WHO IS
SANTA CLAUS?
[Nyerges
is an author / lecturer / educator who has written such books as “Extreme
Simplicity,” “How to Survive Anywhere,” “Guide to Wild Foods,” and other
books. Information about his books and
classes is available at www.SchoolofSelf-Reliance,
or Box 41834, Eagle Rock,CA 90041]
A few
years ago, I recall a Christian woman complaining that Santa Claus has gained a
more prominent role during the Christmas season than the Jesus child. She argued that this was a sign that “we”
have allowed secularism – and maybe even paganism – to creep into the Christmas
tradition. Really!?
So, who is
Santa Claus? Isn’t he just a fictitious
jolly man to make us feel happy during the dark of December? Not really.
There actually was an historical figure, upon which “Santa Claus” is
based.
Nikolas of
Myra was an historical 4th century Bishop in the Catholic church of
Asia Minor (modern-day Demre, Turkey).
He was born on March 15, 270, in Pataya, Lycia, in Asia Minor, what is
now modern Turkey. At that time, however, the area was culturally Greek, and
was politically a part of the Roman
diocese of Asia. He was the only
child of wealthy Greek parents, who both died in an epidemic when Nicholas was
young. Nicholas inherited much from his parents, and was then raised by his
uncle (also named Nicholas), who was a Bishop of Patara, and who trained young Nicholas into
priesthood.
Nicholas
was said to be religious from an early age, and he always fasted on Wednesdays
and Fridays. Because of his
outspoken beliefs, he was persecuted by the Romans and was imprisoned during the persecution of
Diocletian.
In case you never
heard of the “persecution of Diocletian” (I hadn’t), it was the most severe of the persecutions
against Christians, simply because they were Christians, in the Roman
Empire. It was also known as the “Great
Persecution.” In 303, four emperors
issued a series of dictatorial laws which essentially did away with any legal
rights of Christians. The edicts
demanded that the Christians comply with traditional Roman “religious”
practices, meaning, giving sacrifices to the various so-called Roman gods. This persecution was severe, and was weakest
in the British colonies where the Empire had the least sway. It was the most severe in the Eastern
provinces, where Nicholas lived.
Since Nicholas
refused to worship the Roman gods, he was imprisoned, and suffered hardship,
hunger, and cold for about 5 years. With the rise of Constantine, the
persecutions came to an end in 313.
With Constantine in power, Nicholas was released. Constantine is known
for “Christianizing” the Roman Empire, and re-naming all the Mythraic and
so-called “pagan” holidays so they could all now be regarded as Christian
holidays.
Shortly after his
return to his homeland in 317 A.D., Nicholas became the Bishop of Myra.
He was later
invited to attend the First Council of Nicaea in 325, the famous council where
much of the modern dogma of the Catholic church was determined. Nicholas of Myra was one of many bishops to
participate in the Council at Constantine’s request. He is listed as the 151st
attendee at the Council. There, Nicholas was a staunch anti-Arian. Arius, from Alexandria, held that the Son
of God did not always exist, but was
created by the Father. Nicholas
disagreed with Arius, and defended the developing orthodox Christian
viewpoint. According to stories told,
Nicholas got so angry at Arius that he punched him in the face! Really?
Proto-Santa Claus punches a fellow man of the cloth? Really?
Back in his homeland, Nicholas became known as a
very generous bishop. Remember, he
inherited wealth from his parents, and he would sometimes give gold and other
valuables to those that he heard was in need.
In one case, it is said that Nicholas tossed a bag of gold coins into a
needy family’s yard, anonymously. He
was apparently humble, and didn’t want to be seen giving money to people, so he
did it secretly. He was so famous for
wanting to give such gifts in private when he traveled the countryside, children were told to go to sleep quickly
or Nicholas would not come with
gifts. This, apparently, is the origin
of telling children to go to sleep or that Santa will not come.
In one story, he apparently snuck into the home of
a family where the three daughters of a poor man were about to get married. Nicholas put some gold into
the stockings which the girls left by the fire to dry. This, apparently, is the origin of hanging up
stockings on Christmas eve.
He was also well known for the gifts that he gave
to newly married couples during the already established Christmas season.
And so it
goes. Nicholas was a complex man, part
of the new Catholic tradition which celebrated the birth of Jesus on the
already-observed winter solstice. (Early Judeo-Christians did not celebrate the
birth of Jesus, a date that has been lost to history, but was definitely not
December 25).
He died on December 6, 343,which is to this day
known as “Saint Nicholas Day.” Upon his
death, he was buried in the cathedral of Myra.
He is revered as a saint in most versions of Christianity and is
especially honored in Eastern Orthodox Christianity.
By the year
450, churches in Greece and Asia Minor
were being named in honor of Nicholas.
He was officially honored as a
saint by the Eastern Catholic Church in 800.
December 6 began to be celebrated as Bishop Nicholas Day in France by the 1200s.
As time went on,
when ever someone received a mysterious gift, it would be attributed to Saint
Nicholas!
The Dutch called
Saint Nicholas “Sinterklass,” which is the most likely manner in which the name
Saint Nicholas gradually evolved into “Santa Claus.” Along the way, Saint Nicholas was given some
of the attributes of Odin, the Norse God, who could travel through the sky and
who had a secret home somewhere around the north pole. Come to think of it, even the Superman story
also borrowed from Odin. Remember how
Superman sometimes goes to a secret cavern in the Northern coldlands and
converses with his ancestors via ice crystals?
The image
continued to morph over the years, with the Coco Cola company giving the world
a somewhat sanitized and plumper Saint
Nicholas-Santa Claus with their early 20th century ads. There we
began to see the fatter bearded man in the red suit.
Today, the man you
see in the mall is the modern condensation of fact and myth, embodying the
generosity of one Catholic Bishop, the good will of all who gave gifts in his
stead, and bits of the mythology of Odin.
No comments:
Post a Comment