Martyr 1st century

14 000 Holy Innocents

Also known as The Infants slain by Herod at Bethlehem

The children killed by King Herod in his attempt to destroy the newborn Christ.

Feast Day
December 29
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Commemorated as

The Holy 14,000 Innocents Slain by Herod at Bethlehem

Come to them for
Children

Life

The Holy Innocents are the male children of Bethlehem and its surrounding region whom King Herod ordered killed in his attempt to destroy the newborn Christ. By tradition the Orthodox Church numbers them at 14,000 and venerates them as the first martyrs for Christ, commemorating them on December 29, within the festal season of the Nativity.

According to the account, Magi from the East followed a star foretelling the birth of the King of the Jews and came seeking the Child. Herod, troubled by the prospect of a rival, directed them to report back to him; but, warned by God in a dream, the Magi returned to their own country by another way without informing him. Finding himself deceived, Herod ordered the killing of all the male children two years old and younger in Bethlehem and its surroundings, reasoning that the Child he feared would be among them.

The children, though they died without preaching or confession, are honored as martyrs because they suffered death on Christ's account. Orthodox tradition speaks of them as baptized in the blood of their own martyrdom. Their commemoration falls among the days that follow the feast of the Nativity, joining the newborn Christ to the first to die for him.

Contributions & Legacy

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Herod and the Massacre

The synaxarion presents the massacre as the act of a tyrant consumed by fear for his throne. Herod the Great, learning from the Magi that a King had been born, and then finding that they had not returned to disclose the Child's whereabouts, resolved to eliminate any possible rival by killing all the male infants of the area. The tradition relates that Herod was afterward struck down by a grievous disease and died, his body consumed by worms while he yet lived, having in his final period also put to death numerous officials and members of his own household.

Relics and Commemoration

A cave traditionally identified as the resting place of the Innocents lies beneath the Basilica of the Nativity in Bethlehem, beside the belfry, and is said to hold the bones and skulls of the children; the same cave is reported to contain the remains of Christians killed in the Persian sack of 614. Relics of the Innocents are also venerated at the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, at the Church of Saint James in Constantinople, and at the Pantokrator Monastery on Mount Athos. In the Constantinopolitan tradition the Synaxis in their honor was held at the church of the Most Holy Theotokos in Chalcoprateia.

Notes

Named numerical group kept as one row.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints