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as told
by Victor Hoagland, C.P.
Saint
Nicholas, the 4th century saint who inspired our modern figure of Santa
Claus, was born near Myra, a port on the Mediterranean Sea serving the
busy sea lanes that linked the seaports of Egypt, Greece, and Rome.
Ships sailing these waters, laden with grain and all kinds of goods,
found safety in the port from raging storms and menacing pirates.
Nicholas came
from one of the city's wealthy merchant families, but he was not spoiled
by his family's wealth. His mother and father taught him to be generous
to others, especially those in need. So Nicholas came to see that helping
others makes one richer in life than anything else.
One
day, by chance, Nicholas heard about a rich man in Myra who lost all
his money when his business failed. The man had three lovely daughters,
all wishing to get married, but he had no money for their marriage.
Besides, who would marry them, he thought, since their father is such
a failure? With nothing to eat, the man in desperation decided to sell
one of his daughters into slavery. At least then the rest of them might
survive.
That
night before the first daughter was to be sold, Nicholas, with a small
bag of gold in his hand, softly approached their house, and, tossing
the gold through an open window, quickly vanished into the darkness.
The
next morning, the father found a bag of gold lying on the floor next
to his bed. He had no idea where it came from. "Maybe it's counterfeit,"
he thought. But as he tested it, he knew it was real. He went over the
list of his friends and business associates. None of them could possibly
have given him this.
The
poor man fell to his knees and great tears came to his eyes. He thanked
God for this beautiful gift. His spirits rose higher than they had been
for a long time because someone had been so unexpectedly good to him.
He arranged for his first daughter's wedding and there was enough money
left for the rest of them to live for almost a year. Often he wondered:
who gave them the gold?
But
by the end of the year, the family again had nothing, and the father,
again desperate and seeing no other way open, decided his second daughter
must be sold. But Nicholas, hearing about it, came by night to their
window and tossed in another bag of gold as before. The next morning
the father rejoiced, and, thanking God, begged His pardon for losing
hope. Who, though, was the mysterious stranger giving them such a gift?
Each night
afterwards the father watched by the window. As the year passed their
money ran out. In the dead of one night he heard quiet steps approaching
his house and suddenly a bag of gold fell onto the floor. The father
quickly ran out to catch the one who threw it there. He caught up with
Nicholas some distance away and recognized him, for the young man came
from a well-known family in the city.
"Why
did you give us the gold?" the father asked.
"Because
you needed it," Nicholas answered. "But why didn't you let us know who
you were?" the man asked again. "Because it's good to give and have
only God know about it."
When
the bishop of Myra died, the priests and leading people of the city
along with the neighboring bishops came together in their cathedral
to select a new bishop. They prayed and asked God to point out who it
would be. In a dream, God said to one of them that they should all pray
together the next morning. Someone would come through the cathedral
door as they prayed. He should be their choice.
It
was Nicholas who entered the cathedral the next morning. Immediately,
the people of the city named him their bishop, for they knew that this
unassuming person, whose good deeds they had learned about, was meant
by God to lead them.
 As
bishop of Myra, Nicholas seemed more aware than ever of people's needs.
He would appear all over the city offering help to anyone in difficulty,
then quietly disappear without waiting for thanks. He shunned publicity.
Still, his reputation as a holy man grew and grew, even spreading to
distant cities that had never seen him.
He
was especially interested that families had enough to eat and a good
place to live, that children got ahead in life, and that old people
lived out their lives with dignity and respect. And he always loved
the sailors living so dangerously on the sea. Without their ships, people
everywhere would be without food and other goods they carried for trade.
Yet
it is as a lover of children that Nicholas is best remembered today.
While he lived, he gave the little ones he met small gifts-- some candy,
a toy. His kindness, which always managed to surprise them, touched
their hearts, and they learned from this holy man what a beautiful thing
giving is.
In
the figure of Santa Claus, whose name and activity Nicholas inspired,
we have this saint with us today.
The Story of St. Nicholas, for very young
children.
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