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St. Nicholas: Mirror of God's Love print version

by the Rev. Rachelle Birnbaum, adapted from a sermon preached on the Second Sunday of Advent, 1992, at Trinity Church, Boston


San Nicola preaching
La predicazione di San Nicola
"St. Nicholas preaching"
Beato Anglico, Bookmark, Italy
St Nicholas Center Collection
St. Nicholas is said to have quieted storms and tempests; he is the patron saint of sailors and seafarers.

Nearly four-hundred churches are dedicated to him in England.

Millions of Greeks and Russians venerate him as their national saint. In Holland on the eve of his feast day—December 6—children wait in glorious expectation for him to deliver their long-awaited surprise packages.

And yet very little is known about his life except that he suffered torture and imprisonment during the persecution under the Roman emperor Diocletian.

For one about whom so little is known, much has been expected. Indeed, Nicholas of Myra has become for us the most popular of saints. He is the only saint, as I discovered in my childhood, one need not be a Christian to venerate. He is, after all, Santa Claus.

To know so little about Nicholas and yet to hold him with such esteem in our hearts may sound like a sad case of wishful thinking at best, a delusional church at worst. It could be either of these if it were not for the fact that Bishop Nicholas of Myra was more thanthe legends which have grown up around him. For him to have become what he is for us today, Nicholas must have reflected something in his own person in his own lifetime.

It is possible, even probable, that Nicholas rode out storms and tempests, that he ministered to the poor and helpless, that he sat small children upon his knee and surprised them with holiday gifts. But precisely what he did may not be as important as the fact that, whatever he did, he did it in a way that clearly reflected his Lord to those around him. Whatever storms he quieted, he clearly reflected the Prince of Peace. Whatever gifts he gave, he clearly reflected the giver of all good gifts. Whatever status he accorded to children, he clearly reflected one who taught that children are our role models for the kingdom.

This ghostly figure, whose biography has never been written for lack of dependable information, is so popular not because of the legends that have grown through the years, but because in his own lifetime he was a faithful mirror of his Lord. In whatever he did Nicholas reflected most clearly the calling of all of us to be "other Christs" in our own time and place.

It is not the purpose of Advent to give us enough time to do our Christmas shopping, any more than it was St. Nicholas' purpose to become Santa Claus. It is, rather, to make us aware of our individual callings to become other Christs" in this time and place.

When John the Baptist implores his hearers to "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand," he asks us to hold up a mirror to ourselves, to take notice, to see whose reflection comes beaming back. If it is our own, filled with holiday distractions, constant crises, clawing ambitions, then there is no room at the inn of our lives for a child to be born. But John and Advent remind us that there is yet time to prepare the way, so that when this child is born he is not simply born long ago and far away; he is born into the very center of our lives.

John the Baptist doesn't ask us to say, "I'm sorry," but to dismantle our small and manageable worlds and prepare for a world much larger than anything we ourselves could possibly assemble, a world so radically different that it arrives by the birth of a child. Advent is a time for the upheaval and demolition of all the controllable in our lives, all those things that turn to dust and ashes when we try to control, all those things that prevent that which endures-a child born not only long ago and far away, but at the inn at the center of our lives.

When that child finally comes to birth we may find a Christmas gift as unexpected as anything that Father Christmas may drop from his sleigh, a gift maybe best described by a story: During World War II, when the great French Jewish humorist Tristan Bernard was arrested by the Germans after months in hiding, his fellow prisoners were surprised by his smiling face. "How can you smile?" they asked. "Until now I have lived in fear," he said. "From now on, I shall live in hope."

Advent is a time of repentance, a time to dismantle, to demolish, to prepare the way. It is a time when we are asked to hold a mirror up to ourselves and see if the reflection in it reveals who we are called to be. If we are unsure, let us take as our example good St. Nick. In whatever he did Nicholas reflected most clearly the calling of all of us to be "other Christs." And that possibility, as Nicholas himself has shown, is hidden in each of us like a Christmas surprise. It is there because God put it there. God is, after all, the giver of all good gifts, the one who can turn a baby into a savior, an obscure fourth century bishop into Santa Claus, and all of us into the saints of God.

Merciful God, who sent thy messengers the prophets to preach repentance and prepare the way for our salvation: Give us grace to heed their warnings and forsake our sins, that we may greet with joy the coming of Jesus Christ our Redeemer

The author formerly served on the staffs of the Church Divinity School of the Pacific and Trinity Church, Boston. Adapted from a sermon preached on the Second Sunday in Advent, 1992, at Trinity Church, Boston.

Copyright © 1994, Forward Movement Publications, 412 Sycamore Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 , #1248. Used by permission.

Purchase this leaflet from Forward Movement.

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Sermons

Sermon for the Feast of Saint Nicholas
by Saint Thomas Aquinas

Anglican/Episcopal

St. Nicholas: Mirror of God's Love
by Rachelle Birnbaum
Let Us Love One Another
by David Copley
St. Nicholas of Myra
by John Beddingfield
In Search of St. Nicholas
by Christopher Dalliston
Seeds of Eternity
by Jack Hardaway
Saint Nicholas the Gift GiverNEW
by Christopher McLaren
A Life of Witness
by Carol Pinkham Oak
Second Sunday in Advent, Year C
by J. Robert Thacker
Saint Nicholas Day
by Lord Carey of Clifton
Signs of HopeNEW
by Virginia Brown
Saint Nicholas Sermon for Boy Bishop
by Derek Earis
Gift Giving
by Paul Howden
Sermon for the Feast of St. Nicholas of Myra
by Robert MacSwain
A Sermon for St. Nicholas Day
by James M. Rosenthal

Lutheran

Abounding in Love
by Paul J. Nuechterlein
Luke's Original Christmas PageantNEW
by Edward F. Markquart
Christmas TsunamiNEW
adapted from a sermon by Nathan Nettleton by Edward F. Markquart

Methodist

Do We Know Who Jesus Is?
by Ginger Gaines-Cirelli
 Nicholas of Myra
by Mark S. Bollwinkel
 Let True and Selfless Giving Leave You BlessedNEW
by Wesley Taylor

Orthodox

 St. Nicholas the Wonder-Worker
by Nicholas V. Gamvas
The Virtues of St. NicholasNEW
by Luke A. Veronia
Saint Nicholas the MercifulNEW
by Metropolitan St. Philaret
Saint Nicholas, Who Pleased GodNEW
by Metropolitan St. Philaret
Saint Nicholas, Defender of FaithNEW
by Metropolitan St. Philaret
 The Feast of St Nicholas
by the Rev. Andrew Phillips

Presbyterian / Reformed

A Christmas Slap
by Dave Wilkinson
Lessons from St. Nicholas
by A. Allen Brindisi
St. Nicholas Nicked
by Henry Brinton
Santa Claus Saves Christmas
by Leonard J. Vander Zee
 The Can't of Cant, the Can of Candor
by Byron E. Shafer

Roman Catholic

Emmanuel: Worship & WitnessNEW
by Seán Patrick Cardinal O'Malley, O.F.M. Cap, Archbishop of Boston

Children's Sermons

Saint Nicholas ~ A Children's Sermon
by Mitchell Williams
 Thoughts for St. Nicholas Children's Sermons
by Thomas L. Weitzel
 How Did Santa Claus Begin? A Children's Sermon
adapted by George Philip Hoy



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