Libmonster ID: U.S.-2517

How to Explain to a Child the Meaning of St. Nicholas' Day Celebration

Introduction: Between Magic and Faith

The Day of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker (December 19th according to the new style, December 6th according to the old) is a unique point in the calendar where Christian tradition is organically intertwined with folk customs, creating fertile ground for family dialogue. Explaining the meaning of this holiday to a child is a task that is more anthropological and pedagogical than catechetical. The goal is to lay the foundation for understanding kindness, compassion, and historical memory without destroying the child's belief in miracles.

Age-Appropriate Strategies for Explanation

1. For preschoolers (3–6 years): emphasis on kindness and miracles. At this age, abstract concepts are inaccessible. The explanation should be figurative and action-oriented.

Metaphor of the story: Tell a simplified but vivid story about how St. Nicholas secretly helped people. The key plot is about the three poor sisters to whom he secretly threw three bags of gold through the window at night (this is the prototype of gift socks). Focus not on the gold, but on the secret help: “He did a good deed so that no one saw him and praised him, because the most important thing is to help, not to be glorified”.

Personalization: Imagine St. Nicholas as a kind and powerful friend who lives in heaven with God and loves all children very much. He sees how they behave, not to punish them, but to find a way to help and delight them.

Connection with tradition: Explain the ritual: “We put out a slippers or hang up a sock because St. Nicholas once left gifts in this way. This is our way of saying to him: we remember you and believe in your kindness”.

2. For elementary school students (7–10 years): getting acquainted with the life of the saint and the social meaning. The child is able to perceive simple historical facts and ethical concepts.

Biography as an example: Tell that St. Nicholas was a real person who lived a long time ago (about 270–343 AD) in the city of Myra (now Turkey). He was a bishop — that is, the main helper of people in their faith. It is important to emphasize his specific deeds: protecting the innocent from wrongful conviction, saving sailors from a storm, helping the hungry. You can show icons or paintings with these themes.

Concept of kindness: Introduce the concept of “kindness” — the ability to feel another person's misfortune and help. St. Nicholas is an example of kindness. His day is a holiday in honor of this quality. Suggest that the child think about how he himself can show “St. Nicholas” kindness: share toys, help those who are bullied, write a card to a lonely grandmother.

Differentiation of images: It is important to delicately distinguish between St. Nicholas (the saint) and Santa Claus/Ded Moroz (a fictional, magical character). You can explain that Ded Moroz is a kind winter wizard, and the image of Santa Claus grew out of stories about the good deeds of St. Nicholas over time, but they are not the same character.

3. For teenagers (11+): historical context and relevance. You can talk to a teenager at the level of values and critical thinking.

Historical and interconfessional dialogue: Tell that St. Nicholas is revered by Catholics, Orthodox, Protestants, and even Muslims (in Turkey he is called Noell Baba). This is a figure that unites different cultures. His relics are kept in the Italian city of Bari, where pilgrims from all over the world come.

From tradition to social action: Discuss how the ancient tradition of kindness is transformed today. Give examples of modern “St. Nicholas” actions — when people anonymously pay for shopping lists of needy families, give gifts to children in hospitals. Suggest participating in such an action as a family.

Critique of the consumer aspect: Talk about the fact that the holiday should not be reduced only to receiving gifts. Its essence is the memory of a specific person whose life became a lesson of kindness, and the imitation of him through one's own actions.

Key Meanings to Convey at Any Age

Goodness is done in secret. The main lesson of St. Nicholas is the value of humble, unpretentious help, when you are thanked not by people, but by your own heart.

Protection of the weak. The saint always stood up for the oppressed, deceived, those who have a hard time. This is an example of civic courage and justice.

The holiday as the beginning of goodness. The Day of St. Nicholas is the start of the Christmas season, a time to prepare the heart for the main holiday — Christmas. This is the time to learn to give, not just to receive.

Practical Tools and Rituals for the Family

Joint reading: Use quality children's books about St. Nicholas (for example, “St. Nicholas the Merciful” in the series “Lives of the Saints in Retold for Children”) and discuss what you have read.

Viewing thematic content: Choose short cartoons or diaporamas (Soviet “The Miracle Worker”) that tell the story in an accessible way.

“Good Deed of the Day”: On the day of the holiday or the day before, hold a family meeting: what one common “St. Nicholas” good deed can you do? (Buy food for a shelter, donate things to a charitable store, help a neighbor).

Letter not as a request, but as a report: Suggest that the child write a “letter to St. Nicholas,” but not a list of wishes, but a story about the good deeds he has done over the year, what he has learned, and whom he has helped. This forms reflection.

Culinary tradition: Bake together “St. Nicholas” cookies — special star-shaped, staff, or angel-shaped biscuits. At the festive table, tell why these symbols are associated with the saint.

What to Avoid in Explanations

Direct threats: “If you behave badly, St. Nicholas won't bring anything.” This distorts the image of the merciful saint, turning him into a punisher, and fosters a consumer attitude towards faith.

Excessive commercialization: Do not reduce the holiday only to the process of “put the sock in place — get an iPad”. The emphasis on the gift should be secondary.

Contradictions with other traditions: If there is a Ded Moroz in the family, do not create a conflict. It is better to build a “hierarchy”: St. Nicholas is a saint whose memory we honor on December 19th, and Ded Moroz is a magical hero of the New Year.

Conclusion: Cultivating Virtue Through Tradition

Explaining the meaning of St. Nicholas' Day is not a one-time lecture, but a gradual cultivation of understanding through stories, rituals, and, most importantly, through personal example. The task of parents is to make the figure of this saint not just a fictional “analogue of Ded Moroz” who brings gifts on a schedule, but a living moral compass — an example of a person whose strength lay in selfless love for people. In this case, the holiday will not just be a point in the calendar, but a true school of kindness, where the gift in the slippers will not be the goal, but a symbol of a much greater, invisible reward that the heart receives by learning to give.


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The meaning of celebrating St. Nicholas' Day // New-York: Libmonster (LIBMONSTER.COM). Updated: 18.12.2025. URL: https://libmonster.com/m/articles/view/The-meaning-of-celebrating-St-Nicholas-Day (date of access: 16.03.2026).

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