MEDITATIONS FOR
LENT
By St.
Thomas Aquinas
First Thursday
IT WAS FITTING THAT CHRIST SHOULD BE CRUCIFIED WITH THE THIEVES
Christ was
crucified between the thieves because such was the will of the Jews, and also
because this was part of God s design. But the reasons why this was appointed
were not the same in each of these cases.
1. As far as the Jews were concerned Our Lord was crucified with the
thieves on either side to encourage the suspicion that he too was a criminal.
But it fell out otherwise. The thieves themselves have left not a trace in the
remembrance of man, while His cross is everywhere held in honour. Kings laying
aside their crowns have broidered the cross on their royal robes. They have
placed it on their crowns; on their arms. It has its place on the very altars.
Everywhere, throughout the world, we behold the splendour of the cross. In God's plan Christ was crucified with the thieves in order that, as for our sakes he
became accursed of the cross, so, for our salvation, he is crucified like an
evil thing among evil things.
2. The Pope, St. Leo the Great, says that the thieves were crucified, one
on either side of him, so that in the very appearance of the scene of his suffering
there might be set forth that distinction which should be made in the judgment
of each one of us. St. Augustine has the same thought. The cross itself,
he says, was a tribunal. In the centre
was the judge. To the one side a man who believed and was set free, to
the other side a scoffer and he was condemned. Already there was made clear the
final fate of the living and the dead, the one class placed at his right, the other on his
left.
3. According to St. Hilary the two thieves, placed to right and to left,
typify that the whole of mankind is called to the mystery of Our Lord’s
Passion. And since division of things according to right and left is made with
reference to believers and those who will not believe, one of the two, placed
on the right, is saved by justifying faith.
4. As St. Bede
says, the thieves who were crucified with Our Lord, represent those who for the
faith and to confess Christ undergo the agony of martyrdom or the severe
discipline of a more perfect life. Those who do this for the sake of eternal
glory are typified by the thief on the right hand. Those whose motive is the
admiration of whoever beholds them imitate the spirit and the act of the thief
on the left-hand side.
As Christ owed no debt in payment for
which a man must die, but submitted to death of his own will, in order to
overcome death, so also he had not done anything on account of which he
deserved to be put with the thieves. But of his own will he chose to be
reckoned among the wicked, that by his power he might destroy wickedness
itself. Which is why St. John Chrysostom says that to convert the thief on the
cross and to turn him to Paradise was as great a miracle as the earthquake.
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