12-20-05
First, we have never presented Santa to our kids as the one who brings their
presents on Christmas. In other words, we didn't and don't present him as a
real person who lives in the North Pole, has reindeer, etc.
On the other hand, we always allowed the myth of Santa or Santa as a fairy
tale or story for fun. The kids understood that Santa was a make believe,
mythological character. That way we kept the FUN without messing with their
FAITH.
We also told them that St. Nicholas was a REAL person and have told them
about him. Here is a VERY good article on St. Nicholas that I
have found very helpful and have used
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The Real Story of St. Nicholas
St. Nicholas should be an inspiration to us all. He was a
godly man whose reputation for giving to people caused him to be a revered
example of what compassion and giving are all about. He was not a jolly fat man
who climbed down chimneys, and he didn't have flying reindeer.
Stories of his life-a life full of Christian beliefs and values-are the real
background for today's mythical Santa Claus. So much of what Nicholas was-and
what Santa Claus has become-has been distorted by Satan. What has been done to
weaken and contort the testimony of this godly man is really pathetic.
The real story of Christmas is the story of Jesus-God's precious gift to us.
Our Heavenly Father is the real Gift-Giver. Nicholas grew up knowing the real
Gift-Giver.
Nicholas and his parents lived in Turkey in the third century and were
Christians. Nicholas' parents had prayed and asked God for a child, much as
Abraham and Sarah had done. From the time Nicholas was born in about A.D. 280,
they considered him a gift from God. Diligently, they taught their young son
devotion to God and to be very generous to the poor. Although they both died
when Nicholas was in his teens, their heritage of living for God and giving
followed Nicholas.
Ordained as a young teenager, Nicholas entered the priesthood at age 19. His
uncle, the bishop who ordained him, prophesied that Nicholas would offer
guidance and consolation to many people, that he would eventually become a
bishop, and that he would live a life of enlightenment. Eventually he did
become the bishop of a small, coastal village, and his influence spread into
many nations.
Many accounts have been written about the life of Nicholas. It was said that he
would spend all night studying God's Word to bring it to the people. He was
known for helping the poor, for praying, fasting and standing steadfast in
faith and goodness. Many miracles were brought about through his prayers.
Included among the accounts of his ministry is the report of twin brothers who
were raised from the dead. It was written that one could hardly keep count of
the virtue and goodness he spread around him.
One particular story of Nicholas' goodness is the reason many pictures show him
with three golden spheres. These represent three bags of gold that he gave to a
poor man so his three daughters could be married. The man was so poor his
daughters had no dowries, and he was so desperate he was planning to sell them
into what we would call white slavery.
To keep that from happening, Nicholas threw a bag of gold pieces through the
man's window in the night so no one would know who had done it. He wanted God
to get the credit for it. Because of this, the eldest daughter had a dowry. She
was no longer an outcast and could be married.
Not long after that, Nicholas did the same thing for the second daughter,
saving her from a similar fate. When he did it for the third daughter, the
father caught him. Nicholas made the father swear on an oath that he would
never reveal who was responsible for those gifts as long as Nicholas was alive.
When Nicholas died on December 6, A.D. 343, he is said to have quoted Psalm 11
with his last breath: "In the Lord I put my trust."
In the Greek language, the name Nicholas means "victorious" or
"hero of the people," and he did indeed become a very popular figure
in the centuries that followed his death. Stories of Nicholas spread throughout
Greece and into Russia. He became the popular patron saint of Russians, who
called him "Nikolai, the wonderworker."
In 1087, the remains of St. Nicholas' grave were transported from Turkey to
Bari, Italy, where a basilica was built in his honor. Soon after, his
popularity spread throughout Italy and across western Europe. December 6, the
day of his death, became St. Nicholas Day on the Roman Catholic calendar, and
the custom of gift-giving on December 6 began in France and spread across all
of Europe.
You can see similarities between the better characteristics of the Santa Claus
character, who gives gifts at night-not to be seen by anyone, and St. Nicholas'
gold-piece throwing. But how did the story of such a man of God get turned into
a story of an elf workshop at the North Pole?
With the Protestant Reformation of the 1500s, the worshipping of the saints was
denounced, and St. Nicholas Day was no longer observed in England.
In Holland and Belgium, the traditional day of December 6 was still celebrated.
There, Sinter Klaas rode through the streets on a white horse, rewarding good
children with treats and toys and giving rods or switches to bad children. In
Germany, the saint was referred to as "Nicholas dressed in fur" and
also left sweets for good children and rods for the bad ones.
Christopher Columbus brought the first celebration of St. Nicholas Day to the
New World when he landed in the West Indies on December 6, 1492, and named the
harbor Port of St. Nicholas, in honor of the patron saint of sailors.
All of these traditions blended with immigration to the New World. As the
English and Dutch came and intermarried, Father Christmas and Sinter Klaas
blended into one figure. Dutch Americans eventually adopted December 25 as
their day of celebration, and by the end of the Civil War, St. Nicholas the
bishop was generally known in the United States as Santa Claus.
The poem " 'Twas the Night Before Christmas" further shaped the
American Santa. Another popular poem, originally titled "A Visit from St.
Nicholas," was penned by New York professor Clement Moore in the 1800s and
created a word picture portraying a round-bellied Santa with a huge pack on his
back. Picking up on this image, cartoonist Thomas Nast added a North Pole toy
workshop in his cartoons for Harper's Weekly magazine. In 1925, a large
corporation ran an advertising campaign of Santa Claus further defining him as
a large man with a red and white fur suit, black boots and a long, flowing
beard-the closest depiction of our present-day Santa.
The American Santa Claus, like America itself, came from a melting pot of Old
World cultures and characters. He is the Dutch Sinter Klaas and the Lutheran
Kris Kringle who bring gifts to children. His red garment is lined with fur
like the German version of Nicholas, and he spreads merriment and cheer like
Father Christmas. And a team of reindeer, borrowed from a Russian legend,
accompanies Santa Claus on his journey through the night.
The tragic part in all this is how the devil has contorted the man and the
ministry of St. Nicholas-the man who had such fullness of God that even the
dead were raised! He was popular because of his reputation of honor, his godly
ways and his giving nature. But it's just like the devil to twist the ministry
of such a powerful man until it is hidden in the tales of a little fat-bellied,
pipe-smoking pie eater.
The story of the true St. Nicholas is a beautiful picture of the giving that
Christmas is really about-instead of the fretting and getting that the American
Santa now represents. St. Nicholas represents the giving heart of our Heavenly
Father, Who doesn't give switches and rods but Who always gives only good
gifts.
The greatest gift of all is the gift of Jesus Christ to us from God the Father.
Jesus is our hope, redemption and victory. He is our advocate with the Father,
our blood-covenant Friend Who will never leave nor forsake us. In Him, we have
the joy of living a heavenly life on earth.
He is the meaning of Christmas. "Christ mass" means "anointing
celebration." It's the celebration of "How God anointed Jesus of
Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power..." It's the celebration of
how the anointed Jesus "...went about doing good, and healing all that
were oppressed of the devil..." (Acts 10:38). It's the story of our
triumphant Savior-Jesus, the Christ-the King of kings and Lord of lords!
Now, that's a Merry Christmas!