THE "REAL" SAINT NICK
(Conversations
with Jeffrey—The Series. By Leona Choy)
Blog Archives. Encored by request
“Jeffrey,
you believe in Saint Nick, right?”
“Come
on
Grandma,
you know I'm 13 now!”
“I
mean the real
one, the flesh and blood man whose Feast day is December 6 and
celebrated by Catholic Christians all over the world.”
“Don't
you mean December 25th
and
Santa Claus?”
“Nope.
At Christmas we celebrate the birthday of Jesus,
although we don't know the exact date or year of our Savior's birth.
I mean Saint
Nicholas,
a bishop of the Church, a real historical figure who lived at the
turn of the fourth century.”
“Where
did he live? I'm guessing it wasn't at the North Pole.”
“In
Asia Minor in what is now Turkey, but it was a Greek province at the
time. It isn't far from the Holy Land, Israel, just across the
Mediterranean sea.”
“So
there really was
a
Saint Nick?”
“Absolutely.
Saint Nicholas was a generous, model bishop who put Jesus Christ at
the center of his life, his ministry, and his entire life.”
“But
where does the name 'Santa Claus' come from?”
“'Santa'
means 'saint' and 'Claus' came from shortening the bishop's name
'Nicholas.' Some say that early Dutch settlers in New York brought
their tradition of 'Sinter Klass' to America and that started the
tradition here.”
“Tell
me again what a 'saint' is?”
“The
word 'saint' means 'holy.' In Latin it is 'sanctus.' Saints are just ordinary people who want
to live like Jesus taught us to live, but they are special because
they did a good job at it. The apostle Paul calls all Christians
'saints' in his writings. We should all want to be saints.”
“They're
sort of like Christian heroes, right? Role models?”
“That's
the idea. We consider them examples of how we too should live
pleasing to God. Because they are still alive in Heaven, no matter
how long ago they lived on earth, we can ask them to pray for us.”
“What
connection does this real Saint Nick have to the Santa Claus story
of today.”
“The
Santa Claus story sort of grew in people's imaginations through the
centuries. The real man named Nicholas was the Bishop of Myra, a
southern seaport in Turkey. Even the way the modern Santa Claus is
dressed reminds us of the real Saint Nicholas. Bishops of the Church
wear red and Nicholas was a bishop. Today's Santa and his 'helpers'
are always dressed in red. Starting in 1931 (when I was only six
years old!) the Coca-Cola company started using a caricature of the
real Saint Nick for their advertising.”
“What's
a 'caricature'?”
“It's
like a cartoon, an artist's way of exaggerating certain features of a
real person.”
“Do
we know anything about Nicholas as he was growing up?”
“Nick
was the only child of very rich parents who died from an illness when
he was a young boy. He grew up in a monastery and became a priest
when he was 17. He inherited his parents' wealth and used all of it
to help poor families, widows, and especially children and orphans.
He became famous for his generosity and kindness and for giving of
gifts.”
“How
long after Jesus' resurrection did Nicholas live?”
“About
280 years. The Christian Church was just getting started, but faith
in Jesus was spreading fast all over the known world of that day.
During Nicholas' life the leader of the country, Emperor Diocletian
tried to destroy the Church with his political power. One of his
advisers was the son of a witch and influenced the emperor to worship
pagan idols, burn writings about Jesus, and force priests to renounce
the Christian faith or face death. He forbade Christians to meet
together or hold any government office. As a bishop and their leader,
Nicholas was the main target for his persecution.”
“Did
this stop Bishop Saint Nick and all those new Christians?”
“The
emperor arrested him and had him tortured for disobeying the
emperor's new laws. Actually, the real Saint Nick must have been very
skinny, not like today's fat Santa. He spent more than a decade in
prison being starved and he also fasted often when he was free.
Emperor Diocletian was eventually defeated and his kingdom collapsed.
Constantine, who became the next emperor, was favorable to the
Christians, so Saint Nick finally got out of jail.”
“Was
everything
cool for the Christians then?”
“Trouble
continued. Some who called themselves Christians but didn't believe
correctly what Jesus and His apostles taught caused confusion.
Nicholas was known for his courage to stand firm for the true
Christian faith. He lived it and taught his people well. He was
against the heresies of those times.”
“What's
a heresy?”
“It's
a teaching that is contrary to what Jesus and his followers clearly
taught. The main heresy in Nicholas' day was led by a man named Arius
from Egypt. He tried to convince people that Jesus was not really the
Son of God, maybe just a prophet or only a top angel—'sort of a
lord' but not equal to God.”
“How
did that all get settled?”
“In
those early centuries after Jesus' resurrection when all the new
Christians were forming their common beliefs, they settled important
matters of the Christian Church by calling a Council of all the
bishops. The first one ever held was called by Emperor Constantine
during the time of Bishop Nicholas. It was held in Nicea in 325. More
than 300 bishops from all over the Christian world attended,
including Nicholas. Their conclusions are what we declare in the
Nicene
Creed
that we say every Sunday at Mass.”
“Did
our Saint Nick stand up against this Arius guy?”
“Bishop
Nick got so angry with Arius at the Council for saying such false
things about Jesus, that he belted him—he hit him with his fist and
knocked him down!”
“Wow!
What happened to Saint Nick?”
“For
doing that, the Emperor took away his vestments, his special bishop's
clothes, and his bishop's credentials and threw him in prison. The
story goes that Jesus and his Mother appeared to him in a vision in
prison and reinstated him as the bishop.”
“What
kind of gifts did our Saint Nick give to people?”
“Legends
say that Saint Nick always wanted to help people anonymously. He
didn't want anyone to know so it wouldn't draw attention to himself.
On one occasion he heard that a certain poor man had three daughters
who wanted to be married. Their father didn't have money for a dowry
so Bishop Nick secretly helped him out.”
“What's
a dowry?”
“In
those early centuries, a young woman's father had to offer a
prospective husband something of value. That was called a dowry.
Without a dowry, she was not likely to marry and might have to be
sold into slavery. On three different occasions, so the story goes,
Saint Nick threw gold coins through their windows where they landed
in stockings they hung by the fireplace to dry.”
“Could
that be where we got the custom of filling stockings at Christmas?”
“Probably.
He is also known for saving three innocent condemned prisoners who
were blindfolded and ready for the executioner's sword. Nicholas
fearlessly grabbed the sword, cleared them of the unjust charges, and
let the men go free. Saint Nick is widely known as the patron saint
of children. There are other stories of him rescuing children from
danger after they were kidnapped or missing. There is a scary one
about three little children lured into the clutches of an evil
butcher. At another time three theological students were murdered by
an innkeeper and their bodies chopped up and hidden in a pickling
tub.”
“That's
gross, Grandma. Is it true?”
“Who
knows? Stories grow bigger with the retelling. Saint Nick was said to
have restored the dead students to life. He had a strong concern for
justice, especially for innocent people held in prison. Also for
intervening in favor of people unjustly jailed, which was common in
those days.”
“He
must have been quite an aggressive guy.”
“You
could say that, but it was always to defend the true faith of Jesus.
The real Saint Nick also destroyed many shrines to pagan idols, drove
the demons away, and built churches in their place. He totally
destroyed the most beautiful and famous pagan temple dedicated to the
goddess Artemis, who was the Roman equivalent of the Greek goddess
Diana. Not one stone was left in place. Thousands of churches all
over the world are named in honor of Saint Nicholas.”
“Did
Saint Nick ever get to the Holy Land?”
“He
went there on a pilgrimage. On his way back, the story goes that the
ship he was on and the sailors were protected when he prayed, like
Jesus did, for God to calm the storm. Many seaports especially in
Greece, since Nicholas was Greek by birth, erected statues of him
surrounded by small ships made of silver or carved from wood. Sailors
even now ask him to pray for their protection. Instead of wishing one
another good luck, they say, 'May Saint Nicholas hold the tiller.'”
“Is
Dec. 6th
Saint
Nick's birthday? How did the custom of giving gifts get shifted to
December 25th
?”
“Dec.
6 is the day he died. Saints' days are always commemorated on the day
of death, the happy day of their entrance into eternal life. In early
days in Europe gifts were given on Saint Nicholas' day. At that time
gifts were mainly nuts, apples, and sweets put into shoes which were
left beside beds, on windowsills, or before the hearth.”
“Where
did the idea come from that Santa comes down the chimney?”
“Well,
that certainly didn't come from the days of the real Saint Nick. Did
you know that chimneys weren't even built on houses in those days?
Chimneys didn't come into use until the 13th
century and they were first constructed in northern Europe.”
“A
lot of the early Santa pictures you showed me have a hooked staff
behind Santa in the sleigh. What's that all about?”
“That
custom did come from our real Saint Nick. It is called a 'crozier'
and is always carried by a bishop even now in our Churches. It
represents a shepherd's staff since a bishop is considered the
shepherd of his people, just as Jesus is the Good Shepherd.”
“Bishop
Loverde carried a crozier like that when he conducted our
Confirmation Mass.”
“He
did. And did
you notice that in some pictures of Santa today he is carrying a big
book? In some European gift-giving traditions the large book
represents the record of children's behavior—Santa is checking if
they were 'naughty or nice.' But of course the big book we see at
Mass from which the priest or the lector reads is the Book of the
Gospels or the Holy Scriptures.”
“Where
did the idea of the sleigh and reindeer come from?”
“It
took generations before the tradition settled on Santa coming on
Christmas to bring gifts. In 1821 the first, small, lithographed book
was published in America titled The
Children's Friend.
A 'Sancte Claus' (in German, 'Sankt Nicklaus') was pictured with a
red beard arriving from the North in a sleigh pulled by one sort of
tired-looking flying reindeer. They were shown landing on a roof by a
chimney. Santa began to be thought of as rewarding good behavior and
punishing bad. Gifts were mostly safe toys, dolls, and books. In that
early picture the sleigh even had a bookshelf! From then on the
tradition shifted away from the real
Saint Nicholas celebration to the pretend Santa coming on Christmas
eve.”
“Grandma,
that long-ago picture shows Santa as a tiny man not the big guy in
pictures we see now.”
“That
was still the idea two years later when Clement Clark Moore wrote the
poem 'The
Night Before Christmas'
for his own six kids. The way the author imagined Santa was 'chubby
and plump, a right jolly old elf' and his sleigh was miniature. The
description stuck and the poem became famous.”
“Where
did that long clay pipe and all the smoke Santa blew from it
originate?”
“The
traditional pipe was from the Dutch, who were known to be heavy
smokers. It wasn't until the end of the 1920s (when Grandma was in
kindergarten!) that the American Santa began to be pictured as a
normal-sized old man with a hugely fat belly.”
“And
his original red beard has became all white and long to match the fur
trim on his suit. He has a fat, white mustache, rosy cheeks and
twinkling eyes.”
“That's
the way the story goes. And he wears snow boots, a wide black belt,
and a long-tailed ski cap. But Bishop
Saint Nick's hat was called a 'miter,' the special tall, pointed hat
of his appointed office.”
“And
I guess he likes Coca-Cola, or hot chocolate, and cookies that people
leave by the fireplace for him!”
“Now
he owns eight reindeer (nine, if you count the new Rudolf with the
red nose!) and a bunch of elf assistants who are busy making toys all
year. And the toys are really high-tech now!”
“That
doesn't sound much like our original, real Saint Nick.”
“For
some people Santa Claus replaces the Babe of Bethlehem; --the
real
Saint Nick points us to the real
Babe of Bethlehem, Jesus.
Today's Santa is pictured as flying through the air from the North Pole; --the real Saint Nick walked this earth helping and caring for people in need.
The children's Santa was brought on the scene to boost commercial Christmas sales; --the real Saint Nick brought the message of Christ and peace, goodwill toward all.
Today's Santa is pictured as flying through the air from the North Pole; --the real Saint Nick walked this earth helping and caring for people in need.
The children's Santa was brought on the scene to boost commercial Christmas sales; --the real Saint Nick brought the message of Christ and peace, goodwill toward all.
Santa
Claus belongs to childhood fantasy; --the real
Saint Nicholas is still a Christian model for all of us.”
By Leona Choy
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