An old
NYTimes Op-Ed article by one of my old professors, John Anthony McGuckin:
December 25, 2007
Op-Ed Contributor
St. Nick in the Big City
By JOHN ANTHONY McGUCKIN
ST. NICHOLAS was a super-saint with an immense cult for most of the
Christian past. There may be more icons surviving for Nicholas alone
than for all the other saints of Christendom put together. So what
happened to him? Where’s the fourth-century Anatolian bishop who
presided over gift-giving to poor children? And how did we get the new
icon of mass consumerism in his place?
Well, it’s a New York story.
In all innocence, the morphing began with the Dutch Christians of New
Amsterdam, who remembered St. Nicholas from the old country and called
him Sinte Klaas. They had kept alive an old memory — that a kindly old
cleric brought little gifts to the poor in the weeks leading up to the
Feast of the Nativity. While the gifts were important, they were never
meant to overshadow the message of Jesus’s humble birth.
But today’s chubby Santa is not about giving to the poor. He has had
his saintly garb stripped away. The filling out of the figure, the loss
of the vestments, and his transformation into a beery fellow smoking a
pipe combined to form a caricature of Dutch peasant culture. Eventually
this Magic Santa (a suitable patron saint if there ever was one for the
burgeoning capitalist machinery of the city) was of course popularized
by the Manhattanite Clement Clarke Moore published in “A Visit From St.
Nicholas,” in The Troy (New York) Sentinel on Dec. 23, 1823.
The newly created deity Santa soon attracted a school of
iconographers: notable among them were Thomas Nast, whose 1863 image of a
red-suited giant in Harper’s Weekly set the tone, and Haddon Sundblom,
who drew up the archetypal image we know today on behalf of the
Coca-Cola Company in the 1930s. This Santa was regularly accompanied by
the flying reindeer: godlike in his majesty and presiding over the
winter darkness like Odin the sky god returned.
The new Santa also acquired a host of Nordic elves to replace the
small dark-skinned boy called Black Peter, who in Christian tradition so
loved St. Nicholas that he traveled with him everywhere. But, some
might say, wasn’t it better to lose this racially stereotyped relic?
Actually, no, considering the real St. Nicholas first came into contact
with Peter when he raided the slave market in his hometown and railed
against the trade. The story tells us that when the slavers refused to
take him seriously, he used the church’s funds to redeem Peter and gave
the boy a job in the church.
And what of the throwing of the bags of gold down the chimney, where
they landed in the stockings and little shoes that had been hung up to
dry by the fireplace? Charming though it sounds, it reflected the
deplorable custom, still prevalent in late Roman society when the
Byzantine church was struggling to establish the supremacy of its
values, of selling surplus daughters into bondage. This was a euphemism
for sexual slavery — a trade that still blights our world.
As the tale goes, Nicholas had heard that a father in the town
planned to sell his three daughters because his debts had been called in
by pitiless creditors. As he did for Black Peter, Nicholas raided his
church funds to secure the redemption of the girls. He dropped the gold
down the chimney to save face for the impoverished father.
This tale was the origin of a whole subsequent series of efforts
among the Christians who celebrated Nicholas to make some effort to
redeem the lot of the poor — especially children, who always were, and
still are, the world’s front-line victims. Such was the origin of
Christmas almsgiving: gifts for the poor, not just gifts for our
friends.
I like St. Nicholas. You can keep chubby Santa.
John Anthony McGuckin is a professor of religious history at Union Theological Seminary and Columbia.
1 comment:
Superb, Jim Rosenthal
St nicholas Society London
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