Barabbas is the correct spelling for the name of a person, such as the one in The Bible.
Most Christians pronounce Barabbas slurred together with the emphasis on the first syllable, BARE-abbes.
If you know some Hebrew, the problem is far harder. The bar prefix on a name means "son of". So we have the two word patronymic name "bar Abbas," the son of someone named Abbas. But the s ending probably came in transliteration to Greek, so the name was probably "bar ABBA." That, however, is an odd name because Abba in Aramaic means the Father, so his name meant "son of the the father." This suggests that the name could have been a pseudonym, assumed when he became a zealot, or perhaps the name is a literary invention of the writer of the now-lost Aramaic source material on which the Gospels were based intended to convey the notion that Barabas was symbolically an everyman.
Now Barabbas was created in 1949.
Barabbas - novel - was created in 1950.
Barabbas - novel - has 144 pages.
Give Us Barabbas was created in 2004.
There is no record in the Bible of Jesus saying anything to Barabbas.
Barabbas - 1964 TV is rated/received certificates of: Belgium:KT
There are differing accounts regarding the death of Barabbas, a figure mentioned in the New Testament. Some believe he may have died in prison after being released by Pontius Pilate, while others suggest he may have been involved in subsequent uprisings against Roman rule and could have been executed for those actions. The exact details of his death remain uncertain.
Barabbas - 1953 is rated/received certificates of: Finland:K-16 Sweden:15
Now Barabbas - 1949 is rated/received certificates of: UK:A (original rating)
Pilate was the Roman governor of Judea at the time of Jesus' ministry and Barabbas was a convicted murder. Pilate offered to release either Jesus or Barabbas assuming the crowd would respond reasonably and ask for Jesus' release. The mob chose Barabbas, and they called for Jesus to be crucified (Luke 23).
the book of genesisAnswer:All four(4) Gospels mention Barabbas - Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
No, there is no account in the Bible where Barabbas and Lazarus met. Barabbas is mentioned in relation to Jesus's crucifixion and release, while Lazarus is mentioned in the story of his resurrection by Jesus. Their stories are separate and there is no mention of them meeting.