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| Saint Dismas | |
|---|---|
| Confessor | |
| Born | ? |
| Died | ca. AD 33, Golgotha Hill outside Jerusalem |
| Venerated in | All Christianity |
| Feast | March 25 |
| Attributes | Cross |
| Patronage | Criminals, prisoners, undertakers |
Saint Dismas (sometimes spelled Dysmas) is the apocryphal name given to one of the thieves who was crucified alongside Christ according to the Gospel of Luke 23:39-43:
The thief who challenged Jesus to free Himself from the Cross was not saved; the thief who asked to be remembered in Christ's kingdom was St Dismas, according to the legend.
The name of "Dismas" for this person, unnamed in the canonical Gospel itself, appears first in the twelfth century in the Gospel of Nicodemus. The other thief's name is given as Gestas. The name of "Dismas" was adapted from a Greek word meaning "sunset" or "death." The names themselves were popularized through an apocryphal Infancy Gospel, which adds a fanciful tale about how Dismas prevented other thieves in his company from robbing Mary and Joseph on their flight into Egypt.
In medieval art, St Dismas is often depicted as accompanying Jesus in the Harrowing of Hell as related in the Apostles' Creed