C o p t i c O r t h o d o x
C h u r c h -
S y d n e y A u s t r a l i
a
St Nicholas Group
The Life of St Nicholas
He was from the city of Mora, his father's name was Epiphanius
and the name of his mother was Tona. They were rich, as
well as God-fearing, people. They had no children to bring
joy to their hearts and to inherit their wealth after
their deaths. They remained without a son until they grew
old and they were enveloped with despair. God had pity
on them and gave them this saint. He was filled with the
Divine grace since his young age. When he reached school
age, he demonstrated, through intelligence and knowledge,
that he learned far more from the Holy Spirit than he
did from his teachers. He learned all the doctrine and
the teachings of the church since his young age and was
ordained deacon.
Then he became a monk in a monastery wherein his cousin
was the abbot. He lived an ascetic and a righteous life,
and was ordained a priest when he was 19 years old.
God gave him the gift to work signs and wonders and
to heal the sick.
St. Nicholas is too illustrious to describe all the
signs that were performed by his hands, but an example
of his good deeds and benevolent works follows:
There was a very rich man in the city of Mora who lost
all his wealth. He had three daughters who had passed
the age of marriage, and he could not marry them because
of his poverty. Satan tempted the man to think that
he should make his daughters live in sin so that they
might get their food by means of fornication. God revealed
to St. Nicholas the thoughts which were in this man's
head, and what he intended to do. St. Nicholas took
100 dinars of his father's money and tied it up in a
sack. During the night, secretly and without anyone
seeing him, he threw the money into the window of that
poor man's house. When the man found the gold, he was
astonished and rejoiced exceedingly and was able to
give his eldest daughter away in marriage. During another
night the saint threw another hundred dinars into the
man's house and the man was able to give his second
daughter away in marriage. The man wanted to know who
this charitable person was. The third time when the
saint threw the gold into the house, the man was watching
and immediately when he felt the drop of the sack, he
ran out of his house to see who was throwing the gold
to him. He found the kind bishop St. Nicholas and the
man bowed down at his feet and paid him great homage
and thanked him because he saved his daughters from
poverty and from a life of sin. The saint refused to
accept any thanks and asked them to thank the Lord Who
put this thought in his heart.
St. Nicholas drove out the devil and his angels from
people, he healed many sick people, and he blessed little
bread to satisfy many people, with much more left over.
Before being selected bishop, he saw in a vision, a
great throne and magnificent vestments placed on it
and a man said to him, "Put on these vestments
and sit on this throne." Another night he saw our
Lady, St. Mary, giving him the vestments of the priesthood
and our Lord Jesus Christ gave him the Gospel.
When the Bishop of Mora departed, the Angel of the
Lord appeared to the Archbishop and told him the one
who was chosen for this rank was Nicholas and described
his virtues to him. When he woke up he told the bishops
what he had seen, and they all believed that vision.
They knew that it was from the Lord Jesus Christ. They
took St. Nicholas and made him Bishop over the city
of Mora.
Shortly thereafter, Diocletian reigned, and incited
the pagan worship. When Diocletian arrested many of
the believers, he heard about this saint. He seized
him and tortured him severely for many years. The Lord
Christ strengthened him, protected him, and raised him
whole from all these tortures so that he might become
a mighty branch of the tree of faith. When Diocletian
was tired of torturing him, he cast him into prison.
Saint Nicholas wrote to his congregation from prison
to teach, encourage and confirm them in the faith. He
remained in prison until God perished Diocletian and
established the reign of Constantine the Just. Constantine
brought out all the confessors from prison, among them
was St. Nicholas, who returned to his city.
When the Council of Nicea convened in the year 325
A.D. to judge Arius, he was one of the 318 fathers assembled
there.
Having finished his course and guarded his flock, he
departed to be with the Lord. He sat on the episcopal
throne for more than 40 years, and all the days of his
life were about 80 years.
His prayers be with us and Glory be to our God forever.
Amen.