Homily Two on Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker
and the Name Day of the Right-Believing Tsarevich and Grand Prince Nicholas Alexandrovich
By St. John of Kronstadt
"The righteous will be remembered forever" (Psalm 111:6)
Today's feast day and all saints' days serve as proof that the righteous man lives in the eternal memory of posterity. Saint Nicholas lived fourteen hundred years ago, yet we remember him as if he lived and died only yesterday. His holy, God-pleasing life, his benefaction to humanity, are so vividly presented to us. Why, then, does he live in the eternal memory of humanity? Because virtue is immortal, because even after death he lives, and dwelling in heaven, he looks down from there upon us who dwell on earth and acts beneficially upon those who call upon him for help with faith and love. Thus, it is not for nothing that the righteous man is eternally glorified by the Church: his glory is, so to speak, an echo of his immortal, great deeds, his constant response from heaven to our calls in times of spiritual and physical need. People generally don't like to remember anyone in vain, and they quickly forget someone who lived a useless life. If they do remember someone, it means they're worth remembering, it means they live in their hearts through their deeds. I'd like to use this feast as an opportunity to discuss the immortality of the human soul.