Bible and Saints

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Bible and Saints’

151
St Nicholas the Wet Clay Lane

Two frantic parents implore St Nicholas’s help in rescuing their baby boy.

St Nicholas (d. 330), Bishop of Myra in Asia Minor, is known as the patron of those at sea. He is not normally given the soubriquet ‘the wet’: that belongs strictly to an icon of St Nicholas, sadly lost during the Second World War, associated with a remarkable miracle from the late 11th century.

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152
Aaron’s Rod Elfric of Eynsham

The Victorian practice of hanging sugared nuts on a Christmas tree was bursting with Biblical symbolism.

Victorian Christmas celebrations included hanging nuts, typically sugared almonds, on the tree. This symbolic gesture goes back to a Christian interpretation of a passage from Numbers, which was known in England as long ago as the 10th century.

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153
The Man Who Left No Footprints Clay Lane

A young monk was rewarded for taking his duties as guest-master seriously.

In about 658, Abbot Eata sent Cuthbert from Melrose Abbey away south to Ripon, to be the guest-master in a new monastery there. It was while he was at Ripon that Cuthbert had a remarkable experience which left him trembling with excitement and fear.

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154
The Spy Clay Lane

In 1910, Constantine Zervakos, a young monk from the Greek island of Paros, found himself charged with espionage.

Until 1912, the city and port of Thessalonica was in the hands of the Muslim Turks, and any Greek, especially a Christian, took his life in his hands passing through. In 1910, a newly-minted monk of the Longovarda monastery on Paros got himself into very hot water.

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155
Not a Scratch! Clay Lane

Hapless extremists try to wipe out a miraculous icon of the Virgin Mary.

This is far from the only tale of its kind concerning the ‘Kursk Root’ icon, named after its discovery in the 13th century among the shrubs of a forest near the ruins of Kursk in Russia. The icon, which escaped both the USSR and the Nazis, is kept today in New York, and last visited England in 2012.

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156
The Story of Esther Clay Lane

A young Jewish girl is chosen as the Queen of Persia, but quickly finds she has enemies.

The story of Esther is the story behind the Jewish feast of Purim on the 14th of Adar, which falls in February-March. The tale is set in the 480s BC, following Persia’s conquest of Babylon, when the Kings of Persia became lords over Jewish people scattered right across the ancient Near East.

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