The pharisees weren't real christians. They were just pretending. Jesus saw through their deciet and called them out on it. Therfore the pharisees hated Jesus. the disciples were Jesus's close followers so they hated them too.
Hope this helps!
According to the pharisees the disciples did wrong by eating on a Sabbath day. The story is recorded in the book of Mathew.
Mostly Jesus and the disciples......a few times Satan was in it and the Pharisees.
The pharisees believed the messiah had not come.
Nicodemus was a Pharisee. While not a disciple, the Apostle Paul was also once a Pharisee.
None of the 12 disciples, as far as we know, were pharisees. However, the apostle Paul, the writer of most of the New Testament letters, was a Pharisee before his dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus. He was tutored in Jewish Law by the rabbi known as Gamaliel, and an expert in Jewish Law.
Depends on which historical period: The Forefathers and their disciples The Prophets and their disciples (and much of the general populace of Israel) The Torah-sages ("Pharisees"), their disciples, and much of the populace of Judea The Rabbis, their students and followers, and much of the Jewish people Orthodox Jews
The Indians
yes the lord instructed his disciples not to pray like the pharisees who prayed to be seen. But gave them the Lord prayer as an example.
He taught that we should repent of our sins. He also said that the Pharisees were wrong in what they thought.
There is no mention of any prohibition on Pharisees having children. In fact, according to the teachings of the Tanach (Jewish Bible), men are incomplete if they remain unmarried and without children. As Torah observant Jews, the Pharisees most definitely would have had children. The proof of this is that the Pharisees are the ancestors of modern Judaism.
Chapter 8 covers Christ's miracles in the feeding of four thousand, refusing to give the Pharisees a sign from heaven, warning the disciples to beware of the Pharisees, giving sight to a blind man, Peter's confession of him, and warning the disciples of his approaching sufferings which would also extend to them. All of this points to Jesus as Messiah, with the power of God. It also makes clear the hypocrisy of the religious leaders of the day.
I believe they were of the middle class; they were slightly lower on the priestly hierachy than the Sadducees, who were of the upper class. The Scribes and the Pharisees were both middle-class, according to my notes.