"He has blinded their eyes and deadened their hearts, so they can neither see with their eyes, nor understand with their hearts." The later children of Judea were, in fact, blinded by the light of Christ. In their blindness, however, they did not reach out in humility as did St. Paul. No, on the contrary, the flailed their arms in fear and anger, and attempted to banish from existence the Word of God and His disciples. The children who suffered martyrdom for the sake of Our Lord were never blinded by greed, by hate, by political games and malicious social tactics designed to keep at arm's length those who truly needed the light, that in their blindness, they might turn towards the Lord.
Now this blindness is no physical, medical condition. It is a purposeful rejection of Truth as revealed by Jesus Christ and professed by His Church. The Holy Innocents never had a chance to reject the light. Instead, God in His most infinite mercy welcomed them without hesitation into the celestial court. Had these children lived, they may have, indeed, rejected Our Lord. This was not the case. Free will of many was taken away by the free will of King Herod, whose heart was blind with the same blindness which brought about the martydom of St. Stephen. The blood of these early martyrs, St. Stephen and the Holy Innocents, nourished the early Church and continues to nourish the modern Church - which is One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic, never changing from age to age. The outer trappings may change, yes, but never will the purpose of exposing to all the world the light, which blinding in itself, rescues us from the blindness of hate, of malice and greed, of perfidy, and of faithlessness in all its forms.
The two blindnesses of Christendom have been constant for two thousand years, for two millenia. Nothing has changed. There are apostates, and children of God follow them to their own spiritual demises. There are saints and blesseds, and children of God follow them to their own spiritual gratification. In our blindness, which we all have - there is no doubt - we have two options: we can attack the darkness, with the immature conception that we, in our weak and timid human state, can dispel the darkness, or we can abandon ourselves to Christ, who alone brings light into our lives and strength and grace into each and every day of our Earthly existence.
It is for this reason that we wear red. The Holy Innocents bled and died in the darkness of man's sinful nature. However, they were found in the darkness of human error, and borne aloft into heaven, to bask in the Heavenly light of Our Lord. The red which we see at Mass, the red which reminds us of their supreme sacrifice, is not there to match the poinsettias of Christmas, nor the bows of the Christmas wreathes. No. It is there to point at each of us and ask, "what will you do in the darkness of your life? Will you abandon God and make more martyrs, or will you empty yourself of human weakness and throw yourself in martyrdom at the feet of God?" We are all called to be martyrs in this day. We may suffer martyrdom in society, we may suffer a literal matryrdom for reaching out to those who must be helped, we may suffer martyrdom in every sanctuary of every church, and we may suffer martyrdom even in our own families. We wear red to commemorate the martyrdom, the real and bloody martyrdom, of those who love God above all else, and who reached out to Him in the darkness, finding His face, and basking in the light from whence all Creation comes.
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