The Feast of the Holy Innocents: History, Theology, and the Question of Historicity
Each year on December 28, the Catholic Church commemorates the Feast of the Holy Innocents. It is a quiet, somber day tucked into the joy of Christmas, and that placement is deliberate. The Church asks us to remember that the Incarnation did not enter a neutral world, but a violent one. In recent years, claims have circulated that this feast is “pagan,” borrowed from pre-Christian customs, or that the event it commemorates never happened at all. Both claims collapse under even modest historical scrutiny.
Date and Liturgical Place
The Feast of the Holy Innocents is observed on December 28 in the Roman Rite. The dating is not arbitrary. It follows the Feast of St. Stephen on December 26 and St. John the Apostle on December 27, forming what medieval liturgy called the Comites Christi—the Companions of Christ. Stephen died by martyrdom of will and blood, John by will alone, and the Innocents by blood but not by conscious will (Martimort, 1986).
This structure is distinctly Christian and theological, not seasonal or agricultural. There is no evidence of a pagan festival on December 28 that could plausibly account for the feast’s origin.
Biblical and Historical Origin
The feast commemorates the massacre of male children in Bethlehem ordered by King Herod the Great, as recorded in Matthew 2:16–18. Matthew situates the event within Herod’s well-attested pattern of paranoia and brutality. Outside the New Testament, Herod is described by the Jewish historian Josephus as capable of murdering his own sons, his wife Mariamne, and numerous perceived rivals (Josephus, Antiquities 15–17).
The argument that the massacre “did not happen” usually rests on the fact that Josephus does not explicitly mention it. This objection misunderstands both ancient historiography and the scale of the event. Bethlehem was a small village. Modern estimates suggest the number of children killed may have been in the dozens, not hundreds or thousands (Brown, 1993). Josephus routinely omits minor local atrocities unless they affected elite politics or large populations. The absence of mention is not evidence of absence.
Raymond E. Brown, one of the most respected New Testament scholars of the twentieth century, concluded that while Matthew’s account is the only direct source, it is “fully consistent with what we know of Herod’s character” and cannot be dismissed as legend simply because it lacks external corroboration (Brown, 1993).
Early Christian Witness
The Feast of the Holy Innocents is ancient. By the late fourth and early fifth centuries, it was widely celebrated in both East and West. St. Augustine preached sermons on the Holy Innocents, calling them “flowers of the martyrs” (Sermon 373). Prudentius, a fourth-century Christian poet, references their martyrdom in his Cathemerinon. These sources predate the Christianization of Europe’s pagan populations and cannot plausibly be explained as syncretism.
No early Christian writer treats the massacre as symbolic or mythological. It is consistently understood as a real event with theological meaning, not a metaphor invented for liturgical drama.
Theology of the Holy Innocents
Theologically, the Holy Innocents occupy a unique place. They are venerated as martyrs, not because they consciously professed Christ, but because they died for Christ. This distinction matters. The Church has long recognized martyrdom as rooted in the objective cause of death, not solely in subjective awareness (Catechism of the Catholic Church, §2473).
Their feast underscores a central Christian claim: salvation history involves real suffering, especially the suffering of the powerless. The Incarnation provokes opposition. Christ’s kingship threatens worldly power from the moment of His birth.
The Holy Innocents also raise difficult questions about grace, baptism, and salvation. Historically, theologians like Augustine and Aquinas addressed these questions seriously, never dismissing the children as narrative devices. Their deaths were understood as mysterious but meaningful within God’s providence, not as expendable details.
The Claim of Pagan Origins
The claim that the Feast of the Holy Innocents is pagan usually appears without primary sources. It often gestures vaguely at Roman festivals or child-related rites, but no direct parallels exist. Roman religion did not commemorate the mass killing of children as virtuous victims. Nor did it celebrate innocent suffering as redemptive.
By contrast, the Christian interpretation of innocent suffering is distinct and even offensive to pagan sensibilities. As Candida Moss notes, early Christianity redefined martyrdom in ways that sharply diverged from Greco-Roman ideals of honor and heroism (Moss, 2013). The veneration of powerless victims was not inherited from paganism. It contradicted it.
Conclusion
The Feast of the Holy Innocents is not pagan in origin, not mythological in intent, and not ahistorical by scholarly standards. It arises from a specific Gospel account, coheres with what we know of Herodian violence, and is attested early and consistently in Christian tradition. Its theology is sober, uncomfortable, and unmistakably Christian.
That discomfort may explain why modern readers are tempted to dismiss the feast altogether. But the Church has never flinched from remembering that the coming of Christ into the world was met with real bloodshed. The Holy Innocents stand as a reminder that Christmas is not sentiment. It is invasion.
References
Augustine. Sermons.
Brown, R. E. (1993). The Birth of the Messiah. Doubleday.
Catechism of the Catholic Church. (1992).
Josephus. Antiquities of the Jews.
Martimort, A. G. (1986). The Church at Prayer. Liturgical Press.
Moss, C. (2013). The Myth of Persecution. HarperOne.
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