They weren't wrong...
The jews wanted Jesus to be arrested and brought him before Pilate.
The Jews who followed him wanted him as a king, but the priests wanted him killed.
Some of them were not yet willing to admit that Jesus is Messiah and savior. It was also prophesied that some of them would reject the Messiah.
Because it read 'King of the Jews'. The Pharisees (Jewish priests who had Jesus crucified) wanted it changed to "I say I am the king of the Jews" but Pilate would not.
He was killed because he called himself the king of the Jews, which he was. The people who wanted to kill him couldn't find anything wrong with him, he never sinned, so they used that excuse.
Pilate had a board put on the cross , which said Jesus king of the Jews. This angered the Jews . And they wanted Pilate to write another board saying Jesus said I am the king of the Jews. And Pilate replied . What I have written I have written.AnswerMark 15:26, "The King of the Jews"Luke 23:38, "This is the King of the Jews"Matthew 27:37, "This is Jesus the King of the Jews"John 19:19, "Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews"
Jesus' followers did not want him to be crucified. Jesus, himself, did not entirely want to be crucified, but he saw the necessity of it and allowed himself to endure the pain for the greater good.
There is no record of him liking or disliking them, but from the story of his actions in the Bible, one can see that he wanted justice for Jesus, but the Jews prevented him from giving it.
Pilate really didn't under stand why the Jews wanted him to kill Jesus he didn't do nut tin wrong but the crowd was chanting for Pilate to crucify Jesus so he just did.
Jews for Jesus was created in 1973.
They wanted to crucify him , and as they had no power to do this they had to ask theRoman power to do this. The reason for their anger was Jesus claimed to be the son of god. He also fargave sins, which only God could do.And he sad he was the king of the Jews.
The term "King of the Jews" was a term given to him by the Romans since they understood the term Messiah (like Jews at the time did) to refer to a terrestrial ruler. As a result, if Jesus was the Messiah as he claimed, he was effectively the "King of the Jews". However, the majority of Jews and both the Pharisaic and Sadducee Establishments would have rejected his claims to being the Messiah, so the Roman term is irrelevant to ascertaining Jews' true views of Jesus.