Saint Nicholas Day comes on December 6th
every year. Coming as it does near the
beginning of Advent it is a wonderful opportunity to call children and their families
to the sanctuary for a no-rehearsal required, child-friendly worship event. It
also puts the focus of the season on giving rather than getting. And, it is not
a bad match for the prophecy and John the Baptist texts for the first weeks of
Advent! In its simplest celebration
children are told the story of Saint Nicholas and invited to leave their shoes
in the lobby of the church for the remainder of worship. During worship those shoes are filled with
chocolate coins and a clementine or other fruit. (This may be a job for a youth group.) Some congregations add a collection of giving
activities following worship or during the church school hour. In comments on a Facebook post about this
day, Sue Van Oss listed her congregation’s activities for the day - filling
ladies gloves with candy canes for a abuse shelter, stuffing warm socks with
granola bars for a shelter, making cards for seniors, even preparing meals for
a shelter. Another church sets up a huge
assembly line in which families fill special holiday food bags to be given out at
the food bank and several shelters. The
possibilities are endless!
It is also a good opportunity to introduce
Nicholas the Saint. Children are interested that Nicholas who was
quite wealthy got his start caring for other when he was a child, then
dedicated his whole life to that ministry.
There are all sorts of colorful stories of his aiding groups of people
who then adopted him as their patron saint. In one he saved three sisters from
being sold because their family did not have the money for dowries for
them. Nicholas secretly threw a bag of
gold through each of their windows at night. Particularly this story encourages children to
look for ways they can secretly give gifts to people around them. It also provides them with a way to continue loving
and following Saint Nicholas once they learn the secret about Santa Claus.
Saint Nicholas, by Ann Tompert, is one
good collection of short stories about him.
An Author’s Note at the end traces how he morphed into Santa Claus over
the centuries. The book is much too long
to be read in its entirety in worship.
Instead read one or two of the stories or simply use it as background
material for your own story telling. (I
found several copies at the local public library.)
This website has many great resources and ideas for celebrating St. Nicholas's day. http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/who-is-st-nicholas/
ReplyDeleteThank you, David! What a rich website on all things St. Nicholas - an article about the saint, ideas for home and church celebrations of St Nicholas Day, links to celebrations around the world, even cross word puzzles, word searches, and make your own St. Nicholas e cards! It is a gold mine.
DeleteThe images, list of St. Nick themed books, and St. Nick dramas were also especially helpful this season.
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