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The gospels record that Jesus hung out with Pharisees, studied with Pharisees, ate with Pharisees and argued with Pharisees. If you look at what we know about the Pharisees from the Mishnah, which is largely a record of the opinions of the Pharisees, we know that they denounced each other on many occasions as a routine part of their rhetorical style. Jesus fits right in, so closely that most Jews who have studied the Gospels conclude that Jesus was probably a Pharisee and either a member of the school of Hillel or allied to that school of thought. His denunciations sound very much like typical denunciations from the school of Hillel aimed at the school of Shamai.

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Q: Why did Jesus denounce the Pharisees more than he did any other group?
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Why did Jesus denounc the Pharisees more than he did any other group?

The gospels record that Jesus hung out with Pharisees, studied with Pharisees, ate with Pharisees and argued with Pharisees. If you look at what we know about the Pharisees from the Mishnah, which is largely a record of the opinions of the Pharisees, we know that they denounced each other on many occasions as a routine part of their rhetorical style. Jesus fits right in, so closely that most Jews who have studied the Gospels conclude that Jesus was probably a Pharisee and either a member of the school of Hillel or allied to that school of thought. His denunciations sound very much like typical denunciations from the school of Hillel aimed at the school of Shamai.


Who mocked Jesus laughed at him?

Simply his enemies mostly the Jewish people,Pharisees and Sadducees had always scorn Jesus before his passion and after his death.


What type of Christian was Jesus?

Jesus was a Jew. A Christian is a person who follows Jesus. So Jesus could not be a Christian, because He wasn't following Himself.


Why did Jesus address the pharisees?

The scribes and Pharisees were the "spiritual" leaders of the day. But they were far from the truth. Again and again Jesus tried to get them to see they were "lost sinnners" like any other person. But they were proud and eventually plotted to have Jesus killed because Jesus was a threat to them as leaders.


What are the different political groups during Jesus time?

The three different political parties in Jesus' time were the Pharisees, the Scribes, and the Sadducees. The Sadducees were less aggressive to Jesus until later on. The Pharisees, however, were more aggressive.


Did Jesus give up his Jewish faith to become a Christian?

The only evidence we have is the text of the Gospels. The teachings of Jesus recorded there are within the range of teachings you'd find within the Pharisees, so if the only text we had was the Gospels, without Acts, Paul's letters and so on, scholars would probably conclude that Jesus was a Pharisee. Leaders among the Pharisees had desciples, Jesus had desciples. Jesus hung out in synagogues and argued with Pharisees, and typical Pharisees out in synagogues and argue with each other. The arguments got quite heated, more heated even than some of the Gospel quotations about the Pharisees. So, I'd say that there's no evidence that Jesus "gave up his Jewish faith."


What is the other word for denounce?

expose, betray


What pharisee came to see Jesus late at night?

Nicodemus, a Pharisee and member of the Jewish ruling council, came to see Jesus late at night to discuss his teachings and inquire about his connection to God. This encounter is recorded in the Gospel of John.


Is Judas also known as Judas Iscariot Jesus brother?

Jesus had two disciples called Judas. One was Judas Iscariot, the other was just called Judas. Judas Iscariot is not known as Jesus brother, actually, he was the follower of Jesus that betrayed him to the Pharisees.


Are resignation and denounce the opposite of each other?

The answer is yes.


Which one of the Pharisees was saved?

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.


Why did Jesus and the Pharisees not get along?

A:Everett Ferguson (Backgrounds of Early Christianity) points out that there was a considerable area of agreement between the teachings of Jesus and those of the Pharisees. Yet, the synoptic gospels have Jesus constantly at loggerheads with the Pharisees and not much so with the Sadducees, where there was a greater theological difference. John's Gospel does not show particular antagonism between Jesus and the Pharisees, in fact for this gospel it seems that some of his good friends were Pharisees.After the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in 70 CE, the Sadducees rapidly went into decline, while the Pharisees evolved, to develop the Rabbinic faith that Jews would henceforth follow.Perhaps the reason for the reported antagonism was that the close similarities and the eventual success of the Pharisees made them and Christianity rivals for the allegiance of the Jews. Mark's Gospel was written around the time of the destruction of the Temple, and its author would have seen Judaism as weakened by its defeat at the hands of the Romans, with opportunities to convert many Jews before the Pharisees recovered from the national defeat. Matthew and then Luke followed the hostile line begun by Mark, although increasingly against the Jews in general, not just the Pharisees and scribes. In other words, it was not that Jesus and the Pharisees were unable to get along, but that the gospel authors sought to take advantage of weaknesses in traditional Judaism.By the time John's Gospel was written, Judaism and Christianity had long since parted ways, and the Pharisees were a distant memory. There was no longer much to be gained by maintaining an antagonism towards the Pharisees. Jesus could even be portrayed as sitting down at a meal with a Pharisee.