The Kingdom
“The Apostles wavered in their faith in Jesus as the
Messiah, because they anticipated and desired to see in Him an earthly king, in
whose kingdom they could sit at the right and the left hand of the Lord.
The thief understood that the Kingdom of Jesus of Nazareth,
despised and given over to a shameful death, was not of this world. And it was
precisely this Kingdom that the thief now sought: the gates of earthly life
were closing after him; opening before him was eternity. He had settled his
accounts with life on earth, and now he thought of life eternal. And here, at
the threshold of eternity, he began to understand the vanity of earthly glory
and earthly kingdoms. He recognized that greatness consists in righteousness,
and in the righteous, blamelessly tortured Jesus he saw the King of
Righteousness. The thief did not ask Him for glory in an earthly kingdom but
for the salvation of his soul.
The faith of the thief, born of his esteem for Christ’s
moral greatness, proved stronger than the faith of the Apostles, who although
captivated by the loftiness of Christ’s teaching, based their faith to a still
greater extent on the signs and wonders He wrought.
Now there was no miraculous deliverance of Christ from His
enemies — and the Apostles’ faith was shaken.
But the patience He exhibited, His absolute forgiveness, and
the faith that His Heavenly Father heard Him so clearly, indicated Jesus’
righteousness, His moral superiority, that one seeking spiritual and moral
rebirth could not be shaken.
And this is precisely what the thief, aware of the depth of
his fall, craved. He did not ask to sit at the right or the left hand of Christ
in His Kingdom, but, conscious of his unworthiness, he asked in humility simply
that he be remembered in His Kingdom, that he be given even the lowest place.”
~St. John Maximovitch
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