The Pharisees believed in the letter of the law. Jesus believed in the spirit of the law.
The pharisees believed the messiah had not come.
They would have said shame and moved onto their next victim!
The pharisee named in the Gospels who was saved was Nicodemus, who came to see Jesus in the night for fear of the other pharisees:-John 31 There was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews:John 750 Nicodemus saith unto them, (he that came to Jesus by night, being one of them,)John 1939 And there came also Nicodemus, which at the first came to Jesus by night, and brought a mixture of myrrh and aloes, about an hundred pound weight.and after the Resurrection some Pharisees repented and believed:-Acts 155 But there rose up certain of the sect of the Pharisees which believed, saying, That it was needful to circumcise them, and to command them to keep the law of Moses.However, don't forget the ex-Pharisee Saul/Paul.
the Pharisees did not believe in the resurrection of Jesus then or now. The Jews(Israelites) are still looking for HIS comming. ANSWER: Yes, many Pharisees believed in the resurrection of Jesus. In fact, the the New Testament records a higer percentage of Pharisaic believers than any other 1st century Jewish sect. Paul and Nicodemus where Pharisees. Also the Jerusalem council in Acts makes mention of Pharisees that believed. The Old Testament says;; "They are dead, they shall not live; they are deceased they shall not rise." Isaiah 26:4. In the First Century BC, there were debates between the Pharisees who believed in the future Resurrection, and the Sadducees who did not. The Sadducees, politically powerful religious leaders, took a literal view of the Torah, rejecting the Pharisees' oral law, afterlife, angels, and demons.[2] The Pharisees, whose views became Rabbinic Judaism, eventually won (or at least survived) this debate. Source;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resurrection
It is typically believed that Satan was defeated for all time when Jesus was resurrected.
In the Gospel of Luke, 13 - 53, two disciples of Jesus met, spoke and ate with him after his crucifixion and resurrection, then told others about the event. Jesus' followers believed the witnesses and so more readily believe in the resurrection themselves.
AnswerNo. The ancient Jews had several beliefs, but most common was the idea of 'heaven' being called 'Abraham's Bosom' (the place where Abraham, their nation's founder went after death). Others believed in the living after death through ones' descendents and so childbirth was important to the Jew - so important that it was law that if a man died childless then his brothers, if he had any, would have to father a child with his widow to ensure his life and his line continued. Resurrection, however, was believed by some. The Pharisees believed in resurrection but the Sadducees did not - hence the aggressive questioning of Jesus about his own predicted resurrection. And also, this helped in the conversion of Paul - a Pharisee - when he met the resurrected Christ on the damascus Road.
The Pharisees that believed the Torah and the Prophets had no problem...see Acts 5 Gamaliel
Yes, although not one of the 14 stations, the resurrection is added at the end as a fifteenth station, except on Good Friday. Jesus death means nothing without the resurrection.
Jesus appears to have felt considerable kinship with the Pharisees. He spent long hours in synagogues that were dominated by Pharisees, ate meals with Pharisees, and visited Pharisees in their homes. His arguments with Pharisees make up a significant part of the Gospels. The record of Jesus' arguments with the Pharisees in the Gospels and the record of arguments among the Pharisees in the Talmud suggest that Jesus's style of argument, vehemence and occasional name calling (hypocrites!) were typical Phariseeic behavior. It is quite likely that many Pharisees during Jesus' lifetime considered him to be a Pharisee. Most of what Jesus taught in the Gospels is in accordance with the teachings of the school of Rabbi Hillel -- the more humanist and less legalist school of Phariseeic thought.
They were jealous that Jesus spent time with the ordinary people. The scribes and Pharisees thought they were the spiritual people of that time. Again and again Jesus showed them that they were far from the truth. So they criticized Him and eventually had Jesus killed. But that was all part of God's plan.