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Judaism does not recognize Jesus as the Messiah - it would cease to exist as a religion if it did and would then be part of Christianity. Individual Jews sometimes do accept Jesus as the Messiah and become Christians.

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13y ago
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8y ago

Recognize is a confusing word.

If the question is asking whether when Jews see a picture of Jesus, they know who it is, as opposed to thinking its some random shepherd, yes, Jews do not live in a bubble; they can recognize an image of Jesus.

If the question is asking whether or not Jews accept the validity of the Christian claims about Jesus, such as his being the "Son of God" or the "Messiah" or that worshiping him will achieve salvation, no, Jews reject these claims.

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7y ago

As messiah? No. As more than human? No.


Judaism says very little about Jesus. According to our tradition, the vast majority of the Jews at the time didn't hear of him. The Torah-sages (Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai, Rabbi Yonatan ben Uziel, Chanina ben Dosa, Bava ben Buta, Shimon ben Hillel, Rabbi Eliezer, Rabbi Yehoshua, Rabbi Akiva, and hundreds of others) were active at that time and their yeshivot (Torah-academies) were flourishing. Their tens of thousands of disciples and hundreds of thousands of sympathizers were active in the Jewish world in that generation; they were the leaders and the forefront of Judaism. As Josephus (Antiquities book 18) writes, "the cities give great attestations to them." The great majority of Jews loved their sages and their Torah.
The unlearned class of the Amei-haaretz (ignoramuses) was a small fringe of society, but even they would and did lay down their lives in order not to violate anything of the Torah. As one ancient historian famously wrote:
Hecateus declares again, "what regard we [Jews] have for our laws; and we resolve to endure anything rather than transgress them." And he adds: "They [Jews] may be stripped on this account, and have torments inflicted upon them, and be brought to the most terrible kinds of death, but they meet these tortures after an extraordinary manner, beyond all other people, and will not renounce the religion of their forefathers."


No one (even any of them who did hear of Jesus) - would have given any consideration to what was and is considered unacceptable for us. The few who came in contact with him soon lost interest, and the early Christians felt the need to turn to non-Jewish centers of population in order to gain adherents, while the Jews remained Jews.


In Judaism, Jesus was a regular human being who lived in olden times, and is not part of Jewish religious belief.
See: What do Jews believe about God?

We may also note that according to our tradition, prophecy ceased about 340 years before the birth of Jesus; and public miracles stopped even earlier.


Here is a related topic:
The word "messiah" is the transliterated form of the Hebrew "moshiach." The word moshiach means "anointed." The title of moshiach was given to any person who was appropriately anointed with oil as part of their initiation to their service of God. We have had a number of meshichim (plural) in the form of kings and priests. There need be nothing supernatural about a moshiach.
This being said, there is a prophecy of a future moshiach. However, this is a relatively minor topic in Judaism and the Tanakh.
The Jewish requirements of the messiah have not yet been fulfilled. They are:
* Build the Third Temple (Ezekiel 37:26-28).
* Gather all Jews back to the Land of Israel (Isaiah 43:5-6).
* Usher in an era of world peace, and end all hatred and oppression. "Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, nor shall they learn war any more" (Isaiah 2:4).
* Spread universal knowledge of the God of Israel, which will unite humanity as one. "God will be King over all the world. On that day, God will be One and His Name will be One" (Zechariah 14:9).
* The messiah must be descended on his father's side from King David (Genesis 49:10 and Isaiah 11:1).
* The messiah will lead the Jewish people to full Torah-observance. The Torah states that all of its mitzvot (commands) remain binding forever.

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Q: Do Jews recognize Jesus
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Related questions

How did Jewish people view Jesus?

The Jews do not recognize Jesus as the Messiah.


Does the Jewish religion regard as Jesus of nazareth as the messiah?

The Jews do not recognize Jesus of Nazareth as the Messiah, they are still waiting for the Messiah to come.


Who did not recognize that Jesus was supernatural?

Mot a super power but the Jews and Pharisees failed to recognize that Jesus was a son of God , they refused to believe what the prophets had foretold concerning him. Tjhey are still waiting for their Messiah to come to the earth.


Have the Jews ever said sorry for the Crucifying of Jesus?

It was not the Jews that crucified Jesus ,it was the Romans,because Jesus was a Jew.


When will the Jews recognize Jesus as a Messiah as were forced by law to recognize them as gods supposed children?

The Jews were never forced to recognise that Jesus was the Messiah. Even though their own prophets prophesied this, only a few, like the disciples believed it. But there will be a time in the end of the age, a time known only to God, where all Israel shall be saved and recognise Jesus as the Messiah.' ('Romans 11.25-27)


Why would one say Jews are apathetic towards the birth of Christ?

Jews do not recognize Jesus as the Messiah as Christians do.


When was Jews for Jesus created?

Jews for Jesus was created in 1973.


Did Mary Magdelene recognize Jesus at first?

In some Gospel accounts, Mary Magdalene initially did not recognize Jesus after his resurrection. It was only after Jesus spoke to her that she recognized him.


How are Jews related to Jesus?

Jesus was not Jewish


Why didn't the Jews recognize Jesus?

Many DID recognize and accept Him, but the majority were expecting a Messiah who would literally fulfil the prophecies. Jesus didn't sit on the throne of David or carry a sword, etc. The Messiah was also supposed to come from an unknown place (figuratively understood to be heaven), but it was said: "How could anything good come from Nazareth?"


Why did Jesus lead the Jews to freedom?

Jesus did not lead the Jews to freedom. The Romans went on to destroy the Holy Temple and expel the Jews from the land.


Did Jesus change when he resurected?

Jesus was in the spiritual form. That was why most people did not recognize him.