St Oswald's Magazine StOM 1612 | Page 16

SAINTS COMMEMORATED IN DECEMBER & JANUARY 4 December John of Damascus (died 749) A polymath whose field of interest included theology, philosophy and music, he is said to have served as chief administrator to the Muslim Caliph before his ordination. He wrote expounding the Christian faith & composed hymns, he is considered the “last of the Fathers of the Eastern Orthodox Church” and is best known for his strong defence of icons. The RC Church regards him as the ‘Doctor of Assumption’ due to his writings on the Assumption of Mary. John’s life is known from Arabic texts of the early 9 th & 10th century. He was born into a prominent family known as Mansour, named for his grandfather who was responsible for taxes of the Region under the Emperor Heraclius and who surrendered the City to the Muslims. Both grandfather and father served the Caliph, as did John. After ordination in 735 he became a monk at Mar Saba near Jerusalem. He was bilingual in Arabic and Greek and had received his Christian education from St Cosmas of Maiuma, whom the Arabs had brought from Sicily as a slave and sold to his father. John died at Mar Saba in about 749. He was officially called ‘Doctor of the Faith’ in 1883. 6 December St Nicolas (Fourth century) There is a lot more tradition than history attached to the original Father Christmas. What is certain is that he was Bishop of Myra, now in Turkey. He also was imprisoned in the persecutions under Diocletian (around 303) and was present at the Council of Nicaea in 325, where he argued strongly against Arius and his heresy. He was a great champion for justice and intervened even with Constantine for prisoners who had been unjustly condemned. He died in Myra and was buried there. When the Saracens conquered Myra, his relics were taken to Venice and then Bari in Apulia, only in recent years claimed back by Myra. Among the legends attached to him was the one of his throwing through a window bags of gold for three daughters of a widow for their dowry, these became the origin of the pawnbroker’s three golden balls and made him patron saint of brides. There was also the unpleasant story of the boys killed by an innkeeper, which Nicolas restored back to life. These stories made him the patron of children and associated with the giving of presents at Christmas. 1 January (Old Calendar, 14 January according to the new) Basil the Great (died 379) The Church reveres him as a fighter for purity of the faith, a great theologian, calling him a ‘universal teacher’. A man of ‘encyclopaedic cast’, with great StOM Page 16