kept them from believing in jesus and crucified jesus
The Pharisees and the Sadducees.
The pharisees were people who enforced and taught the Jewish law, or the law of God. The problem with the pharisees were that they made up their own law that coincided with God's law, but these laws were their own interpretations of the Law, not the actual law itself.
The Sadducees opposed Jesus, they were the Temple , priestly group. He was also opposed by some of the Pharisees who were the faction which represented the Lay folk.
You might mean pharisees which is a social movement among Jewish people
Scribes, Pharisees, Romans and the people
The pharisees believed the messiah had not come.
The singular possessive form of "pharisee" is "pharisee's," and the plural form is "pharisees'."
Simply his enemies mostly the Jewish people,Pharisees and Sadducees had always scorn Jesus before his passion and after his death.
to prove he wasnt the son of god the savior of all people
The Pharisees believed in the oral tradition and strict adherence to religious laws, while the Sadducees only followed the written Torah and did not believe in the afterlife. The Pharisees were more popular among the common people, while the Sadducees were more aligned with the aristocracy.
Yes. The "Pharisees" is a term which actually refers to the Torah-Sages.
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.