St. Nicholas aka Santa Claus in the Year of Mercy
On December 6 we celebrate the feast of St. Nicholas, when I hold my
annual party for local convents in the tradition of my religious
community. We inherited this celebration from the Sisters in Holland who
helped form us German Sisters of Notre Dame. The feast entails
gingerbread bishops, apple tarts, oranges, popcorn balls, bags of
goodies, the singing of “St. Nicholas Day” and “Jolly Old St. Nicholas,”
and a prayer to St. Nick.
I was introduced to this feast my first year in the convent, when we usually had silent meals. Suddenly at supper, a figure with a miter and crosier appeared at the door and a creature clothed in black slithered around the floor, hitting our legs with branches. These were St. Nick, who rewarded the good, and Ruprecht, who punished those who did wrong. (Neither of these come to my party!) Through the centuries, St. Nick, a generous bishop, evolved into the gift-giver we know as Santa (Saint) Claus (short for Nicholas). St. Nicholas makes a perfect patron saint for this year of mercy that Pope Francis declared. Click to continue
I was introduced to this feast my first year in the convent, when we usually had silent meals. Suddenly at supper, a figure with a miter and crosier appeared at the door and a creature clothed in black slithered around the floor, hitting our legs with branches. These were St. Nick, who rewarded the good, and Ruprecht, who punished those who did wrong. (Neither of these come to my party!) Through the centuries, St. Nick, a generous bishop, evolved into the gift-giver we know as Santa (Saint) Claus (short for Nicholas). St. Nicholas makes a perfect patron saint for this year of mercy that Pope Francis declared. Click to continue
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