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No, Simon Peter was a fisherman who was called by Jesus Christ to be one of His disciples and later become one of the original 12 apostles.

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Daren Crona

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1y ago
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4d ago

The Pharisees were a sect within Judaism during the time of Jesus. They were known for their strict adherence to religious laws and traditions, as well as their emphasis on the oral tradition and interpretation of the Torah.

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15y ago

No he was not. He may have been linked with the Essenes, since John the Baptist was and Jesus was His cousin, and they both detested the Pharisees and everything they stood for and said so in no uncertain words! ANSWER: There is good reason to believe that if Jesus was not a Pharisee, He certainly agreed with much of their doctrines. Over 90 percent of the teachings of Jesus contain parallels in the surviving pharisaic teachings contained in the Talmud. See "Hyam Maccoby" Jesus the Pharisee"

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10y ago

Jewish.

The word "Pharisees," which is based on a Greek misspelling used by Josephus, doesn't convey the meaning which it should. It actually refers to the Sages of the Talmud. (The Hebrew word "p'rushim," to which he referred, means people of temperance; the opposite of epicurean.)

Josephus talks of three groups among the Jews in late Second-Temple times: Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes. This may convey the mistaken impression that the Pharisees were just one "sect" among others, when in fact Josephus himself admits that the Pharisees (Torah-sages) with their disciples constituted the large majority of the Jewish people.

Although the Christian Testament portrays them poorly, in fact the Pharisees were very egalitarian. They believed that all men were created in God's image and that all had the same rights, and the same right to an education, etc. They were devoted to the practicing of kindness, the fulfillment of mitzvot, the study and teaching of Torah and the education of all people, regardless of status in society. They detested hypocrisy and actively sought it out and criticized it whenever they encountered it. The Pharisees were the only movement to survive the destruction of the Second Temple and were the ancestors of modern Judaism.

Our traditional Jewish beliefs today, including the afterlife and the resurrection, are traditions continuing from the Prophets and the Sages of the Talmud ("Pharisees").

The Sadducees were men of politics and secular life. They had abandoned various parts of Judaism; and they claimed no earlier source (tradition) for their attitudes. They harassed the Torah-sages; and, like the miniscule breakaway group called the Essenes (see Related Link), disappeared at the time of the Second Destruction, just as the earlier Jewish idolaters had disappeared at the time of the First Destruction.

Note that there is a common conception that the Sadducees, like the later (and now largely defunct) Karaites, made a deliberate decision to reject the Oral Law and reinterpret the Scriptures.

However, a careful perusal of the Talmud reveals that the Sadducees were actually opportunists who had nothing much at all to do with religion in any fashion. They were lax in Judaism; they were men of politics who weren't interested in Torah-matters.

The group that did (on rare occasions) argue with the Torah-Sages concerning subjects of religious observance, were a tiny sect called the Baitusim (Boethusians), who quickly died out.

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9y ago

A very weak relationship as they disagreed with many beliefs . Like Jesus believed any bad soul can become a good soul as for the Pharisees disagree. They believe a bad soul will always stay as a bad souls no matter what.

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13y ago

Because of their hypocrisy

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11y ago

gcses

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Q: What religion were the Pharisees?
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What are the weaknesses of the Pharisees?

umm stop cheating on your religion six hats assignment!


How did the pharisees practise their religion?

The Pharisees were strong adherents of Mosaic code. During the Roman period the Jews were given freedom to practice their religion. The Jews had their courts where offences against their religion were tried and the guilty punished. The highest council of the Jews was called Sanhedrin. The Pharisees and the Sadducee occupied it. The Pharisees believed that Moses gave laws in addition to the Commandments to those who were near him and those laws were not codified. They strongly believed that the alien culture of the Greeks should be shunned though the Saducees advocated a compromise. Ironically the Pharisees were not the clergy yet they were strong in their faith whereas the Saducees' faith was a little accommodative.


When was jesus in conflict with a pharisee?

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.


In mark 914-29 what religion are the teachers of the law?

These people are the scribes and Pharisees of Jesus day they were the teachers of Judaism.


What does Jesus have to do with the pharisees?

The pharisees were the religious people of their day, and Jesus, as the Son of God, was running into them whenever he was in Jerusalem, the location of the Jewish Temple the seat of the Jewish religion. They opposed His teachings and signs and wonders. The pharisees wanted a religion based on outward works, Jesus had come to set-up His kingdom in the hearts of men and women. Jesus said that "a time is coming, and now is, when those who worship the Father will do so in spirit and in truth", not external worship at a place or temple but an internal worship coming from within the human spirit.


Who is the Jesus according to the pharisees?

The pharisees believed the messiah had not come.


What is the singular possessive and plural for pharisee?

The singular possessive form of "pharisee" is "pharisee's," and the plural form is "pharisees'."


Did the pharisees believe in miracles?

Yes. The "Pharisees" is a term which actually refers to the Torah-Sages.


How did Jesus feel about the Pharisees?

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.


Did the pharisees and saduccees survive the Diaspora of the Jews?

Only the Pharisees survived and became today's Jews.


Who were the pharisees the children of?

Roman Catholic AnswerThe Pharisees told Jesus that they were not illegimate, that they had Abraham for their father.


Did the pharisees attack the Jews?

No.