Thief in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
thef: In the Old Testament the uniform translation (17
times) of gannabh, from ganabh, "steal," but gannabh is
rather broader than the English "thief," and may even
include a kidnapper (Dt 24:7). In Apocrypha and the New
Testament, the King James Version uses "thief" indifferently
for kleptes, and lestes, but the Revised Version (British
and American) always renders the latter word by "robber" (a
great improvement), See CRIMES. The figurative use of thief"
as one coming without warning" (Mt 24:43, etc.) needs no
explanation.
The penitent thief ("robber," the Revised Version (British
and American) Mk 15:27; Mt 27:38,44; "malefactor," Lk
23:32,39) was one of the two criminals crucified with
Christ. According to Mark and Matthew, both of these joined
in the crowd's mockery, but Luke tells that one of them
reproached his fellow for the insults, acknowledged his own
guilt, and begged Christ to remember him at the coming of
the Kingdom. And Christ replied by promising more than was
asked--immediate admission into Paradise. It should be noted
that unusual moral courage was needed for the thief to make
his request at such a time and under such circumstances, and
that his case has little in common with certain sentimental
"death-bed repentances."
To explain the repentance and the acknowledgment of Christ
as Messiah, some previous acquaintance of the thief with
Christ must be supposed, but all guesses as to time and
place are of course useless. Later tradition abundantly
filled the blanks and gave the penitent thief the name Titus
or Dysmas.
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