| christmasHow St. Nick Became  Santa ClausBy        Craig von BuseckCBN.com Contributing Writer
 
 CBN.com - An ancient merchant had three lovely daughters. But due to a  tragic turn of events, he had lost all hope that his daughters would be able to  marry and live a happy life. It was the third century, and this businessman had  lost his fortune when pirates pillaged his ship. His beautiful daughters were of  marrying age, and without money he could give them no dowry.  In those days, young women without a dowry had few options  for survival. Many were forced into slavery or prostitution.  The father prayed around the clock that somehow God would  grant a miracle for his family. A young Christian bishop discovered the plight  of this man and his daughters. This bishop was a wealthy man, having received a  large inheritance at the death of his parents. One evening, in the middle of  the night, the bishop secretly slipped a sack of gold through a window into the  merchant's house. This timely gift saved the virtue of the man's oldest daughter.  Later, another sack saved the second daughter.  Anticipating a third gift of gold, the father determined to  discover who was helping his family. He stayed up all night and when the sack  was dropped through the window, the father ran down the road and apprehended  the mysterious benefactor. The merchant immediately recognized the young bishop  and tried to give thanks to him.  The humble minister deflected the praise. "No, all  thanks go to God, not to me." The father answered, "I need to let everybody know you  did this." The bishop responded, "No, you must promise me that not  until I'm dead will you let anyone know how you received the gold." This  compassionate bishop believed literally Christ’s injunction that when we give,  we should do so in secret, sacrificially in Christ’s name and not our own. The merchant promised that he would tell no one of the way  this minister helped save this family. And it wasn’t until after his death that  the world learned the numerous stories of the generosity of this bishop of the  early Church, Saint Nicholas.  Through his timely gifts, Saint Nicholas helped to restore  the hope of this family, and hundreds more in his community. But the ministry  of Bishop Nicholas extended beyond giving gifts. History tells us that he was  persecuted by the Roman authorities and imprisoned for his faith. Later, when  Emperor Constantine made Christianity the state religion, Nicholas boldly  defended the doctrine of the Trinity at the Council of Nicea.  Throughout his ministry, Bishop Nicholas selflessly poured  out his life and his fortune as he served the people in and around his home. The Giving Bishop  The story of our modern Santa Claus begins with this same  Nicholas, who was born during the third century in Patara, a village in what is  now Demre, Turkey. His wealthy parents raised  him as a Christian. But they died in an epidemic while Nicholas was still  young, and he was left with their fortune. Obeying Jesus' words to "sell  what you own and give the money to the poor," Nicholas used his inheritance  to assist the suffering, the sick, and the poor.  During the persecution of Christians by Roman Emperor  Diocletian, Bishop Nicholas was exiled and imprisoned along with thousands of  other Christians. Though he suffered for his faith in Jesus Christ, mercifully Nicholas   survived this persecution and was eventually released. After returning to his post as bishop, Nicholas was called  upon to defend Christianity against the heresy of Arianism. A contemporary of  Nicholas and an early church theologian, Arius taught that God the Father and  God the Son did not exist together eternally. Arius also taught that the  pre-incarnate Jesus was a divine being created by (and possibly inferior to)  the Father at some point, before which the Son did not exist.  Tradition tells us that Nicholas vigorously fought Arianism,  and was listed as a participant in the First Council of Nicaea. This important  gathering, held in Nicaea in Bithynia (present-day Iznik in Turkey), was  convened by the Roman Emperor Constantine I in 325 A.D. This was the first  ecumenical council of the early Christian Church, and it produced the first  uniform Christian doctrine -- the Nicene Creed. It is also believed that Nicholas participated in the  destruction of several pagan temples, among them the temple of Artemis.  Because the celebration of the goddess Diana's birth is on December 6th, some  have speculated that this date was deliberately chosen for Nicholas's feast day  to overshadow or replace the pagan celebrations. But December 6th is also  listed as the date of Nicholas's death, which is more likely the reason the  feast is celebrated on this day. St. Nicholas in Europe Through the centuries St. Nicholas has continued to be  venerated by Roman Catholics and Orthodox Christians -- and he is honored by  Protestant Christians. By his example of generosity to those in need, St.  Nicholas is a model of Christ's call to selfless giving. Widely celebrated in Europe,  St. Nicholas' feast day on December 6th kept alive the stories of his  generosity and kindness. In Germany  and Poland,  boys dressed as bishops begged alms for the poor.  In the Netherlands and Belgium, St. Nicholas arrived on a steamship  from Spain  to ride a white horse on his gift-giving rounds.  December 6th is still the main day for gift giving  in much of Europe. In  the Netherlands, candies are thrown in the door, along with chocolate initial letters, small gifts, and  riddles. Dutch children leave carrots and hay in their shoes for St. Nick's horse,  hoping it will be exchanged for gifts. Simple gift-giving on St. Nicholas Day helps to preserve a Christmas Day focus on the Christ Child.  The story of St. Nicholas was almost forgotten during the  16th century as Protestants downplayed the veneration of the saints. Both  reformers and counter-reformers tried to eliminate the customs of St. Nicholas' Day, but they had very little long-term success.   Because  the common people loved St. Nicholas, he survived on the European continent as  people continued to place nuts, apples, and sweets in shoes left beside beds,  on windowsills, or before the hearth. The first Europeans to arrive in the New   World brought the story of St. Nicholas with them. The Vikings  dedicated their cathedral to him in Greenland. On his first voyage, Columbus named a Haitian  port for St. Nicholas on December 6, 1492. In Florida,  Spaniards named an early settlement St. Nicholas Ferry, now known as Jacksonville.  St. Nicholas Becomes  Santa Claus According to the Saint Nicholas Center Web site, after the  American Revolution, New Yorkers were looking to break with British tradition, and they remembered with pride the colony's  nearly-forgotten Dutch roots. John Pintard, an influential patriot who founded  the New York Historical Society in 1804, promoted St. Nicholas as the patron  saint of both the society and the city. In January 1809, Washington Irving published the satirical  Knickerbocker's History of New York, which made numerous references to a jolly  St. Nicholas character. This was not a saintly European bishop, but rather a Dutch  burgher with a clay pipe. The jolly elf image received a big boost in 1823  from a poem destined to become immensely popular, "A Visit from St. Nicholas,"  -- now better known as "The Night Before Christmas."  Washington Irving's St. Nicholas strongly influenced the  poem's portrayal of a round, pipe-smoking, elf-like St. Nicholas. The poem  generally has been attributed to Clement Clark Moore, a professor of biblical  languages at New York's  Episcopal General Theological Seminary. In North America, the  popular name Santa Claus was taken from the Dutch Sinterklaas, which  originated with a contracted form of Sint Nicolaas (Saint Nicholas). The  "Mall Santa" that we are all familiar with -- sporting a red suit  with white cuffs and collar, and black leather belt, became the popular image  in the United States  in the late 19th century and early 20th century because of the "Merry Old  Santa Claus" images created by political cartoonist Thomas Nast. Beginning in 1863, Nast began a series of annual drawings in  Harper's Weekly that were inspired by the descriptions found in Washington  Irving's work. These drawings established a rotund Santa with flowing beard,  fur garments, and a clay pipe.  Nast drew his Santa until 1886,  and his work had a major influence in creating the modern American Santa Claus.  In the mid-20th Century a series of Coca-Cola advertisements  featuring a rotund and jovial Santa Claus was drawn by artist Haddon Sundblom and  further popularized Nast's depiction. There are, of course, controversial aspects of the American Santa  Claus fiction. Some Christians believe he takes the focus of Christmas away  from Jesus Christ, placing it on a fictional character with little redemptive  value. Others insist that it is unhealthy for parents to lie to their children  to enforce their belief in Santa Claus. And others say that Santa Claus is a  symbol of the commercialization and consumerism that has seized the Christmas  holiday in the West. Still for others, Santa Claus and the modern celebration  of Christmas is seen as an intrusion upon their own national traditions. But beneath all the symbolism and tradition that has been  attached to the modern American Santa Claus, he, like so many other  "Father Christmas" characters before him can hearken back to a simple  Christian bishop who loved God and loved people. Bishop Nicholas displayed his  love through the giving of gifts, just as our Heavenly Father gave the gift of  His Son to us that first Christmas morning 2000 years ago. In this season, we celebrate how God gave His Son, Jesus, to  bring hope to the world. May each of us prayerfully consider how we, like  Nicholas, can give of ourselves to help restore hope to those that God brings  into our lives.  
          There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for  one’s friends. (John 15:13, NLT) To learn more about the life of Saint Nicholas, I highly recommend that you read St.   Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas by Joe Wheeler and Jim Rosenthal.  CBN.com's Christmas Section  More from the Saint Nicholas Center  More Church 
		  History on Spiritual Life More Spiritual Life  More from Craig von Buseck on CBN.com  Craig's ChurchWatch   Blog Send your comments on this article 
  Craig von Buseck is Ministries Director for CBN.com. Read other articles and interviews by Craig on CBN.com.
 
 
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