The monologue of the Religious Right is over and a new conversation has begun! Join the God's Politics dialogue with Jim Wallis and friends Brian McLaren, Diana Butler Bass, Becky Garrison, Gareth Higgins, Shane Claiborne, Mary Nelson, Gabriel Salguero, Tony Campolo, and others.

Get e-mail updates



About Jim Wallis
Read His Bio
Events
Press Coverage
Multimedia
Books
Get Sojourners

May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006

Subscribe
RSS Feed
On Beliefnet
Blog Heaven
Quizzes
Prayer of the Day
Inspiration
Meditations
Prayer Circles
Memorials
News & Society
Home
Huffington Post
Crooks and Liars
TalkingPointsMemo
Street Prophets
Andrew Sullivan
Cross Left
Think Progress
Emergent Village
Bene Diction Blogs On
Chuck Currie
Commonweal
Connexions
The Parish
Faith and Policy
Faith in Public Life
Faithful Progressive
First Born Son
Gathering in the Light
I Am a Christian Too
Imitatio Christi
Jesus Politics
Latino Leadership Circ.
Perspectives
PhaithofStphransus
Philocrites
Pomomusings
Prodigal Sheep
ProgressiveChristianAl
Public Theologian
Talk To Action
The Corner
The Wittenburg Door
Theoblogical
Waving or Drowning
Willzhead
XpatriatedTexan
 
 
 

Happy St. Nicholas Day! (by Abayea Pelt)

As you all encounter pictures of "jolly, old St. Nick" this season, remember that St. Nicholas the Wonderworker was a real Christian hero. He spent his life working for freedom and justice for the poor and powerless. In particular, he is known for saving three women from being sold into prostitution and preventing the execution of three men who were wrongfully convicted.

From oca.org :

Saint Nicholas, the Wonderworker, Archbishop of Myra in Lycia, is famed as a great saint pleasing unto God. ... From his childhood, Nicholas thrived on the study of divine scripture; by day he would not leave church, and by night he prayed and read books, making himself a worthy dwelling place for the Holy Spirit.

There was a certain formerly rich inhabitant of Patara, whom St Nicholas saved from great sin. The man had three grown daughters, and in desperation he planned to sell their bodies so they would have money for food. The saint, learning of the man's poverty and of his wicked intention, secretly visited him one night and threw a sack of gold through the window. With the money the man arranged an honorable marriage for his daughter. St Nicholas also provided gold for the other daughters, thereby saving the family from falling into spiritual destruction. In bestowing charity, St Nicholas always strove to do this secretly and to conceal his good deeds.

During his life, the saint worked many miracles. One of the greatest was the deliverance from death of three men unjustly condemned by the governor, who had been bribed. The saint boldly went up to the executioner and took his sword, already suspended over the heads of the condemned. The governor, denounced by St Nicholas for his wrong doing, repented and begged for forgiveness.

Abayea Pelt is the office manager and receptionist for Sojourners, and an active member of St. Nicholas Orthodox Cathedral in Washington, D.C.

 

Comments

Thanks, Ms. Pelt. The picture of St. Nick you paint for us is much better than that of a guy who eats too much cake, flying through the sky behind self-propelled reindeer, and burying us in commercial products as we sleep.

It would be interesting to know why humanity finds the legendary St. Nick so much more attractive than the real one. Saint Nicholas (the real one)is clearly the winner, in my book.

Great post! Thank you.

One gets the feeling that St. Nicholas would not have objected to an execution of the modern-day Santa Claus. What a pathetic thing for parents to teach their children. It's a twisted mockery of both St. Nicholas and the birth of the Savior in His humble surroundings. If there's a Satan, I would imagine he/she/it thoroughly approves of our cultural perversion of this celebration.

Better yet, let's crucify Santa. He's gotten a free ride being able to replace Christ on Christmas but not Good Friday.

I hope that the authors of the previous comments stop to think of the positive connections between the Santa Claus myths and those that surround the possibly historical saint. Blame those who allow their obsession with expensive gift-giving to overshadow Saint Nicholas's legendary (and Christ-like) charity. If we all spent as much on the poor and suffering as we do on family, friends, and co-workers, we might just accomplish something Christian.

Post a Comment

Are you aware of our Rules of Conduct?







 

 
Recent Posts
The Lion of the Senate (by Jim Wallis)
Things Fall Apart: Prayer Requests for South Africa and Zimbabwe (by Nontando Hadebe)
Daily News Digest (by Duane Shank)
'New Year Baby' Documents Khmer Rouge Survivors (by Anna Almendrala)
Why We Can’t Wait & Why We Must: The Radical Timing of God’s Movement (by Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove)
Daily News Digest (by Duane Shank)
Senators Stall Bush's AIDS Relief (by Jim Wallis)
Video: Immigration Raids and Church Response (by Patty Kupfer)
Voice of the Day: Francis de Sales
Daily News Digest (by Duane Shank)
 
 
 

 
Explore Beliefnet
News & Society
Today's Headlines
Complete Politics Coverage

More Faith & Politics
Interview with Jim Wallis
Conservative Blogger Rod Dreher
Responding to a blog post? Read our Rules of Conduct first.