They hated him because He pulled the crown from them. They thought Jesus was en earthly king.
Simply his enemies mostly the Jewish people,Pharisees and Sadducees had always scorn Jesus before his passion and after his death.
Jesus defied the system of the day which caused the Pharisees to hate him. The Pharisees had added many laws onto the word of God, and Jesus taught that its only the Word of the Lord that is true.
The pharisees believed the messiah had not come.
The Pharisees believed in the letter of the law. Jesus believed in the spirit of the law.
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.
Yes, some Pharisees chose to follow Jesus during his ministry.
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!
kept them from believing in jesus and crucified jesus
Roman Catholic AnswerThe Pharisees told Jesus that they were not illegimate, that they had Abraham for their father.
The Pharisees referred to Jesus as "rabbi," a term meaning teacher or master. They also used the derogatory term "Beelzebul" to accuse Jesus of being possessed by demons or Satan.
A:Compared to the Sadducees, the Pharisees were more concerned with moral issues and the rights of the common people - many of the same concerns that Christianity expressed. Since the gospels were written long after the death of Jesus, it may be that the gospel references to the Pharisees were more related to rivalry between the early Christians and the Pharisees, rather than any genuine spirit of animosity on the part of Jesus. The first gospel, that of Mark, was written approximately 70 CE, at the end of the First Roman-Jewish War, when the old order of Temple Judaism was destroyed, the Sadducees had been eliminated and the Christians and Pharisees were both striving to be seen as the natural successor to Temple Judaism.
in the bible, they are mainly the pharisees and priests