Most of what Jesus taught was entirely consistent with Jewish tradition, and particularly, consistent with the more liberal of the two dominant streams within the Pharisees. The Pharisees at the time were divided between the school of Rabbi Hillel, which took a generally lenient and humanistic stand on issues, and the school of Rabbi Shamai, which took a strict legalistic stand. By the end of the first century, it was clear that Hillel's disciples had won, so the teachings of Jesus were largely on the winning side.
Also, Jesus' teaching methods were typically Phariseeic. The Pharisees frequently taught using parables, a parable is a mashal in Hebrew, plural mashalim). There are lots of parables in the Talmud, and even one of them that shows up both in the Jerusalem Talmud and the New Testament -- the parable of the Laborers in the Vinyard.
Finally, Jesus taught largely about Jewish law, focusing on how to obey the laws in the Torah.
I (sadly) don't know, I have to answer this question for homework. :(
Jesus was a Jew and was brought up with Jewish teaching. As the son of God, He had perfect knowledge of the teachings, having instituted them and the race as His chosen people. Jesus objected, however, to the legalistic additions that had been made to the original laws by some Jews.
Jesus was not Jewish
Jesus was born to a Jewish family .But he taught about God.
Yes he did follow the laws, customs and traditions of the Jewish, and he did so through his life.
Neither Jesus nor his disciples ever quoted oral Jewish tradition to support their teachings but, rather, appealed to the written Word of God. (Matthew 4:4-10; Romans 15:4; 2 Timothy 3:15-17)
I (sadly) don't know, I have to answer this question for homework. :(
heresy
Circumcision, Dietary Laws, Temple.
Jesus did not have a blood relation to Matthew. They were both Jewish, that's it.
the closest you can come there is when he was baptised by John the Baptist. Keep in mind of coarse that Jesus was Jewish an had also gone through all the rituals and traditions of the Jewish faith.
According to the New Testament, Jesus was Jewish, and virtually all of his teachings are distortions of things from the Torah.