick Access Chapter 1 - Matthew 1:1 - Very Man... Chapter 2 - Matthew 1:16 - Jesus the See... Chapter 3 - Matthew 2:3 - Jesus the Trou... Chapter 4 - Matthew 3:10 - The Desert Vo... Chapter 5 - Matthew 4:23 - Jesus in Seas... Chapter 6 - Matthew 5:45 - His Sun... Chapter 7 - Matthew 8:1-3 - Human Lepros... Chapter 8 - Matthew 8:34 - Man's Dislike... Chapter 9 - Matthew 11:28 - The Rest and... Chapter 10 - Matthew 11:29 - The Three E... Chapter 11 - Matthew 12:41 - Nineveh and... Chapter 12 - Matthew 13:25 - The Two Sow... Chapter 13 - Matthew 19:6 - Herod's Ball... Chapter 14 - Matthew 19:15-16 - Man's Wa... Chapter 15 - Matthew 14:24-31 - The Help... Chapter 16 - Matthew 17:17 - The Graciou... Chapter 17 - Matthew 18:1-4 - The Peerag... Chapter 18 - Matthew 18:2; Luke 19:10 - ... Chapter 19 - Matthew 21:44 - The Stone o... Chapter 20 - Matthew 22:42 - The Things ... Chapter 21 - Matthew 24:12 - The Chill o... Chapter 22 - Matthew 24:42, 44 - True Vi... Chapter 23 - Matthew 25:3 - Religion wit... Chapter 24 - Matthew 25:31, 33 - The Gre... Chapter 25 - Matthew 24:70 - The Denying... Chapter 26 - Matthew 27:4 - The True Con... Chapter 27 - Mark 3:35 - Relationship to... Chapter 28 - Mark 4:39 - The Great Calm... Chapter 29 - Mark 5:36 - Only Believe... Chapter 30 - Mark 6:6 - Jesus Wondering ... Chapter 31 - Mark 6:33, 34 - Christ's Te... Chapter 32 - Mark 6:53-56 - Jesus and Hi... Chapter 34 - Mark 11:13 - The Fruitless ... Chapter 33 - Mark 10:52 - Christ's Recog... Chapter 35 - Mark 11:22 - Faith in God... Chapter 36 - Mark 13:33 - Watch and Pray... Chapter 37 - Mark 13:34-37 - The Master ... Chapter 38 - Mark 14:62 - The Coming of ... Chapter 39 - Luke 4:16-31 - The Gracious... Chapter 40 - Luke 6:19 - Health in Jesus... Chapter 41 - Luke 7:36-50 - Much Forgive... Chapter 42 - Luke 11:13 - How Much More!... Chapter 43 - Luke 15:2 - Jesus Watching ... Chapter 44 - Luke 15:10 - God's Joy Over... Chapter 45 - Luke 15:20 - The Father's L... Chapter 46 - Luke 15:22 - God's Free Lov... Chapter 47 - Luke 17:26, 27 - Noah Days... Chapter 48 - Luke 19:11-27 - The Lowest ... Chapter 49 - Luke 14:40 - Christ Must ha... Chapter 50 - Luke 21:28 - Signs of the T... Chapter 51 - Luke 21:36 - Deliverance in... Chapter 52 - Luke 22:18 - The New Wine o... Chapter 53 - Luke 22:19, 20 - The Heaven... Chapter 54 - Luke 23:32-43 - The Three C... Chapter 55 - Luke 24:29 - The Disciples'... Chapter 56 - John 1:12, 13 - Reception o... Chapter 57 - John 3:2 - The World's Need... Chapter 58 - John 3:14, 15 - Life in Loo... Chapter 59 - John 3:29 - The Filling Up ... Chapter 60 - John 3:34, 35 - The Fullnes... Chapter 61 - John 4:10 - The Living Wate... Chapter 62 - John 5:39, 40 - Bible Testi... Chapter 63 - John 6:17 - Night with Jesu... Chapter 64 - John 6:50 - The Bread of Im... Chapter 65 - John 6:51 - Christ's Flesh ... Chapter 66 - John 7:37 - Come and Drink... Chapter 67 - John 7:53; John 8:1, 12 - J... Chapter 68 - John 8:31, 32 - Truth and L... Chapter 69 - John 8:54 - The Father Hono... Chapter 70 - John 11:40 - The Honour Giv... Chapter 71 - John 12:12 - Inquiring afte... Chapter 72 - John 12:32 - The Great Attr... Chapter 73 - John 12:35-36 - Light and i... Chapter 74 - John 12:46 - Light for the ... Chapter 75 - John 12:48 - The Judging Wo... Chapter 76 - John 14:8-10 - The Revelati... Chapter 77 - John 13:16, 17 - The Abidin... Chapter 78 - John 14:26 - The Mighty Com... Chapter 79 - John 14:27 - The Divine Leg... Chapter 80 - John 16:25-28 - Christ in H... Chapter 81 - John 16:33 - Tribulation, P... Chapter 82 - John 17:26 - The Declaratio... Chapter 84 - John 18:28 - Ritualism and ... Chapter 84 - John 19:2 - The Greater Sin... Chapter 85 - John 20:17 - Christ's Work ... Chapter 86 - John 21:5 - The Tender Love... Light & Truth - The Gospels - Footnotes...
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XIII.
Herod's Ball-Room.
"But when Herod's birthday was kept, the daughter of Herodias danced before them, and pleased Herod."-Matthew
19:6.
This birthday ball of Herod was held, in all likelihood, at Machaerus, a fortress beyond Jordan, not far from the Dead Sea.
It was a high and royal festival.
Pomp, splendor, luxury, and lust were all gathered there.
In the midst of the song, and the glitter, and the mirth, there was one troubled conscience, that of Herod,-one trembling man, Herod.
His soul was ill at ease, though surrounded with all that the world could give to banish care.
He, Herodias, and John the Baptist, may be said to be the chief personages brought before us in this scene.
But let us take up the narrative in another form; (1.) before the ball; (2.) during the ball; (3.) after the ball.
I.
Before the ball.
The news of Christ's miracles had overspread the land, and reached Herod.
He was startled and troubled.
Who is this Jesus!
Can he be John?
Can John be risen?
But why these fears on the part of Herod?
The answer carries us back to the time before the ball.
John had reproved Herod for his wickedness more than a year and a half before; for Herod had taken his brother's wife, and John had proclaimed the unlawfulness of the deed.
This had roused the king's anger.
He would fain have slain him, and was only kept from doing so by fear of the multitude, who reverenced John.
But he imprisoned him, and kept him in the castle of Machaerus for eighteen months.
The guilt of an unlawful marriage was on his conscience, as well as the guilt of imprisoning a holy man.
His course of sin had been begun and persevered in.
He was braving out his crimes; and like worldly men in such circumstances, he rushes into gaiety to drown his troubles and terrors.
The pleasures of the feast and the ball-room, the song and the dance,-these are welcomed to induce forgetfulness, and "minister to a mind diseased."
In how many cases do men fly to the ball, the theatre, the card-table, the tavern, the riotous party, not simply for pleasure's sake, and to "taste life's glad moments," but to drown care, to smother conscience, to efface convictions, to laugh away the impressions of the last sermon, to soothe an uneasy mind, to relieve the burden or pluck out the sting of conscious guilt!
O slaughter-houses of souls!
O shambles, reeking with blood!
O "lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries"; how long shall men "run on in this excess of riot"?
O lust of the flesh, lust of the eye, and pride of life, when will ye cease to intoxicate, and lead men captive at your will?
O God-forgetting gaiety!
O dazzling worldliness!
O glittering halls of midnight, where
 
"Youth and pleasure meet
To chase the glowing hours with flying feet,"
 
when, when will ye cease to be resorted to by the sons of men to "heal the hurt" of the human soul, to still its throb and heartache, and to medicate the immedicable wound?[1]
II.
During the ball.
It is a gay scene.
The lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life are there.
All that can minister to these are there.
Herod is there, feeding on lust, drinking in pleasure, stupifying conscience.
The fair daughter is there, in all the splendor of gay wantonness.
And the vile mother is there, lascivious and revengeful.
And the courtiers are there, in pomp and glitter.
Music and mirth are there.
The dance and the song are there.
No note of gloom, no indication of trouble.
What a scene of mirth and revelry!
But some are absent,-conspicuously absent, we may say.
John is not there.
A prison holds him.
His disciples are not there.
They can but weep and lament.
And Jesus is not there, nor his disciples.
They were at the marriage festival in Cana; but this ball-room is not for them.
It is not the place for a follower, either of Jesus or of John.
The beauty of "this world" is one thing, and the beauty of "the world to come" is quite another.
These scenes of royal vanity are instructive; for they present the world in its most fascinating aspects.
All that regal state, and princely beauty, and wealth, and gold, and silver, and gems, and tapestry, and blazing lamps can do, to make this world fair, is in such scenes and haunts.
These balls are the most seductive specimens of pure worldliness that can be found.
Surely the god of this world knows how to enchant both ear and eye.
In an assembly like this, the natural man is at home.
Here the unregenerate heart gets scope to the full.
It is a place where God is not where the cross is not; where such things as sin and holiness must not be named.
It is a hall where the knee is not bent, except in the voluptuous waltz; where the music whose burden is the praise of Jesus is unheard; where the book of God, and the name of God would be out of place; where you may speak of Jupiter, or Venus, or Apollo, but not of Jesus; where you may sing of human love, but not of the love that passeth knowledge; where you may celebrate creature-beauty, but not the beauty of Him who is fairer than the children of men.
It was during that ball that the murder of John was plotted and consummated ("Lust hard by hat."-Milton); that a drunken, lustful king, urged on by two women, perpetrated that foul deed.
Such are the haunts of pleasure!
Such are the masquerades of time.
Lust is let loose; revenge rises up; murder rages; conscience is smothered; the floor of the ball-room is spotted with blood; the dancers may slip their feet in it, but the dance goes on.
Such was the coarse worldliness of old days; but is the refined worldliness of modern times less fatal to the soul?
The ball is finished, and John lies dead in prison.
What a picture of gaiety!
What a specimen of ball-room revelry!
And this is pleasure!
This is the world's joy! "Ye adulterers and adulteresses, know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God?"
     III.
After the ball.
Of the chief actors in this ball-room murder, nothing more is said.
They pass to the judgment-seat, there to receive sentence for lust, rage, revenge, and murder.
They have sent John before them to the presence of his Judge to receive his reward.
They have got their revenge, and they leave his body to be dealt with in any way.
His lips are silenced; that is all they care for.
But his disciples find their way into the prison; they gather round their Master's body; they bury it in silence.
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