Quote:
Originally Posted by BrotherEastman
Okay Carl, I'm sorry but that really to me did not make much sense. Why would Jesus say Today which was the same day that he and the thief died would go into paradise. Also II Corinthians 5:8 states to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord. Maybe that is why I am having a hard time with your explanations.
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BrotherEastman, I am somewhat amazed that you (apparently) fail to recognize the "esoteric" nature of our Lord's statement to the thief on the cross, saying, "Today shalt thou be with me in paradise" (
Luke 23:43).
I think the most important thing to first determine in attempting to grasp the significance and understanding of our Lord's words, is "who" it is that is speaking; that is, the Spirit or the man Christ Jesus.
If it be the latter then I'm of the same opinion as Carl. On that day in which both He and the thief experienced death by crucifixion, neither of them went to paradise, that is, the holy city of God located in the invisible heavens. However, if it were the former (which, BTW I believe to be the case), then our Lord's statement is an example whereby "... God, who quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they were" (
Romans 4:17).
If the former was the case, and "... one day is with the Lord as a thousand years" (
II Peter 3:8), then the word "today" meant that both our Lord and the repentant thief would indeed be in paradise at some point within the 1,000 year period in which our Lord uttered the statement regarding their mutually assured destiny.
In other words, in this case our Lord's statement to the thief represents an example of the manner in which God "conceals (the truth about) a matter" (
Proverbs 25:2), and expects that we are to search out its proper meaning. Therefore I agree with Carl's observation, albeit he perhaps did not provide a full or satisfactory explanation (I beg Carl's forgiveness if I am amiss in this).
Oft-times a cursory reading of a scriptural passage causes one to either fail to grasp what is being expressed, or neglecting to compare its contents to other associated passages, its "deeper" message is missed or overlooked. I think this is the case with many when reading our Lord's response to the thief's repentance on that momentous occasion.
My thoughts about the matter tendered for your consideration of its merits.