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Does this necessarily mean to you that Jesus wasn't the Messiah? It doesn't to me
Well, according to the Jews, he didn't fulfil their messiah prophecies.
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Does this necessarily mean to you that Jesus wasn't the Messiah? It doesn't to me
Jesus was the Messiah based on
1. Miracles he performed
2. Fulfillment of Messianic prophecies connected with him
3. Timing of his arrival exactly according to Daniels prophecy of the '70 weeks'
4. Miraculous nature of his birth
5. His Resurrection
6. His prophecies concerning the end of the Jewish temple system and the situation in the world during the last days.
7. And Gods own declaration as heard by 3 witnesses on the night before he died...and as witnessed by John the Baptist when he saw holy spirit descend upon Jesus.
Well, according to the Jews, he didn't fulfil their messiah prophecies.
Therefore...
I don't understand something. If you are not interested in information or opinions about the subject which are different from what you believe, why do you bother asking for our opinions at all?therefore........?
That means that He wasn't the Messiah?
I don't understand something. If you are not interested in information or opinions about the subject which are different from what you believe, why do you bother asking for our opinions at all?
They don't match up.
And as stated by several - everything about Jesus is written after-the-fact.
Anyone here can do a search for this subject on a Jewish site - such as the Judaism 101 site - jewfaq.org/mashiach
The history of Israel and the humam race is shown in the seven feasts of Israel.
The circumstances of Jesus' life fulfilled prophecies given hundreds of years before which no one could attempt to control or deliberately fulfill. Just a few are below:
Messiah was to be born at Bethlehem: Micah 5:1
Messiah would be from the tribe of Judah: Genesis 49:10
Messiah would present himself by riding on a donkey: Zechariah 9:9
Messiah would be tortured to death: Psalm 22
Messiah would arrive before the destruction of the Second Temple: Daniel 9:24-27
Messiah's life would match a particular description, including suffering, silence at his arrest and trial, death and burial in a rich man's tomb, and resurrection: Isaiah 52:13-53:12
That's not true at all as the lives of many Jewish people who have trusted Christ as their Messiah attest that the scriptures of the Old and New Testaments meet perfectly.
Any fool can attest to something about which he has no knowledge. For decisions, ideas, and behaviors to be reasonable, however, they must be based on some kind of logical reasoning.
Vote Ron Paul 2012
It's not about what Christians say he did. It's about what he didn't do. Everything the NT says about Jesus in regards to messianic prophecies could be 100% true and he still wouldn't be the Messiah.
Christ Jesus, WAS, IS, and WILL BE the Messiah.
1Tm:2:5: For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;:yes:
According to the Jewish view that is correct. Christians have a different view regarding the mission of Messiah.
But then again this chapter(and not the only one) is about the return from the Babylonian Exile to Israel and of course Cyrus.
Oh wait you are reading Jesus into it.
Nevermind.
That's fine and dandy. But the NT argues that he's the Jewish messiah and attempts to make that argument on the basis of Jewish scripture.
So while Christians might have imagined up a whole new concept of Messiah-ness to believe in, their book's version is quite obviously not the Messiah prophesied by the Jewish prophets.
A book wherein the Jewish primary character says "I have come only to the lost children of the House of Israel" and characterizes himself using a Jewish concept (mashiach) wasn't actually talking about a Jewish mashiach? But some other kind of thing?Well it just says "Messiah", not "Jewish Messiah". But yeah, the Jewish Scriptures are used to justify that claim. But in other places the Jewish concept is questioned.
That is somewhat debatable. I have yet to see any reference in the Tanakh that rules out a Messiah who dies, is resurrected, and completes the messianic mission upon his return. In fact a similar idea is advanced by Lubavitcher messianists.