St Nicholas of Myra

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘St Nicholas of Myra’

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St Nicholas the Wet Clay Lane

Two frantic parents implore St Nicholas’s help in rescuing their baby boy.

St Nicholas (d. 330), Bishop of Myra in Asia Minor, is known as the patron of those at sea. He is not normally given the soubriquet ‘the wet’: that belongs strictly to an icon of St Nicholas, sadly lost during the Second World War, associated with a remarkable miracle from the late 11th century.

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1
St Nicholas and the Deadly Gift Clay Lane

The Bishop of Myra’s ceaseless toil to put an end to the worship of Artemis made him some dangerous enemies.

By the 320s, Christians in the Roman Empire were no longer discriminated against, but that did not mean life was easy. As this story shows, the warm-hearted yet combative Bishop of Myra (now Demre in Turkey) made himself some dangerous enemies by continuing to insist that there was one God and one Truth, and that the popular and profitable religions of Rome were the delusions of a dark power.

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2
When Godric Sang with Angels Clay Lane

On Easter night, monk Reginald woke from a doze to find the aged hermit Godric singing lustily.

St Godric of Finchale (?1065-1170) was a bed-ridden invalid near the end of a long and eventful life when Reginald, a monk from the nearby Durham Abbey, went to see him in his hermitage in a bend of the River Wear. It was a Saturday, the night before Easter Day. Back in the Abbey church, the monks were eagerly awaiting the sunrise, but Reginald had dozed off.

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3
Home from Home Goscelin of Canterbury

In Constantinople, capital of the Roman Empire, a man from Kent founded a glittering church for English refugees.

Goscelin of Canterbury was a Flemish monk who settled in England during the 1060s. He preserved many records of the English just in time to save them from obliteration by the Normans, who overran the country’s highest offices following the Conquest of 1066. As he tells us, however, not everyone could bear to stay and watch.

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4
St Nicholas Scotches a Rumour Clay Lane

Three highly decorated officers in the Roman Army fall victim to a campaign to discredit them.

From 331, the Praetorian Prefect of the East was Ablabius, making him the most important man in the eastern Roman Empire after the Emperor himself. Originally a pagan from Crete, he became a Christian and was a close confidant of Emperor Constantine. Later, under Constantius, he lost his place and his life for supporting the Orthodox party in the Arian crisis.

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5
St Nicholas and the Unjust Judge Clay Lane

Trouble comes to the town of Myra when Imperial soldiers are despatched to put down a revolt.

In February 313 the new Roman Emperor, Constantine, and Licinius his junior in the Balkans, decreed religious liberty across the Empire. With astonishing speed, formerly persecuted Christian bishops gained public respect, and if this tale is anything to judge by, deservedly so.

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6
St Nicholas and the Empty Granary Clay Lane

The saintly Bishop helped the captain of a merchant ship to cut through the red tape, and save his town from starvation.

St Nicholas (d. 343) was Bishop of Myra, a town in the Roman Province of Lycia, on the southwest coast of Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey). According to his 9th-century biographer, Michael, one miracle in particular gained him a reputation in the Imperial capital itself.

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