Resource > Expositions Of Holy Scripture (Maclaren) >  St. Matthew 9-28 >  The Martyrdom Of John  > 
III. There Is Something Dramatically Appropriate In The Silent Death In The Dungeon Of The Lonely Forerunner. 
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The faint noise of revelry may have reached his ears, as he brooded there, and wondered if the coming King would never come for his enlargement. Suddenly a gleam of light from the opened door enters his cell, and fails on the blade of the headsman's sword. Little time can be wasted, for Herodias waits. With short preface the blow fails: The King has come, and set His forerunner free, sending him to prepare His way before Him in the dim regions beyond. A world where Herod sits in the festal chamber, and John lies headless in the dungeon, needs some one to set it right. When the need is sorest, the help is nearest. Truth succeeds by the apparent failure of its apostle. Herodias may stab the dead tongue, as the legend tells that she did, but it speaks louder after death than ever. Herod kept his birthday with drunken and bloody mirth; but it was a better birthday for his victim.



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