No.
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.
The Bible does not say whether Jesus had met Barabbas. However, some believe that the story of the prisoner release was only symbolic, since there is no evidence that the Roman rulers of Judea ever followed this custom; in fact it would have been seen as a sign of weakness. Instead, they say that the name Barabbas means "son of the father", a parallel to Jesus, who was also the Son of the Father.Jewish tradition says that on the Day of Atonement, the Jews selected one of two sheep to be released, and killed the other sheep to atone for their sins. The story from Mark's Gospel so neatly fits this model, except that the author moved his version to the Passover and has the Jews release the wrong "son of the father". On this evidence, Barabbas did not really exist, and Jesus never met him.
chirst
There are plenty.
The bible does not mention exactly what Philip did as a profession.
Angle ABC?
Jenn Tisdale I know it I met her
No the bible does not give the correct age of Boaz.
Possibly, to practice their religion. And also, to convert those they met.
they met at the well
yes it is my friend got a youtube account and she met this guy and the guy brainwashed her and did very very bad things to her.
A:The similarity of the stories of Lazarus, Martha and Mary in Luke's Gospel and John's Gospel can lead the casual reader to believe that the same Lazarus died and was resurrected twice. The confusion can be cleared up by understanding that John's Gospel was actually inspired by Luke's Gospel. It can then be understood that the author of John took the story from Luke and reworked it, producing a completely different but parallel story about Lazarus. In Luke's Gospel, Martha and Mary are sisters and friends of Jesus, but are not related to Lazarus. Jesus tells a parable of Lazarus dying and going down to hell where he meets a rich man being punished for his sins. The rich man asks for Lazarus to be raised from the dead so that he can warn his friends of the fate that awaits them. This Lazarus was not intended to be understood as a real person.John's Gospel says that Lazarus was the brother of Jesus' very close friends, Martha and Mary. His exact cause of death was unimportant, because Jesus was to raise Lazarus from the dead after several days. Having been raised from the dead, Lazarus was still mortal and would die again one day. The gospel does not say anything about the final death of Lazarus, although it does say that the priests talked about having Lazarus killed (John 12:10).For theological reasons, the author of John wanted to make the resurrection of Lazarus the final trigger for the arrest of Jesus. He therefore moved the Cleansing of the Temple out of the way, to the beginning of his story, almost immediately after Jesus met John the Baptist. In John 12:19, the turning point is identified: "The Pharisees therefore said among themselves, Perceive ye how ye prevail nothing? behold, the world is gone after him.")
There was a "committee" that met and examined the books. The books had to meet certain criteria, such as have verified authorship, had to be accepted by the churches, had to agree with other books of the Bible.