Friday Filler- I Loved This Event, Until…


Thank Grog It’s Firday!


I’m writing this a bit early as we have my Mom’s service Saturday, and have a lot to do to prepare. So, I started doing notes on this, as the Clash of Creeds event was winding down.

I loved this event. I thought it was one of the best of the year, until…

This is where I wish I could cue the “Dun, Dun, Dunnnn” music that always plays when they reveal the villain in a cartoon. Three notes…that almost always signify dread. And for me, the weird, almost lost dialogue at the end of this event came far to close to real life events that have blown up over the last 10 days.

I am going to find it. Because I really need to use it to make my points. I mean, wouldn’t it be great if we had a warning when we are doing something stupid in life, that we either didn’t see coming, or we ignored the warning signs?

In so many cases, everything seems OK, until…

I found one! Now…where were we?

That’s right… I LOVED THIS EVENT, UNTIL…

…until the bit with Herod came in. Sorry. But, King Herod is one of the worst villains of Christianity, and that is saying a lot!  There are so many bad guys in the Judeo Christian history and bible…some of whom are far from being just myths, or metaphoric beings (like the poor maligned snake of the Garden of Eden, or Lott’s “would you like more salt with that?” wife). 

No. The worst part about King Herod, besides the whole killing, and enslaving bit, was his “pass the buck/blame” when he had the chance to do the right thing. 

Let’s face it, there are loads of leaders in history who are best known for doing the right thing, when things are tough, even in the face of public scrutiny. In fact, we almost always just forget about the kinds of leaders who do things only in their own best interests, and create conflicts, mayhem and ruin. Unless they are REALLY bad guys…Like King Herod. 

But, let’s remember…poor old King Herod is a confusing fellow, in that there were more than one of them, and none of them were actually king of anything. 

According to the WIKI; Herod Antipater (Greek: Ἡρῴδης Ἀντίπατρος, Hērǭdēs Antipatros; born before 20 BC – died after 39 AD), known by the nickname Antipas, was a 1st-century ruler of Galilee and Perea, who bore the title of tetrarch (“ruler of a quarter”) and is referred to as both “Herod the Tetrarch” and “King Herod” in the New Testament, although he never held the title of king.  He is widely known today for accounts in the New Testament of his role in events that led to the executions of John the Baptist and Jesus of Nazareth. (Matthew 14:1–12)

After being recognized by Augustus upon the death of his father, Herod the Great (c. 4 BC/AD 1), and subsequently by his brother, the ethnarch Herod Archelaus, Antipas officially ruled Galilee and Perea as a client state of the Roman Empire.

So right away, we get that Herod had a couple of roadblocks to happiness. First, his name was Antipater. Holyfreakinshirt!  Who names their kid Antipater?? 

Next, his Dad was “The Great.” Now we know from modern history that anyone with a “Great” dad, (even if people say “great” sarcastically because he is actually a jerk) knows that he will likely be held to a very high and difficult standard.  He was most likely taught that “Only Winners Count,” and that anyone who didn’t agree was a “Loser.”  Poor Herod Antipater.  

He also had an older brother who got to rule before him, who was apparently universally liked, and did a good job, until he died, but may have suffered by telling his Dad to “pound sand,” and that he didn’t want to be in the family business, and so the little brother got his chance at leading. 



This is of course, is all rumor. 

What we do know is that Herod Anitpater did some bad stuff.  But, one of them wasn’t doing what the writers said he did. 

They imply something dastardly when he makes his entrance into the game…

And it doesn’t get any better as the game progresses…

So it was Herod who decried that all first born males be executed??? 



Nope. Fake News.  Didn’t happen.  In fact, it was GOD who did that, as one of the plagues of Egypt.  And is actually celebrated as part of “Passover.”

In the Bible, it says, “That night, God sent the angel of death to kill the firstborn sons of the Egyptians. God told Moses to order the Israelite families to sacrifice a lamb and smear the blood on the door of their houses. In this way the angel would know to ‘pass over’ the houses of the Israelites.”

So…the writers, like so many other “facts” on the internet, just spun a convenient story to make you dislike Herod.  Which really shouldn’t have been that hard, if they just told the real story…as he did have John the Baptist killed, and passed the buck back to Pontius Pilot, when he had the chance to spare Jesus. 

So, while I had a very good reason not to want to buy Herod (the whole bit about being culpable in the killing of Christ bit), it was actually because the writers were so lazy as to mix up who actually killed the babies (God). Who needs that kind of confusion roaming around town????

And besides. Once Marge and her Sexy Santa outfit showed up, I couldn’t concentrate on what the idiot men were doing in the game anyway. 


Mmmmmmm….Marge.

So let’s wrap this up. 

Nobody likes leaders who foment bad actions, pass the buck, and then demand that they be called King, when in fact they are not.  History is full of guys like that, and it never ends up well for them.  So, no…I didn’t want Herod running around town, spewing Fake News from the writers. The decision on who to believe was easy…and once the Movementarians lost the battle to a woman in a Sexy Santa Suit, all was right with the world. 

Oh…that real life were so easy.  

To Recap…
Herod wasn’t a King. 
Herod didn’t order babies killed.
Herod in real life was a buck-passer who was plagued by trying to be “Great” even though he didn’t have the tools or smarts to do so. 
Sex sells…and diverts attention away from bigger problems. Ask the Kardashians.

Let’s see where next week takes us.  Will it be an entirely new event, with a chance to forget Herod altogether? Let’s hope so. 

UPDATE ON HEROD——as with many of our worst leaders, it appears there is a lot of conflicting info on their dastardly deeds. As far as Herod goes…I concede that there are clearly too many of them…and they may or may not have committed infanticide.   

I add this article as further proof of the confusion…

https://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/christianity/history/herod.shtmlhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/christianity/history/herod.shtml

But in all fairness, actual historians were few and far between. Even the primary Gospels of the Bible were written 2nd and 3rd hand…and not actually “published” hundreds of years after the fact.  So…yeah…the Simpsons writers messing around with history again, isn’t surprising.

 

 

 

26 responses to “Friday Filler- I Loved This Event, Until…

  1. Hey I’ve got a couple of leftover jobs from the Christmas challenge and have come across something I’ve never seen before. First is there’s a job for Kwanzaa Dr. Hibbert …get him to teach about Kwanzaa. But when I click on “do it” there’s no highlighted job with such a name listed. Second one is for star snowsuit Maggie, telling me to make star snowsuit Maggie into a treetop star… again, no such highlighted job when I click on “do it”
    What am I to do from here? Anyone else out there get this problem?

  2. King Herod ordered all of the infant boys among the Jews to be killed, because it had been prophesied that a “king” had been born and he feared losing his power. That is why Joseph had to flee with Mary and Jesus to Egypt. The writers got it right.

  3. Land expansion
    A missed opportunity by that small dedicated EA Staff
    We could’ve had Moses leading His People
    We could’ve had Moses Step Brother (Ramesses the Great)
    We could’ve had a Mini Exodus
    (It was a fun Event – thanks to the Writing – but Tappers need more Land)
    I was hoping for Gilgamesh vs King Herod …. you can’t win ’em all …

  4. There should be a task with Herod and Maude, only a handful will get this.

  5. Is the ‘service’ mentioned at the first an off-limits topic? I think my comment was deleted. Just sending my well-wishes.

  6. Today must be a tough day, as you mentioned your Mother’s service. Wishing you and your family well.

  7. Off topic, but have anybody else’s 12 hr tasks disappeared for certain characters? And question no 2: is it normal for yahweh to only have 3x 4hr tasks?

  8. Maybe it’s thanks to nativity plays that Herod is thought of how he is.

    You do seem to be getting a bit worked up about it though. Not that any of it matters, all religions are made up and there is no God anyway. There may be an afterlife, but I doubt it has anything to do with a God.

    • Trust me…I’m not “worked up.” I am actually using Herod as a great example of how leaders can go astray…especially when they are trying to please a father who is long gone.

  9. The old testament was not a “good” God. First he places Adam and Eve in paradise then sets up an entrapment (don’t eat the fruit of this tree which I place near you so you can eat of it) and sends his agent/cop (Lucifer/his favorite angel) to temp them to eat it so he can throw Adam and Eve out of paradise. He destroys Sodom and Gomora and turns lot wife into a pillar of salt for looking back, harsh punishment. Third, he drowns the whole world in Noah, and then punishes the son of Noah for seeing his father drunk and naked. Fourth, he tells the Israelites to commit genocide on a town, killing on men, women, children and even the animals. Fifth he sends his son to be crucified.

    • Yes. That is an understatement. “Good God!!!” Is probably what the followers were saying after the plagues.

    • Sending his son to be crucified is New Testament God. In fact, the Jesus thing is the whole basis for the New Testament!

      • Yep. That “Jesus thing” is pretty much why most Christians remember Herod. As I said…he had the chance to spare him, and let Pilot and the throng choose Barabbas instead. Lame.

      • But the Church used the Old Testament to say Jesus was the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies, i.e. to give the stamp of approval of Jesus for the Hebrews. After his death, his disciples and Paul moved the Church / faith away from the Jews to the non-Jews. Sorta like how Muhamad said Jesus was a prophet of God, incorporating a “seal-of-approval” on his new religion.

  10. There are two Herod’s in the Bible. Herod the Great directed the wise men to baby Jesus in Bethlehem and then according the the Bible ordered that all baby boys 2 years old in and younger in Bethlehem be killed (Matthew 2). The other Herod (Antipas) was the one Jesus encountered before his crucifixion (Luke 23). Alice Cooper rocked Herod here: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=10156331011940746

  11. Different Bible story in a different testament. In the New Testament, the Bible says King Herod initiated a murder of all the infants in Bethlehem in an attempt to get rid of the baby Jesus.

    Also, fun fact… “Antipater” translates to “against father” in Latin. Not sure if that was intentional in terms of naming him, but there it is.

  12. Matthew 2:16 “ 16 Then Herod, seeing that he had been outwitted by the astrologers, flew into a great rage, and he sent out and had all the boys in Bethʹle·hem and in all its districts killed, from two years of age and under, according to the time that he had carefully ascertained from the astrologers.”

  13. Was it not Herod who ordered all young babies killed in the hopes of getting Jesus just after he was born? That’s why they fled into Egypt. I don’t remember if it was Herod, though.

Leave a Reply