The Story of the Good Thief You've NEVER HEARD | Mthr Natalia

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Published 2024-04-28
Mother Natalia tells two stories of (lowercase /t/) tradition. Then she gives us insight into what they can teach us in our our lives.

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All Comments (21)
  • @DominicMazoch
    The Eastern Rites have stories we need to hear in the West.
  • @GaelicGlory
    Please don't stop making these, Mother Natalia, you have much wisdom to share :)
  • @alphacause
    One of the things I love about Mother Natalia's weekly presentations is the unique spin she puts on very familiar Biblical passages. We have been exposed to these passages so often, and heard homily after homily on them that we often grow numb to the notion that there may be alternate ways to look at these passages that further illuminate truths about the human condition as it relates to God. Thank you, Mother Natalia, for shedding new light on well known Biblical stories, whose meaning we often take for granted.
  • I will never read the Gospel of St Mark the same again. This is the first time I have listened to Mother Natalia and I am touched beyond words. Her telling of the story of the "good thief" brought me to the shedding of many tears of love, hope and peace. I so often feel inadequate before the Lord Jesus Christ. I deeply appreciate Mother Natalia's take on the true stories of the Bible and I plan to listen to all of her videos. Thank you, so much!
  • @cinemadolce
    That tradition about ā€œpotentiallyā€ Mark was beautiful. I really like that story. I know itā€™s partly speculativeā€¦ but it feels like it has an air of truth. šŸ˜Š
  • I love you Jesus! Iā€™m so sorry for what Iā€™ve done and how Iā€™ve lived. I hate my own wretchedness and I hope that you will forgive me for the evil that Iā€™ve done.
  • Raymond Arroyo wrote a childrenā€™s picture book about this legend. it is called ā€œthe thief that stole heavenā€. That is, if this is what youā€™re talking about
  • @ianp7383
    I remember reading a story about Jesus and the good thief meeting as children when I was littleā€¦ canā€™t wait to watch to see if thatā€™s it!
  • @btsnoona_
    It's my understanding that Dismas was the first Saint. As a Ruthenian who grew up in a Melkite church I have been taught this tradition my whole life. Thanks for sharing it!
  • @Fin_Stryker
    Yes, Mark is not only the Author of this Gospel but the Richman himself. Just as John's Gospel who reflected his own as being loved from Amongst the 12. And yeah, that anonymous young man in the night of betrayal, was no other than the author of the Gospel himself who for the last moment sacrificed to offer the only thing (linen) that is left of him after giving up everything (his wealth) except the fine linen, but now he gave up, even his last fancy to offer it to the Sorrowful Passion of his LORD.
  • @linaspinel6402
    Blessed Catherine Emmerich saw in vision what is somewhat related in this story, it is in her book about the life of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Emmerich describes Dismas was the child of the Thief described in this story and he was cured from a disease when summerged in the water with which our blessed Mother had bathed baby Jesus.
  • @Ames_Mo93
    That story about the Christ Child and Dismas was beautiful. I really enjoy it when I see videos uploaded with Mother Natalia šŸ’™šŸ™
  • @pielisse007
    This is so beautiful! And even if the story itself is not necessarily historical, it's a historical tradition - midrash is the Jewish exegesis of scripture, and often includes additional "extra-scriptural" stories about the events that are contained in Scripture, that help interpret the text and understand it better. Stories like these that Mthr. Natalia has so graciously told us today, and stories like Veronica wiping the face of Christ in the Stations of the Cross, and other stories of this nature are, in my opinion, a beautiful continuation of the midrash tradition but in an authentically Catholic way. These stories teach us how to love Christ more and how to be more Christlike. He is risen, let us rejoice!
  • @paulking8491
    St Dismas is my patron Saint but I have never heard this story. Thank you for sharing.
  • @Olivier1
    These stories are so beautiful. It would be such a wonderful surprise if one day Jesus reveals the hidden parts of his life. Thanks for sharing, Mother Nathalia
  • @thomasjorge4734
    Thank you Mother, for that very beautiful interpretation of the Rich Young Man being John Mark and loosing ALL his posessions fleeing from Gethsamane and the Hopeful Dismas story.
  • @Saint_nobody
    It is not enough to be loved. I often mistake platonic for romantic and overplay my hand to those who only want to be my friend... pray for me.
  • @AJKPenguin
    I recall a tradition that St. Dismus, the Good & Wise Thief, first encountered Christ either when the Holy Family fled to Egypt or on the return home. He and his band of robbers were going to jump the Holy Family. . .mind you they had some treasures from the Magi. . .but he hesitated and called off the sting. It has similar storylines to this beautiful story.
  • @mlh333
    Thank you for sharing this profoundly inspirational story of St. Mark and the Good Thief! It's too beautiful not to be true!
  • @gsideforlife
    Thank you for sharing. The story of the rich young man has a place in my heart and this interpretation is a blessing. I've also always wondered about that verse about the young man who ran away without his linen cloth. ā¤ We belong to each other and are meant to lift up one another.