They had him put to death for many reasons. Fear was part of it. Jesus was looked at as an instigator and provocateur and the Pharisees were afraid that he (Jesus) would eventually bring the wrath of the Roman Empire down on them.
i remember the roman king was jealous of Jesus and he (Jesus) was taking his followers so the king got mad and jealous
Jesus taught the Pharisees there but they seldom agreed with him, in fact they took council to kill him.
It was the Pharisees who accused Jesus of healing people on the sabbath, as they were very strict about it.
The responses were fear, praise and fame first in Luke 7.16,17 when he raised the young man at Nain. When Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, (John 11), the responses were, faith in Jesus from those who believed in him and anger at Jesus and a desire to kill him and Lazarus from the Pharisees.
The Pharisees (religious leaders of the Jews at the time) did not like Jesus for many reasons:They thought that what he was saying was blasphemousThey were scared that he would start a rebellion against the Romans (If the Jewish people rebelled, the Romans would blame the Pharisees for the uprising and kill them)
Jesus was very popular among the people. He healed the sick and preached to them about God. However, the Pharisees (important people in the Jewish religion) were very upset because of how much attention He was getting. They were jealous and wanted to kill Him. They accused Him of crimes He did not commit and eventually killed His physical body, but He was never dead. He rose again in 3 days.
"At the same time, a Jew (the author) reading the Gospels is immediately aware of aspects which do not seem authentic; for example, the accounts of Pharisees wanting to kill Jesus because he healed on the Sabbath. The Pharisees never included healing in their list of activities forbidden on the Sabbath; and Jesus's methods of healing did not involve any of the activities that were forbidden. It is unlikely that they would have disapproved, even mildly, of Jesus's Sabbath-healing. Moreover, the picture of bloodthirsty, murderous Pharisees given in the Gospels contradicts everything known about them from Josephus, from their own writings, and from the Judaism, still living today, which they created. ... "... Jesus and the Jewish Resistance by; Hyam Maccoby
The Pharisees and Jesus often clashed-yet they had much in common theologically, and Jesus had many non adversarial contacts with them. At the same time, Jesus rejected the validity of the oral laws of the Pharisees and also their emphasis on ritual purity that made the Pharisees refuse any contact with "sinners." Jesus came with the invitation to all people to enter the kingdom of God, while the Pharisees in effect disinvited all who did not live by the same standards as they. It was especially this exclusivism that Jesus objected to in the Pharisees; by using only standards of external behavior to measure people's relationship with God, they failed to realize that it is what is inside a person that counts, and that they therefore needed God's grace as much as the worst sinner. And it was this external religion that made it very difficult for them to believe in Jesus who did not do all the things the Pharisees felt a religious person should do. Jesus' work stirred up very great hatred in the Pharisees. They said that Jesus was in league with Satan. Despite the problems Jesus had with the Pharisee, it was the Sanhedrin who formally challenged Jesus' authority in the court of the temple (Matthew 11:27-33; Matthew 21:23-27) which later lead to the chief priests and elders of the Jews to plot to seize Jesus in secret and to kill him (Mark 14:1-2, Matthew 26:1-5, Luke 22:1-2).
The Romans Killed Jesus because Pilate feared an uprising spurred by the Jewish Pharisees. Killing Jesus, as the Pharisees demanded was a small price to pay for political stability. As they were heathens, they did not recognise God, and had no idea that a religious movement would be born from their actions. The Roman Empire would not have a Christian Emperor for another 300 years.
It was noted as being the home [house] of the Jewish god. It was destroyed forever shortly after the scribes and pharisees of of the landpersuaded the Romans to kill Jesus who was the Christ or if you prefer the Jewish title - Messiah.
because they were jealous of him and he called himself king of the jews so the king did not want another king
The pharisees were often conspiring to kill Jesus, so there could be no amicable relationship. In fact Jesus called them a 'generation of vipers'. (Matthew 3.7)