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Gestas : ウィキペディア英語版
Impenitent thief

The impenitent thief is a character described in the New Testament account of the Crucifixion of Jesus. In the Gospel narrative, two bandits are crucified alongside Jesus. In the earliest accounts, they join the crowd in mocking him. In the version of the Gospel of Luke, however, one taunts Jesus about not saving himself, while the other (known as the penitent thief) asks for mercy.
In apocryphal writings, the impenitent thief is given the name Gestas, which first appears in the Gospel of Nicodemus, while his companion is called Dismas. Pious folk beliefs later embellished that Gestas was on the cross to the left of Jesus and Dismas was on the cross to the right of Jesus. In Jacobus de Voragine's "Golden Legend", the name of the impenitent thief is given as Gesmas. The impenitent thief is sometimes referred to as the "bad thief" in contrast to the good thief.
The apocryphal Arabic Infancy Gospel refers to Gestas and Dismas as Dumachus and Titus, respectively. According to tradition - seen, for instance, in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's ''The Golden Legend''〔(The Golden Legend. )〕 - Dumachus was one of a band of robbers who attacked Saint Joseph and the Holy Family on their Flight into Egypt.
==New Testament narrative==
The earliest version of the story is considered to be that in the Gospel of Mark, usually dated to around 70 CE. The author says that two bandits were crucified with Jesus, one on each side of him. The passers by and chief priests mock Jesus for claiming to be the Messiah and yet being unable to save himself, and the two crucified with him join in. () Some texts include a reference to the Book of Isaiah, citing this as a fulfilment of prophecy (: "And he ... was numbered among the transgressors"). The Gospel of Matthew, written around the year 85 or 90, repeats the same details. ()
In the Gospel of Luke version however, from around the year 90, the details are varied: one of the bandits rebukes the other for mocking Jesus, and asks Jesus to remember him "when you come into your kingdom". Jesus replies by promising him that he would be with him the same day in Paradise. () Tradition has given this bandit the name of the penitent thief, and the other the impenitent thief.
The Gospel of John, thought to be written about 90-100 CE, also says that Jesus was crucified with two others, but in this account they are not described and they do not speak. ()

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Impenitent thief」の詳細全文を読む



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