Posted on 12/06/2009 5:48:31 AM PST by NYer
.- Today, December 6, the faithful commemorate a Turkish bishop in the early church who was known for generosity and love of children. Born in Lycia in Asia Minor around the late third or fourth century, St. Nicholas of Myra is more than just the inspiration for the modern day Santa.
As a young man he is said to have made a pilgrimage to Palestine and Egypt in order to study in the school of the Desert Fathers. On returning some years later he was almost immediately ordained Bishop of Myra, which is now Demre, on the coast of modern day turkey.
The bishop was imprisoned during the Diocletian persecution and only released when Constantine the Great came to power and made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire.
One of the most famous stories of the generosity of St. Nicholas says that he threw bags of gold through an open window in the house of a poor man to serve as dowry for the mans daughters, who otherwise would have been sold into slavery.
The gold is said to have landed in the familys shoes, which were drying near the fire. This is why children leave their shoes out by the door, or hang their stockings by the fireplace in the hopes of receiving a gift on the eve of his feast.
St. Nicholas is associated with Christmas because of the tradition that he had the custom of giving secret gifts to children. It is also conjectured that the saint, who was known to wear red robes and have a long white beard, was culturally converted into the large man with a reindeer-drawn sled full of toys because in German, his name is San Nikolaus which almost sounds like Santa Claus.
In the East, he is known as St. Nicholas of Myra for the town in which he was bishop. But in the West he is called St. Nicholas of Bari because, during the Muslim conquest of Turkey in 1087, his relics were taken to Bari by the Italians.
St Nicholas is the patron of children and of sailors. His intercession is sought by the shipwrecked, by those in difficult economic circumstances, and for those affected by fires. He died on December 6, 346.
A lot of things were going on in the last 8-9 years of Paul VI pontificate that lends credence to a theory that FR does not allow on the site. I'll FReepmail you. Like I said, somebody may say it. That doesn't make it true.
ping
Desdemona, saints were not 'canonzied' in those days and are still not 'canonized' in the Eastern Church. Saints are saints if people spontaneously venerate them. The Eastern Church, as the early Church did, follows that practice. There is no formal 'beatification' based on innovations of the Latin side and unkown to the genuine Church.
This is why the Church cannot unite with papal primacy as it is understood in thre West. The Orthodox cannot allow some nut, sitting on the throne in the Vatican, not obligated to anyone, to make such decisions.
Stepinac?
As Kolo observed correctly, the problme is that +Nicholas is in question because some nut in the Vatican decides he is, but Stepinac is the kind of material the same nut finds acceptable.
Not to the Orthodox Catholic Church, he isn't.
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