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Barabbas
According to the gospels, it was customary for the Romans to release a Jewish prisoner during the Passover festival.
The Roman governor Pontius Pilate tried to use this custom as an excuse to release Jesus.
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Thus Barabbas was released, and Jesus was crucified.
In books and movies, Barabbas is usually depicted as an evil criminal. But he may have actually been a freedom fighter in the Jewish resistance to the Romans.
Evidence for this can be found at Mark 15:7, which says that he was in prison because he had taken part in a recent uprising.
In fact, some biblical scholars think that he was an important rebel leader.
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But Jesus was also very popular with the common people.
When he entered Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, he was greeted by large excited crowds.
Many people believed that he was the long-awaited Messiah, who with God's help would overthrow all oppressive rulers and establish a new eternal Kingdom of God.
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The likely explanation is that the crowd was dominated by employees of the Jewish religious authorities.
Their servants and henchmen would have been in the courtyard, and probably composed a significant part of the gathering there.
Also, because Jesus was arrested late at night and brought before Pilate early the next morning, most of his followers probably didn't know where he was, or what was happening to him.
And his closest followers had apparently gone into hiding out of fear of arrest.
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This explanation is supported by Mark 15:11, which says that the "chief priests stirred up the crowd to have Pilate release Barabbas instead."
But why did the Jewish leaders want Jesus to die instead of Barabbas?
The answer is that many of the common people believed that Jesus was the Messiah, and this made him a threat to their authority.
The Mystery of Barabbas
The so-called "mystery of Barabbas" refers to some puzzling similarities between the released prisoner and Jesus himself.
The most striking similarity concerns their names. Some ancient Syriac copies of Matthew,
and a few other ancient sources, call the freed prisoner "Jesus bar Abbas".
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The name Barabbas can be obtained from this by dropping the name "Jesus" and changing "bar Abbas" to "Barabbas".
Furthermore, the phrase "bar Abbas" can be translated as "son of the Father," which could possibly be applied to Jesus himself, since he sometimes used the word "Abba" (father) in referring to God.
From this evidence, many scholars have concluded that Barabbas' original name was "Jesus bar Abbas".
Other evidence indicates that this name was intentionally altered by later Christian writers.
One well-documented case involves the scholar Origen, who reportedly promoted the change for reverential reasons, because he didn't want the name "Jesus" to be associated with a criminal.
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But from the viewpoint of the Romans, Jesus could have also appeared to be a rebel leader.
Many people were calling him the Messiah, a title which implied that he would overthrow the existing government.
He had a large number of followers, many of whom might be easily swayed into taking part in a revolt.
In fact, his earlier attack on the temple merchants could be regarded as a "mini-revolt".
Thus, both men may have had the same name, and both of them could have appeared to be rebel leaders, at least from the Romans' viewpoint.
These similarities are known as the "mystery of Barabbas".
Some people think that the similarities are too close to be accidental and have looked for another way to explain them.
According to one radical theory, in the original story Jesus himself was the imprisoned rebel leader, and Barabbas is an invented "fictional duplicate" inserted into the story to play that role instead.
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But this theory is mostly speculation, and its supporters have to resort to questionable arguments to explain the details. For these reasons, most scholars are unconvinced.
In fact, Jesus was a common name in ancient Palestine, and uprisings against the Romans took place quite frequently.
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Note: The gospels don't say what Barabbas did after he was released. But other ancient sources do preserve some traditions about him. According to one tradition, on the day he was released he went to Golgotha and watched Jesus die on the cross. Some sources also say that he was later killed while taking part in another revolt against the Romans.
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