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Remember Me

Remember Me

by Rev. Alexandra Robinson on March 26, 2025


Reading Luke 23:32-43
The story of the thief on the cross is one of the most powerful and poignant stories of Scripture.  Two thieves are crucified beside Jesus and join the soldiers deriding him.  They mock his kingship of the Jews, telling him to “save himself.”  I can imagine crucifixion would lead anyone to lash out in anger at the nearest person.  None of us can think clearly when experiencing excruciating pain.  So the thieves follow that mob mentality in their pain.
But the heart of one thief changes before Jesus dies - we don’t know exactly why.  His understanding of Jesus transforms.  Maybe he sees how Jesus refuses to be anesthetized with sour wine and endures humiliation with unbelievable courage.  Maybe he hears Jesus’ cry out to God – of being known and heard by a loving Heavenly Father.  Perhaps he experiences Jesus’ words of grace  “forgive them for they do not know what they do,”  while they mock him.  Perhaps it was all of these experiences. We will never know.   But this transformation gave the thief  courage to change his ways: to stop deriding Jesus and tell others to stop as well, to admit his guilt, and to say (not ask) “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” 
For some, it might seem unfair that a thief, after a life of harming others, could receive the reward of heaven at the last minute.  That’s not fair – we might think.  The thief gets rewarded without all the work of being a lifelong disciple!  But when we look deeply, we see that the thief’s reward was not just a joy of afterlife, but a realization.  The thief  realized how different his life could have been if he had known Jesus earlier.  He could have lived a changed life: of courageously telling others to stop harmful words, of admitting his guilt while experiencing forgiveness from sins, and having faith that he could truly remember whose he was: a beloved child of God.
How lucky we are to know Jesus today so we can remember whose we are, and live it every day.   May we remember how fortunate we are, so the gift of discipleship is never stolen from us.

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