American Minute with Bill Federer
Saint Nicholas
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St. Nicholas
was the most popular
Greek Orthodox Saint,
equivalent to St. Patrick in Irish history, or St. Peter in Roman Catholic tradition,
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Greek Orthodox tradition
tells of
Saint Nicholas
being born around AD 280, the only child of a wealthy, elderly couple who lived in Patara, Asia Minor (present-day Turkey).
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When his parents died in a plague,
Nicholas
inherited their wealth.
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Nicholas
generously
gave to the poor,
but he did so
anonymously,
as he wanted the glory to go to God.
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This was at a time when a
pietist-monastic movement
spread through Christianity, where Christians would
give away all their money and possessions
to live in a cave or
join a monastery.
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One notable incident that occurred during this time in
Nicholas'
life was when
a merchant
in his town had gone bankrupt.
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The creditors threatened to take not only his house and property, but also
his children.
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The
merchant
had
three daughters.
He knew if they were taken it would probably mean a life of sex-trafficking, prostitution or forced marriages.
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The
merchant
had the idea of quickly marrying his daughters off so the creditors could not take them.
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Unfortunately, he did not have
money for a dowry,
which was needed in that area of the world for
a legally recognized wedding.
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Nicholas
heard of the merchant's dilemma and, late one night,
threw a bag of money in the window
for the
oldest daughter's dowry.
Supposedly the bag of money landed in
a shoe or a stocking that was drying by the fireplace.
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It was the talk of the town when the first daughter got married.
Nicholas
then threw a bag of money in the window for the
second daughter
and she was able to get married.
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Expecting money for his
third daughter,
the merchant waited up.
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When
Nicholas
threw the money in, the father ran outside and caught him.
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Nicholas
made him promise not to tell where the money came from,
as he wanted the credit to go to God alone.
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This was the origin of
secret, midnight gift-giving
and
hanging stockings by the fireplace
on the anniversary of
Saint Nicholas' death,
which was
DECEMBER 6, 343 AD.
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The three bags of money
which
Nicholas
threw into the house are remembered by
the three gold balls
hung outside of
pawnbroker shops
-- as they present themselves as
rescuing families in their time of financial need.
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As a result,
Nicholas
became considered the
"patron saint" of pawnbrokers.
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After giving away all his money,
Nicholas
went on
a pilgrimage to the Holy Land
where he intended to join the
secluded
Monastery of Sion.
Before he made his final commitment to join, somehow the Lord impressed upon him
"not to hide his light under a bushel."
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He decided to
go back to Asia Minor,
but not before first
visiting the birthplace of Jesus.
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Mark Twain
wrote in
Innocents Abroad,
1869, of visiting
the Church of the Nativity:
"This spot where
the very first 'Merry Christmas!'
was uttered in all the world, and from whence
the friend of my childhood, Santa Claus, departed on his first journey,
to gladden and continue to gladden roaring firesides on wintry mornings in many a distant land forever and forever."
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Nicholas
returned to the southern coast of Asia Minor, to the
busy Mediterranean port city of Myra.
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Unbeknownst to him, the
bishop had just died
and the church leaders could not decide who was to be their next bishop.
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One of the church leaders had a dream that the first person to church the next day would be named
"Nicholas"
and
that he was to be their next bishop.
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As his habit was,
Nicholas
fasted all night and was the
first person to church the next day.
The church leaders told him of the dream and that he was to be their next bishop.
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Nicholas
was hesitant to accept, as the Roman Emperor was
arresting bishops and killing them.
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He finally relented and became the
Bishop of Myra.
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Soon after,
Nicholas
was arrested and imprisoned during
Emperor Diocletian's brutal persecution of Christians.
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There were
ten major persecutions
of Christians in the first three centuries, and
Diocletian's was the worst.
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Suddenly,
Diocletian
was struck with an intestinal disease so painful that
he abdicated the throne on May 1, 305 AD.
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The next emperor,
Galerius,
continued the persecution, but he was struck with an intestinal disease and died in 311 AD.
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With no emperor, the
Roman Empire was thrown into confusion.
The four major generals decided to fight it out as to who would be the next emperor.
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General Constantine
was in
York, Britain,
when he received the news.
His men surrounded him and shouted "Hail Caesar!"
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Constantine
marched toward
Rome
to fight
General Maxentius.
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The day before
the Battle of the Milvian Bridge,
October 28, 312 AD,
Constantine
reportedly saw
the sign of Christ in the sky.
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The sign of Christ was the first two letters of the Greek name "Christ."
The first letter, "X," is called "Chi" and the second letter, "P," is called "Rho."
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Constantine put the "XP," the "Chi-Rho,"
on all his military banners and after his victory, he ended the persecution of Christians with the
Edict of Milan in 313 AD
--
the first time in history that Christians were not persecuted by the government.
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Over the centuries,
the sign of Christ
was shortened to just the
"Chi"
or
"X."
It was called the
"Christ's Cross"
or "
Criss-Cross."
This is the origin of
"X-mas."
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During the reign of Emperor Constantine,
Nicholas was let out of prison.
Now that it was legal to be a Christian,
he preached publicly against pagan sexual immorality.
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He condemned
the worship of
the fertility goddess Artemis
or
Diana,
whose temple was nearby, just as the
Apostle Paul
did as recorded in the
Book of Acts, chapter 19.
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The
Temple to Diana at Ephesus
was one of the
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World,
twice as big as the Parthenon in Athens, having 127 huge pillars --
and temple prostitutes.
It was the Las Vegas of the Mediterranean world.
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Nicholas'
fire and brimstone preaching led the people of Myra to
tear down
their
local temple to Diana,
and shortly thereafter, through the preaching of
St. John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople
(AD 397-403), the people tore down
the enormous temple to Diana
at
Ephesus.
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During this time, the
Greek Olympics were ended,
which were considered pagan, as they competed naked.
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Nicholas
preached against divination, human sacrifice, and
exposure of unwanted infants,
which was the Roman equivalent of abortion.
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Then
the first major heresy
in church history began.
A church leader named
Arius
began the
Arian Heresy,
saying Jesus was a created being and less than God. The heresy not only
split the church, but the Roman Empire.
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To settle it,
Constantine
ordered all the bishops to come to
Nicea.
It was the
first time that all the bishops throughout the known world met together.
There they ended the heresy by writing the
Nicene Creed.
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The tradition is that
St. Nicholas
attended the Council of Nicea
and was so upset at
Arius
for starting this heresy
that he slapped him across the face.
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Evidently, Jolly Old St. Nick had a little temper!
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Not only did
Nicholas
confront heretics, but also
corrupt government politicians.
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One story was of
a Roman governor, in order to cover up his immoral acts,
had falsely accused some
innocent soldiers
and was about to
have them executed.
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When
Nicholas
heard of it, he rushed down and broke through the crowd.
He grabbed the executioner's sword and threw it down, and then publicly revealed, by the power of the Holy Spirit, what evil the governor had done.
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The
Governor,
realizing that
Nicholas
had no way of knowing the details
except by divine insight from God,
fell on his knees and
begged Nicholas to pray for him.
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Greek Orthodox tradition
attributes many miraculous answers to
St. Nicholas' prayers.
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Once
a storm
was so bad that fishermen and sailors were unable to get back to shore, so the people begged
Nicholas
to help.
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He went down to the docks and
prayed, and the sea became calm
so the fishermen and sailors could return safely to port, similar to the way Jesus calmed the sea as recorded in chapter 8 of the Gospel of Matthew.
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This led to
Nicholas
later being considered the
"patron saint" of sailors.
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When a famine spread across the land,
Nicholas
asked
merchant ships
carrying grain from North Africa to Rome,
to unload some grain for his people,
promising that God would bless them.
On their return trip, they reported that
the grain that was left in their ship had multiplied,
like the little widow's meal barrel as promised by Elijah in the First Book of Kings 17:16.
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St. Nicholas
died DECEMBER 6, 343 AD.
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In the 5th century a church was built in
Myra
in his honor.
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When it was damaged in an earthquake in 529 AD,
Emperor Justinian
rebuilt it.
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In 988 AD,
Vladimir the Great of Russia
converted to
Eastern Orthodox Christianity
and adopted
Nicholas
as the
"patron saint" of Russia.
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In the 11th century, Muslim jihad terrorists, the
Seljuks Turks,
invaded
Asia Minor,
killing Christians and destroying churches. They also demolished and desecrated
the graves of Christian saints.
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Islamic Hadith Sahih Muslim
(Book 4, No. 2115) states: "Do not leave an image without obliterating it,
or a high grave without leveling it."
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In a panic, Christians shipped the remains of
St. Nicholas
to the
town of Bari
on the southern coast of Italy
in the year 1087.
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Pope Urban II
dedicated the church, naming it after
St. Nicholas
--
Basilica di San Nicola de Bari.
This officially introduced the
Greek St. Nicholas
to
Western Europe.
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So many Greek Christians continued to flee the Muslim invasion that
Pope Urban II
went to the
Council of Claremont in 1095
and called upon European monarchs to send help.
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Europe sent help -- it was called
the First Crusade.
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In a backwards sense, Western Europe might not have had
St. Nicholas traditions
if it had not been for
Islamic jihadist invading Eastern Europe.
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How did
St. Nicholas
become
Santa Claus?
With
St. Nicholas'
remains now in Italy,
western Europeans quickly embraced the gift-giving traditions associated with him.
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By 1223, so much attention was being given to gift-giving during the Christmas season that
Saint Francis of Assisi
wanted to
refocus the attention to the birth of Christ.
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St. Francis
created
the first "creche"
or
nativity scene,
a humble manger of farm animals with the focus being on
Joseph, Mary and baby Jesus -- the Son of God
come to dwell among men: "And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us." (John 1:14)
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In 1517,
Martin Luther
began the
Reformation,
which effectively ended the popular "St. Nicholas Day" in many Protestant countries, as
"saints days" were considered a distraction from Christ.
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Since Germans like the gift-giving,
Martin Luther
moved the
giving
to December 25th to emphasize that
all gifts come from the Christ Child.
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The German pronunciation of
Christ Child
was
"Christkindl,"
which over the centuries became pronounced
"Kris Kringle."
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As the
Roman Catholic saying
is that
St. Peter is at the Gates of Heaven,
a
Greek Orthodox tradition
developed from the prophecy that Jesus would return at the end of the world to judge the living and the dead, riding a white horse, and the saints would return with him, riding white horses.
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Revelation 19:11-16 "And I saw heaven opened, and behold
a white horse;
and
he that sat upon him was called Faithful and True,
and in righteousness he doth judge and make war.
His eyes were as a flame of fire, and on his head were many crowns; and he had a name written, that no man knew, but he himself.
And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood: and
his name is called The Word of God ...
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... And out of his mouth
goeth a sharp sword,
that with it he should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God.
And he hath on his vesture and on his thigh
a name written, King Of Kings, And Lord Of Lords."
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Revelation 19:14
added:
"... And
the armies
which were in heaven
followed him upon white horses,
clothed in fine linen, white and clean."
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As
Nicholas
was a saint, the reasoning is that he would certainly be
one of multitude returning with Jesus, riding a white horse.
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The story became embellished with
St. Nicholas coming back once a year
for a sort of
mini pre-Judgement Day,
to check up on the children to see if they are on the right track.
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Over the centuries, the story evolved.
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Saints came
heaven, the New Jerusalem, the Celestial City
-- which turned into the
North Pole.
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In
Norway
there were
no horses,
so they have
St. Nicholas
riding a
reindeer.
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The Lamb's Book of Life and Book of Works
turned into the
Book of the "naughty and nice."
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The
angels
turned into
elves.
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In England during Henry VIII's reign, Christmas celebrations became sort of a Mardi Gras -- originally a religious day but now
a time of partying and carousing.
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When
Puritans
took over
England
, beginning in 1642,
they outlawed Christmas as being too worldly.
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When
Puritans settled Massachusetts,
they had
a five shilling fine for anyone caught celebrating Christmas.
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Puritan leader, Rev. Cotton Mather
(1663-1728), told his congregation, December 25, 1712:
"Can you in your Conscience think, that our Holy Savior is honored, by Mad Mirth, by long Eating, by hard Drinking, by lewd Gaming, by rude Reveling; by a Mass fit for none but a Saturn or a Bacchus, or the Night of a Mahometan Ramadan? You cannot possibly think so!"
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But the
Dutch
loved
Christmas
and
St. Nicholas.
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The
Dutch holiday tradition is that St. Nicholas
comes once a year to give presents to good children.
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But the naughty children had something else to look forward to.
St. Nicholas is accompanied by a
Moorish
costumed helper,
Zwarte Piet,
who would
put naughty children into gunny sacks
to take back to Spain where they would
be sold into Muslim slavery.
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Beginning in 1624,
Dutch immigrants
brought
St. Nicholas traditions
to
New Amsterdam,
which became
New York
in 1664.
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Dutch called
Saint Nicholas -
"Sant Nikolaus" or "Sinter Klass,"
which became pronounced
"Santa Claus."
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Living in
New York
was
Washington Irving,
the author of
Legend of Sleepy Hallow
and
Rip Van Winkle.
He coined the name for
New York
as
"Gotham City."
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Irving
also wrote
Diedrich Knickerbocker's A History of New York,
1809, in which he described
St. Nicholas
visiting once a year, but
no longer wearing a bishop's outfit,
but a typical
Dutch outfit
of
long-trunk hose, leather belt, boots and a stocking hat.
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Clement Moore
was a Hebrew professor in New York at the
General Theological Seminary of the Protestant Episcopal Church,
which was built on land donated by his family in the neighborhood of
Chelsea.
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Clement Clarke Moore Park
is located in New York City at the corner of 10th Avenue and 22nd Street.
He helped Trinity Church establish a new church on Hudson Street -
St. Luke in the Fields.
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In 1823,
Clement Moore
wrote a poem for his six children titled
"A Visit From St. Nicholas":
'TWAS the night before Christmas,
when all through the house
Not a creature was stirring,
not even a mouse;
The stockings were hung
by the chimney with care,
In hopes that
ST. NICHOLAS
soon would be there ..."
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"When, what to my wondering
eyes should appear,
But a miniature sleigh,
and eight tiny reindeer,
With a little old driver,
so lively and quick,
I knew in a moment
it must be ST. NICK ..."
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"So up to the house-top
the coursers they flew,
With the sleigh full of Toys,
and
ST. NICHOLAS
too ..."
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"As I drew in my head,
and was turning around,
Down the chimney
ST. NICHOLAS
came with a bound ..."
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Clement Moore
described
St. Nicholas
as smaller:
"He was chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf,
And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself."
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During the Civil War,
Harper's Weekly Magazine
had an illustrator named
Thomas Nast,
famous for creating the
Republican elephant
and
Democrat mule
in his
political cartoons.
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Nast
drew
St. Nicholas
visiting
Union troops
with a
"North Pole"
sign behind
St. Nick
as a political
jab at the Confederate South.
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In the early 1900s,
Haddon Sundblom
was a artist famous for his creation of the
Quaker Oats man
and
Aunt Jemima Syrup.
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In 1930,
Coca Cola
hired
Sundblom
to create a painting of
Santa Claus drinking Coke,
which he did annually for the next 33 years.
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With
Coca Cola
pioneering mass-marketing to be come the
most well-known trademark name in the world, Sundblom's
version of
Santa Claus
became the
most recognizable.
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Though much has been added on to the story throughout the centuries, underneath it all, there was a godly, courageous
Christian Bishop
who lived in
4th century Asia Minor,
named
Nicholas,
who:
- loved Jesus enough go into the ministry;
- was imprisoned by the Romans for his Christian faith;
- stood for the doctrine of the Trinity;
- preached against sexually immoral pagan temples;
- confronted corrupt politicians; and
- was very generous, giving anonymously to the poor in their time of need!
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American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
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Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
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