SAINT NICHOLAS THE WONDER WORKER
AND MYRRHSTREAMING
Dear
People,
It never ceases to amaze me how the
reality of Christ’s presence in the lives of His faithful servants continues to
have a direct impact on the lives of millions of people today. A case in point is Saint Nicholas Archbishop
of Myra in Lycia, Asia Minor, born in March 15, 270 and reposed in the Lord on
December 6, 343 A. D. In spite of the
fact that Saint Nicholas left this physical realm 1771 years ago, time and
space do not separate us from the love of Jesus. Saint Nicholas, a chosen vessel of Jesus
Christ, continues to live an active, vibrant life in the Church that Jesus
Christ established on the Cross at Golgotha.
Saint Nicholas constantly responds to the calls of help from people
today that look to him to either heal them, save them from certain death or to
lead them to salvation in Christ’s Kingdom. I have read many miracles that
Saint Nicholas has performed over the centuries and I continue to marvel at
just how much he cares for our salvation.
We have an icon of Saint Nicholas here
in the United States that continues to emit abundant myrrh after eighteen
years. I consider this myrrh a gift of Saint Nicholas from heaven that is being
given to the world through the love of Jesus Christ. This phenomenon started on the feast day of
Saint Nicholas in 1996 and continues to this very day. We use this myrrh to anoint our faithful who
are sick in soul and body. This is one
more tangible example of the active presence of the saints in the lives of
Orthodox Christians in the twenty-first century. The miracles of Saint Nicholas that follow in
this article simply continue the miraculous tradition of Saint Nicholas breaking
through the barriers that separate us from the spiritual world. I envision Saint Nicholas to be a man who was
totally committed to Jesus Christ. I say
this because there is no way he could have received the abundant gifts of the
Kingdom without being totally obedient to the will of Jesus Christ. Having said this, I would like to quote for
you what it means to be totally committed to Jesus Christ. I have found this commitment in the Elder
Paisios of Mount Athos who writes about it in his own words. This is a poem he wrote to his mother on the
back of a picture of himself after he was tonsured a monk. “Greetings, dear mother—I am becoming a monk,
leaving behind the vain world, fooling the deceiver. I will spend my youth in the desert, in
isolation: I sacrifice everything for the love of Christ. Every worldly good I leave behind as straw
and chaff, to fulfill the first commandment: to love God above all. I walk in Jesus’ footsteps, carrying the
Cross of Golgotha, and I pray that I’ll meet you in Jerusalem on high. I leave your great, tender love, dearest
mother; I beseech Jesus that we may be united unto the ages. From childhood I have wanted to wear the
monk’s black habit to dedicate myself to Christ, to be pleasing to God. And
from now on I will have Panagia as a mother, to preserve me from the cunning of
the enemy. Dearest mother, in the desert, in solemnity, in stillness, I will always pray
for you and for the whole country.
Monk Paisios
of Philotheou, Mount Athos, May 3, 1957. Offered to my honored mother—Paisios. This is quoted from the book “Elder Paisios
of Mount Athos.”
+Fr. Constantine
(Charles) J. Simones, May 24, 2014, Waterford, CT, USA
A
CONTEMPORARY MIRACLE OF SAINT NICHOLAS
This is the story that was related to us by Porphyrios
D. Stafila ll. “I heard this story from
the priest-monk Theofilaktos. He is a
monk from the Monastery of the Caves of Pskov in Russia. He told this story during the later part of
the 1980’s. This monk was told this
story by a high-ranking military officer of the navy and because of this
miracle, this officer returned to his Orthodox faith. During the early years of his military service
he was the captain of a torpedo boat in the Pacific Ocean. One day the ship went off course. The meteorological forecast was good and
there was no indication that anything unusual would happen with the weather. And then there suddenly appeared on the
horizon menacing black clouds which were growing in size. The wind picked up in speed and began to blow
violently. Suddenly a tempest had enveloped
us. Huge waves began to pound the
ship. The ship began to rock back and
forth in the waves. Water entered the
engine room. The ship was on the verge
of losing power and the power to navigate through the water. The fate of all of us was in great danger.
The captain was not a coward but the
fear of death began to overwhelm him. He
realized that he had the responsibility for the whole crew of the ship. What should he do: Suddenly he remembered the
words of his mother who had told him some time ago: “Pray to God. He saves people wherever they are in the
world.” He also heard the words of his grandfather, an old man of the sea.” But
he who had never traveled on the ocean had never prayed to God before. The captain had not stepped foot in a Church
since he was a child. He had become a
member of komosol (the communist party) and gave his service to the party. He therefore did not even know how to
pray. But from the depths of his being
he cried out with all of his strength: “Lord save me, Lord save me!” Suddenly a miracle took place. He saw an old man walking on the waves of the
water on the right side of the ship. He
was vested as a priest. The captain had
the time clearly to see his face. He had
a close cropped beard and an electrifying look on his face. The old man blessed the ship with both of his
hands and immediately the winds died down, the ocean became calm and the tempest
ceased. The captain could do nothing but hold his breath.
When he returned to port he promised
that without delay he would visit a Church to light a candle as an act of
thanksgiving for the salvation of himself and his crew. But in the Far East at that time all the
Churches had been destroyed. It was not
long after this that he had the opportunity to visit a Church. His navy detachment had been transferred to
Leningrad (St. Petersburg). While he was
riding on a city tram he saw a Church with five domes. He got off the tram at the next stop and went
directly to the Church. It turned out to
be the Cathedral Church of Saint Nicholas.
He entered the darkened Church, took a candle and he looked to see where
he could place the candle. He then saw an
icon of an old bishop and decided to place the lit candle in front of that
icon. The captain approached and looked
at the icon carefully. The appearance of
the man’s face was exactly like that of the old man that calmed the tempest in
the Pacific Ocean. The captain asked a
lady caretaker of the Church about the icon: “Who is the person in this icon?”
She responded: “What are you trying to say, who the person in this icon is. He
is Bishop Nicholas, the patron saint of sailors.” This
story was written by Fr. Theofilaktos in the book “This Happened in Our Time.”
(Pravoslavie May 5, 2014.
RECENT MIRACLES OF SAINT NICHOLAS IN CHINA
Saint Nicholas was referred to by
the Russian Orthodox people as merciful because of the many miracles he
performed through the grace of God. One of these miracles is described to us by
Filaretus Vosnenski which happened some forty years ago. This miracle is a contemporary miracle that
took place in Harbin, China when Filaretus Vosneski was living there. A large icon of Saint Nicholas the miracle-worker
was displayed in the train station of Harbin and it was greatly revered by all
the travelers who passed that way. All
travelers upon arriving and leaving the train station would hasten to light a
candle before the icon of Saint Nicholas invoking his blessing for a safe
trip. Because of this special love for
this icon there were always hundreds of candles lit before the icon.
One day during the start of spring
season, the river ice was breaking up in the area Sungari. Harbin is located in the Sungari
district. Travelers noticed one day that
a local Chinaman, with wet clothes, was rushing to the train station in order
to kneel before the icon of Saint Nicholas.
He hastened to do this because, as he told the people there, the saint
had miraculously saved him from death.
He told the people at the train
station the following story. He attempted one day to cross the frozen river although
he was taking a big risk. While taking
hurried strides over the ice, the ice broke up under him and he found himself
trapped under the ice. He was dying when
he suddenly remembered the miracle-working icon of Saint Nicholas in the Harbin
train station and he yelled out: “Old man from the railroad station, help me,”
and then he passed out. A short time
later, in spite of the fact that he thought he was surely dying, he found
himself alive but soaking wet on the river bank. As soon as he was able to gather himself
together he rushed off to the icon of the Saint at the railroad station. He wanted to thank Saint Nicholas for his
salvation. Saint Nicholas is greatly
honored in China.
Once a Russian hunter was lost in
the steppes of Manchuria and he sought shelter in a Chinese farm house. As soon as he entered the house and was offered
shelter, he noticed an icon of Saint Nicholas.
He then thought to himself that when he left he would take the icon with
him since the Chinese do not have any connection with the Orthodox Christian
faith. When he asked his hosts if he
could take the icon they objected strenuously.
They were insulted by his request and they said to him: “Why do you want
to take the Elder from us? He is so good and he helps us very much. We will never abandon him.”
(A note from the translator) When we think of China as a non-Christian
country we should not forget the presence of thousands of Russian Orthodox
Christians who fled to China to escape the communist revolution in 1917. The communist attempt to take over China began
in 1928 and ended in 1950. During this time period thousands of Russian
Orthodox Christians fled Russia and settled in China. The Russians built
schools, hospitals and Churches in flourishing Russian enclaves. Saint John Maximovitch of San Francisco was
the spiritual leader of the Russian Orthodox community in China before these
Christians were forced out of the country by the communists.
Translated
from the Greek by:
+Fr.
Constantine J. Simones, May 24, 2014, Waterford, CT, USA,
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