Who was the thief? We do not know. Had the thief on the cross been baptized?
We do not know. - Had the thief been baptized by John the Baptist? We
do not know.
- Had the thief been baptized by one of the apostles? We do
not know.
Was the thief a Jew or a Gentile? We do not know. -
If he was a Jew, had he offered the appropriate sacrifice so that his sins were
forgiven? We do not know.
- If he was a Gentile, had he already been forgiven
under the Gentile law? We do not know.
- If he was a disciple of Jesus Christ,
had he been baptized and repented of the sin for which he was being crucified?
Had he been forgiven days before he was crucified? We do not know.
When Jesus told the thief that he would be in paradise, was Jesus stating a fact
which He knew to be true? Or, did Jesus forgive his sins? We do not know. - Jesus
could have been stating a fact about the thief, whose sins had been forgiven under
the Mosaic law or the Gentile law.
- Jesus does not say that He forgave
the thief. We cannot assume that Jesus forgave the thief's sins.
We
do not know whether or not Jesus forgave the thief's sins on the cross. Even if
Jesus forgave the thief's sins during crucifixion, it means nothing in respect
to our salvation today. - Jesus forgave people of their sins while He
was on earth (Lk. 5:17-26).
- When Jesus forgave people on earth, it did
not change the terms of salvation for anyone else.
- E.g., Jesus forgave
the paralytic (Lk. 5:17-26), but the other Jews still had to meet the terms of
salvation stated in God's word - offer sacrifices.
- The thief
on the cross has nothing to do with our salvation. His salvation does not prove
that we are forgiven without obeying Jesus' command to be baptized (Matt. 28:19;
Mk. 16:16; cf. Acts 2:38; 22:16; 1 Pet. 3:21).
The thief lived during
a different dispensation than we live today. - People who lived prior
to Pentecost (Acts 2), were saved under a different law than we are saved today.
So, the terms of the thief's salvation means nothing in respect to our salvation
today.
- The thief's salvation does not nullify clear
Bible teaching that our sins are forgive when we obey Jesus and are baptized (Heb.
5:9; Matt. 28:19; Mk. 16:15-16; Acts 2:38; 22:16; 1 Pet. 3:21). See:
I hope you can see that we cannot make
any statements regarding our salvation based on the thief's salvation. The fact
is, we do not know anything about his salvation from which we can make any conclusions. |