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There is no historical reference, anywhere, to the death of Jesus. Jews simply accept that, in the absence of alternative explanations, Jesus probably died much as is described in the gospels.
Nobody. He was not well-known in his time (most historians of the time don't mention him); and he plays no part in Judaism.
No. Jesus was alive over 2,000 years ago. Hitler was alive in the 1920's-1945. Thousands of years apart in the time line of history. Neither lived when the other was alive. So, it is impossible for Hitler to have killed Jesus unless he owned a time machine.
The Jews do not recognize Jesus as the Messiah.
According to Judaism, yes. Jesus died somewhere between 30-35 CE. The Temple continued operating until 70 CE when it was destroyed. That makes a minimum of 35 years where Jewish sacrifices were accepted by God after Jesus' death.According to Christianity, the Christ was the final and perfect sacrifice, and therefore no further sacrifice was needed or would be accepted. Therefore God would not have accepted Jewish sacrifices after Jesus' death.
Jewish people follow God, not Jesus.
No they were Romans.
Jesus' birthday is not marked in the Jewish calendar.
Virtually all Jews in Israel at the time of Jesus had Jewish funerals, including Jesus. At that time, a Jewish funeral would have NOT included a coffin.However, according to Christian belief, Jesus was never buried.
According to the New Testament, Jesus was Jewish, and virtually all of his teachings are distortions of things from the Torah.
Yes - Jesus was a jew. The Old Testament of the bible is from Jewish scriptures.
The Jews are blamed for the death of Jesus because it was the Jewish religious leaders who manipulated Herod and Pilate into crucifying Jesus by charging Jesus with breaking certain Jewish laws making him worthy of death. The Romans would have rather released Jesus that day and crucified Barabbas. But the Jewish mobs at the behest of the Jewish leaders clamored for the release of Barabbas and the crucifixion of Jesus.
Not according to Jewish belief.
According to the Bible, Jesus resurrected on Sunday, after being killed on Friday.
Depends whom you ask. According to Judaism, he departed from Jewish teachings.
Phillip Sigal is known for his work as a scholar of Jewish studies with a focus on Kabbalah. He has written numerous books on Jewish mysticism, including "The Emergence of Contemporary Kabbalah" and "The Jewish National Mysticism."
E. P. Sanders has written: 'Paul, the law, and the Jewish people' -- subject(s): Bible, Criticism, interpretation, History, Jewish law, Judaism 'Jewish and Christian Self-Definition' 'Jesus and Judaism' -- subject(s): Views on Judaism, Judaism 'Paul and Palestinian Judaism' 'Jewish law from Jesus to the Mishnah' -- subject(s): History, Judaism, Views on Jewish law, Jewish law, Pharisees, Jesus Christ 'Jewish and Christian Self-Definition (Jewish & Christian Self-Definition)'
There is no figure in Jewish history, literature, or tradition whose life, story, message, or position resemble those of Jesus in the slightest.