42And he [thief on the cross] was saying, “Jesus, remember me when You come in Your kingdom!” 43And He said to him, “Truly I say to you, today you shall be with Me in Paradise.”
We have the privilege of being an audience to one of the most intimate moments of fellowship with the Lord. This is not the tale of a faithful follower who relinquished everything to follow Jesus for three years. Nor is this about someone who accepted martyrdom out of loyalty to the Lord. No! Jesus promised eternal life in a place of bliss to the condemned convict.
The story is more poignant when we understand this man’s background. The Gospel writer, Luke, referred to him as a “criminal” (Luke 23:39) or as the KJV translates the word, “malefactor.” The Greek term refers to “one who commits gross misdeeds and serious crimes” (BDAG). Matthew’s account calls him a “robber” (Matt. 27:28), which seems relatively benign for a crucifixion. However, the ancient Greeks also used this word to describe a “revolutionary, insurrectionist, or guerrilla.” He was not an ordinary thief, guilty of a misdemeanor. Don’t forget Barabbas, whom Pilate offered as a replacement for Jesus—he is described as a murderer and among the “insurrectionists” (Mark 15:7). So, the two men crucified alongside Jesus were likely of the same breed of men, rebels against Roman authority.
This man calling out to Jesus, “Remember me when you come in your kingdom,” may have still been clinging to the hope of a new governing authority to replace Rome. The difference now is that after meeting Jesus in a shared execution event, he realized that Jesus’ kingdom was entirely different from all other movements he may have joined against Rome. The hope he had nurtured for better government, politics, and life was now transferred to the person of Jesus Christ, who was being executed! Yet, Jesus looked nothing like a victorious king that would naturally inspire a following. Consider how the prophet pictured the suffering of Christ:
His appearance was marred more than any man and His form more than the sons of men. (Isa. 52:14b)
He has no stately form or majesty that we should look upon Him, nor appearance that we should be attracted to Him. (Isa. 53:2b)
The rebel on the cross saw beyond the outward optics of a man tortured under a whip, beaten to a pulp and mocked, bleeding from excruciatingly painful thorns pressed into His head, pierced with old, rusty spikes driven through His body; pinned by those spikes to a rough-hewn timber cross. The rebel himself was also experiencing the same sharp, aching pain as Jesus did. What faith that took, to see in the crucified Jesus a Savior!
Among the man’s last recorded words, he cried out, “Remember me.” Does this not remind us of the same words Jesus uttered in the intimate surroundings of the Last Supper shortly before His crucifixion and departure to return to His heavenly Father, “Remember me”? And here we have the thief asking Jesus the same. This is nothing short of intimacy of faith and fellowship amid suffering! I wonder if the apostle Paul might have had this in mind when he wrote about his desire to “know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death …” (Phil. 3:10).
Little did the man know when he made this request that it would lead to the truth of the psalmist: “Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His godly ones” (Ps. 116:15). One moment, he was a condemned criminal on shameful public display, and the next moment he was a believer and intimately precious to God. Jesus’ answer was far greater than the thief imagined. He would not have to wait to be accepted into God’s kingdom. Before the day was over, he would be welcomes with a grand entrance into paradise (which we take as a glorious description of heaven with absolute bliss).
What hope this gives to all of us. If Jesus promised salvation to a man of such a background at the last minute before death, He could also promise that anyone who believes in Jesus Christ will gain eternal life (John 3:16). But at a more telling level, this story shows how extraordinary God’s grace is. Indeed, He is worthy to be worshiped and praised.
Lord, I worship You because You saved me from my rebellious, sinful life and have given me the promise of paradise, that is, eternal life with You forever!

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