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St. Nicholas and the Gift Giving Season

Kathy Boh on 4th Dec 2014

GIFT-GIVING AT CHRISTMAS TIME

FEATURING

ST. NICHOLAS

In this Christmas season of parties and get-togethers and gathering presents, many of us are giving our “Christmas lists” greater scrutiny than ever before. Let’s explore the seasonal feasts and see how they may shed light on our “to do” lists, our celebrations, and our gift-giving review. We are going to look at three feast days and how they relate to the gift-giving theme of this holiday time. We begin with St. Nicholas Day, celebrated this week. Later, we will take another look at Christmas, and the Paragon of gifts that has been given. Lastly, the Three Wise Men bearing their gifts will merit our attention in January, as the season draws to a close.

ST. NICHOLAS

           

t. Nicholas was born in the coastal village of Patara, on the Mediterranean Sea, in southern Turkey. (It was considered part of Greek culture at the time). He was raised by very wealthy and devout Christian parents, and inherited a fortune in his youth when they died. As a boy, he dedicated his life to the Lord and his service, so that he was determined to use his inheritance to help those in need—the sick, the poor, and those who were suffering.

The life of St. Nicholas revealed the immense virtue of this man toward so many people over his lifetime. The stories are many. With notable integrity, he was unafraid to deal with temporal matters of injustice, and was ever willing to help the needy. Nicholas was known—more than once— to have intervened for those unjustly imprisoned and condemned to die. This saint was often invoked by sailors for protection at sea due to his prayer ending a storm at sea when he, himself, was travelling. Many knew him as a protector of children.

  • St. Nicholas was an outstanding and outspoken church leader. Persecutions had begun violently under the Emperor Diocletian, and Nicholas—as bishop of Myra—was arrested and tortured, then imprisoned and exiled. He was freed when the Emperor Constantine put an end to the persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire, and changed the law to allow Christian worship through the Edict of Milan in 313.

Nicholas wasknown throughout his life for his great generosity—done humbly and anonymously. The story of his assisting three poor, marriageable sisters (who were going to be sold into slavery or prostitution) is widely known, and is the most noteworthy chronicle that led to his being celebrated for gift-giving. (At the appropriate time for each of the girls, he anonymously threw a bag of coins into an open window to provide a dowry to equip her for a suitable marriage.) His renown for such generous and secret giving led to popular traditions that grew up in Europe emphasizing gift-giving on his feast day in early December. The day of his death in 343 A.D. in Myra became commemorated as his feast day—December 6th.

His fame and devotion spread over many parts of the world, including Europe, Russia, Eastern cultures—and specifically—Italy, Germany, the Netherlands, America and England. St. Nicholas Day occurs during the season of Advent, the time of preparation for (and leading up to) Christmas. Over time, the gift-giving became connected to the Christmas season. (His Dutch name—“Sinterklaas” —became the origin of the name “Santa Claus”.) Many—even in America—have kept the custom of stockings being filled on St. Nicholas Day, with small presents given. Some favored this day for gifts so as to leave Christmas Day as the time to glorify and focus on the birth of the Savior, Himself.

St. Nicholas Day is a good occasion to remember the everyday people in our lives who might appreciate something small that blesses them, and also calls attention to the meaningful things in life.

Saint Nicholas Prayer Card Set