He is dying.
Not eventually. Not someday. Not in theory. Now.
Every breath is shorter than the last. Every second more expensive than the one before it. The body begins to shut down in layers—lungs straining, heart racing, strength disappearing.
There is no tomorrow left to plan for. No time to clean things up. No chance to start over. Just moments.
And in those moments, something unthinkable happens. The thief speaks to Jesus. But not the way the other man does.
The other criminal mocks Him. Spits venom with what little strength he has left. “Aren’t you the Messiah? Save yourself—and us!”
It’s desperate. Bitter. Angry.
It’s also revealing. Because even at the edge of death, one man still wants control. Still wants terms. Still wants God to prove Himself on his conditions.
“Do something for me.” “Get me out of this.” “Fix my situation.” It’s a demand.
And if we’re honest, it sounds a lot like us.
How many times have we prayed like that? God, if you’re real—fix this. God, if you care—change that. God, if you’re listening—prove it.
We don’t want transformation. We want escape. We don’t want surrender. We want relief.
But the second thief—the one who has already admitted his guilt—he sees something the other man doesn’t. And with what little strength he has left, he turns and rebukes him.
“Don’t you fear God?” he says. “Since you are under the same sentence?” In other words—Do you not see what’s happening here? Do you not understand who you’re talking to?
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And then… he does something that changes everything.
He turns his head toward Jesus. And he asks a question.
No—not a question. A plea.
“Jesus… remember me… when you come into your kingdom.” (Luke 23:42)
That’s it. No speech. No polished prayer. No list of promises about how he’ll do better if he gets another chance.
Because he knows—he’s not getting another chance.
He doesn’t bargain. He doesn’t negotiate. He doesn’t try to impress. He simply asks to be remembered.
Do you see how small that sounds? “Remember me.”
Not save me. Not heal me. Not get me off this cross. Just… don’t forget me.
Because somewhere in his fading consciousness, he understands something profound: If this man truly has a kingdom… then death is not the end. And if death is not the end… then this moment is not all there is.
That realization changes everything. Because now the thief isn’t just looking at his suffering—he’s looking beyond it.
And for the first time in his life, hope begins to flicker.
Not hope in himself. That’s gone. Not hope in circumstances. Those are finished.
Hope in Jesus.
But here’s what makes this moment so staggering—he has nothing to offer. Nothing.
No good works to point to. No track record to lean on. No time left to prove anything.
He cannot climb down and make things right. He cannot repay what he’s done. He cannot even take a single step toward redemption.
All he can do…is ask.
And that’s where this gets uncomfortable. Because everything in us resists that kind of helplessness.
We want to contribute. We want to earn. We want to feel like we’ve done something to deserve whatever comes next.
But the thief shatters that illusion. Because his request is empty of everything except need. And that’s exactly what makes it powerful.
“Jesus… remember me…”
It’s not eloquent. It’s not impressive. But it’s real.
And Jesus responds in a way that should shake every assumption we’ve ever had about God. “Truly I tell you… today you will be with me in paradise.” (Luke 23:43)
Today. Not someday. Not after a process. Not once you’ve proven yourself. Today.
In other words—It’s done.
Do you understand what just happened? A man who spent his life in rebellion… a man who admitted he deserved his punishment… a man who had nothing left to give—is promised eternity in paradise.
Not because he earned it. Not because he fixed his life. Not because he made up for his past. But because he asked. Because he believed. Because in his final moments, he placed his hope in the only One who could save him.
That’s it.
And if that feels too simple… too easy… too unfair… good.
It should. Because grace is offensive like that. It doesn’t play by our rules. It doesn’t follow our system of earning and deserving. It bypasses all of it. And it goes straight to the heart.
Which means this: The thief didn’t clean himself up to come to Jesus. He came to Jesus because he couldn’t clean himself up.
And neither can you.
And neither can I.
We just don’t like to admit it.
But the moment you do—the moment you stop negotiating… stop demanding… stop trying to earn your way in… and simply say, “Jesus… remember me…” —you are closer than you think. Closer than you’ve ever been. Because the door to paradise doesn’t open for the perfect. It opens for the desperate.
And on that cross… in his final breath… a dying thief found it.
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