So, the thief had a chance to offer up an animal sacrifice for his thievery before being nailing the sins of theft to that cross? Some might say that the sacrifices were not limited to past sins, and yet they had to dip their hand in the blood of another lamb, and lay it upon another that was sent out into the wilderness, declaring their sins upon that lamb.
That gives ample evidence to it pointing to the future Messiah...always to Him, whose death is retroactive toward past and future.
So, given that the relevancy, time wise, of animal sacrifices are a matter of speculation since we can't really trust rabbinic traditions and teachings on account of how much they added to Torah, I still don't buy it that the thief was covered strictly by sacrifices he may not have ever offered up so far as we know. We don't even really know if the thieves were Jews or Greeks. Some may say that Greeks were treated differently in that system of justice, but without having lived in that Era to glean every specific of cultural justice, im not sure anyone can say for sure either way. I'd have to do some in-depth study of what's available to us.
MM
That gives ample evidence to it pointing to the future Messiah...always to Him, whose death is retroactive toward past and future.
So, given that the relevancy, time wise, of animal sacrifices are a matter of speculation since we can't really trust rabbinic traditions and teachings on account of how much they added to Torah, I still don't buy it that the thief was covered strictly by sacrifices he may not have ever offered up so far as we know. We don't even really know if the thieves were Jews or Greeks. Some may say that Greeks were treated differently in that system of justice, but without having lived in that Era to glean every specific of cultural justice, im not sure anyone can say for sure either way. I'd have to do some in-depth study of what's available to us.
MM