A little while ago I wrote about St. Dismas, the “Good Thief.” This is another post on him, as part of my promise to him to help spread his devotion.
So I took a look around the Internet and found this bit of history of him, along with a “Good Thief Prayer.”
There is even more information on St. Dismas over at Pray More Novenas: Novena to St. Dismas.
While looking up stuff, I found that I had written about him way back in the early days of this blog. Take a look at “Remember Me…”
As I find more stuff on the Good Thief, I’ll post more; if he interests you, bookmark the St. Dismas Post Archives.
Why should I write about him? Like I said in the post linked to in the first sentence:
I think St. Dismas would be a great saint for us alcoholics and addicts to know. He left behind no writings and nothing for certain is known about him apart from the Gospel accounts. But, he was a ‘last minute,’ ‘deathbed’ conversion. And he led a life of sin, some say he was a robber, others a revolutionary. These do not contradict each other; revolutionaries often commit crimes to serve the rebel cause. But the point I am trying to make is that at the very end, when he was facing eternity, he grasped salvation from the lips of the Saviour. There is hope for everyone. Maybe pray to St. Dismas for the conversion of another whom you feel may have too ‘hard a heart’ to convert? Many prisoners in jail are alcoholics and addicts. Conversion is difficult in that environment; perhaps St. Dismas can do what others cannot.
His feast day is March 25, the traditional date for the Crucifixion.
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