Every breath is a decision. Every second stretches into something that feels eternal. The body is shutting down—but the mind… the mind is suddenly awake.
Clear. Focused. And fixed on one thing.
Him. Jesus.
Not the crowd. Not the soldiers. Not the other criminal hurling insults into the air.
Jesus.
And what the thief sees in that moment doesn’t make sense. It doesn’t fit. It doesn’t line up with anything he’s ever known. Because the man hanging next to him—the one bloodied, beaten, mocked, and gasping for breath—isn’t responding the way any normal man would.
There’s no rage. No threats. No curses thrown back at the crowd. No desperation to escape.
Instead—there is something almost unrecognizable. Compassion.
“Father, forgive them… for they do not know what they are doing” (Luke 23:34).
Forgive them? Forgive them? The ones who nailed Him there? The ones who are laughing? The ones gambling for His clothes like this is some kind of sport?
Who does that? Who, in the middle of unimaginable suffering, looks at the people causing it… and asks God to forgive them?
The thief hears it. And something breaks open inside of him. Because suddenly, this isn’t just about innocence.
This is something more. This is someone more.
Up until now, he’s admitted his own guilt. He’s recognized Jesus’ innocence. He’s asked to be remembered.
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But now—now he’s seeing something deeper. The character of Jesus. Not just what He hasn’t done… but what He is. And it’s unlike anything the thief has ever encountered. Because this world runs on a very different system.
You hurt me—I hurt you back. You take from me—I take more from you. You disrespect me—I make sure you pay for it.
That’s how we operate. That’s what we understand. But this? This is something else entirely. This is mercy in its rawest form.
Not deserved. Not earned. Not requested. Given. Freely. And the thief is watching it unfold in real time.
Do you understand how jarring that must have been? Because everything in his life had taught him that power looks like control. That strength looks like dominance. That survival looks like taking what you can before someone else takes it from you. And yet here is a man—clearly powerful, clearly different—choosing not to retaliate. Choosing not to defend Himself. Choosing not to crush His enemies. Instead—He’s forgiving them. And that changes everything.
Because now the thief isn’t just seeing who Jesus is… he’s starting to understand why He’s there.
This isn’t weakness. This isn’t defeat. This is intentional. This is purpose. This is… sacrifice. And suddenly, the cross doesn’t look the same anymore.
It’s not just a place of punishment. It’s a place of exchange.
Where guilt meets innocence. Where hatred meets mercy. Where broken men hang next to a perfect Savior—and are given a chance they never deserved.
That’s what the thief is beginning to see. And it’s overwhelming.
Because if Jesus is willing to forgive them—the ones mocking Him… the ones crucifying Him… the ones who don’t even know what they’re doing—then what does that mean for him?
A thief. A criminal. A man who already admitted he deserves to be there.
Could that kind of mercy reach him, too? Could forgiveness extend that far? That’s the question hanging in the air. And it’s the same question that hangs in ours. Because we all have lines we draw.
People we think are too far gone. Mistakes we believe are too big. Failures we assume disqualify us.
We measure grace. We limit it. We decide who deserves it and who doesn’t. But the cross obliterates that system. Because the same Jesus who says, “Father, forgive them”—says it knowing exactly who “them” includes.
Not just the soldiers. Not just the crowd. Not just the religious leaders. All of us.
Every lie. Every selfish choice. Every moment we turned away when we knew better. Every time we chose ourselves over what was right. All of it.
And still—“Father, forgive them.”
That’s the clarity the thief is stepping into. Not just that he is guilty. Not just that Jesus is innocent. But that Jesus is merciful. And that mercy is bigger than he ever imagined.
Bigger than his past. Bigger than his crimes. Bigger than the cross he’s hanging on. And once you see that—once you really see it—you can’t go back.
Because now the question isn’t, “Do I deserve this?” He already knows the answer to that.
The question is: “Is His mercy enough?”
And the answer… is about to change everything.
If this moment is gripping you—if you want to see it unfold in full, to feel the weight of it the way this man did—I want you to experience the story for yourself.
Request your free watch kit and step into it here: ThatKEVINShow.com/Heaven
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