By T. Brent Allen
For DHI Media
info@timesbulletin.com
The
Christmas holiday is nearing and all the decorations are being put out
for Saint Nick. Houses and malls alike are getting a covering of lights
with highlights of green and red. Children will soon look to the sky,
awaiting the jingling of bells and the sound of hooves on the rooftop.
But have you ever wondered who Saint Nicholas was and why we hang
stockings out at Christmas?
Saint Nicholas was actually a real
person. He was called Nikolaos, and he was the Greek Bishop of Myra in
present day Turkey. He lived in the late 3rd and early 4th centuries AD,
and he was the only son of wealthy but devout Christian parents, named
Epiphanius and Johanna. They died in a plague and he was raised by his
uncle, also called Nikolaos, who was bishop of Patara and brought him up
in Christian teachings.
Many older traditions, such as the
Catholic and Orthodox traditions, give his feast day as Dec. 6, the
recorded day of his death.
The Dutch call him “Sinterklaas”, wherefrom we get the modern day “Santa Claus”.
In
many European countries, this day is the traditional gift-giving day.
In Belgium and Germany, for example, children will put their boots out
by the chimney, with small donations to him or his horse. In return, if
they have been good, they will receive small gifts or sweets in their
shoes. If they have been naughty, they will get a tree branch (switch)
or lumps of coal. In countries as far away as Lebanon, this day is
observed as one of gift giving for children.
As the old poem from
Clement Clarke Moore (1822) goes, “The stockings were hung by the
chimney with care, in hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there.” But
where does the tradition of stocking-filling come from? Probably the
best explanation comes from a story of need. It says that young
Nikolaos, obeying his teachings to “sell what you have and give the
money to the poor”, used his whole inheritance to aid the suffering,
sick and poor.
One day, he heard of a local townsman or merchant
who had three young daughters. In those days, one married at about 14 or
15 years of age. Times were hard and the man had fallen on bad luck.
Back then, it was necessary for the father to give a dowry, or payment
in money or goods, to the prospective husband before marriage. The more
expensive the dowry, the better the chance one had of finding a good
husband for one’s daughters. However, in his poverty, the man had no
dowry to give, not for three young daughters. Hence, they were destined
to lives in slavery or prostitution, a very common practice at the time.
Of course, the father could not abide this, but it was his fate.
Young
Nicholas, hearing this bad news, was determined to help. Yet, he knew
the father was a prideful man and would take no payment nor aid of any
kind, instead resigning himself to his misery. He would have to lose his
daughters to the wickedness of the world.
The story goes that
after hand-washing their clothes, the girls had hung them out to dry. In
the dark of the night, Nicholas took handfuls of gold coins and put
them in each of their six stockings. On the morrow, the girls found the
gifts the stranger had left, were able to buy their way out of slavery
and find good husbands, and thus lived happily ever after.
For
this reason, Saint Nicholas of Myra, the real man behind our Santa
Claus, is regarded as the patron saint of children. We celebrate his
good deeds and love every December, as the wise men gave to the Christ
child.