We see places in the Tanakh to say otherwise.
Can you give me some examples? We can move past Isaiah 53 since this passage is are not about the messiah.
That's how Jews interpret the Messianic figure , i understand that perfectly.I just don't agree with it.
Oh that's fine. I'm not really here to convince you or undermine your faith. I'm simply sharing my Jewish perspective.
If this was said by a Christian , it would be considered theologically wrong.
I'm not really sure what your religion is, but what I said was standard, mainstream Christian theology.
Jesus was not a Christian , he was a Jew.
Of course. Irrelevant. This is the first time in your post that you have responded to my text with a remark completely unrelated.
Jews considered that he was an apostate , but what does that mean?
Actually I don't consider him apostate at all. He was a Jew that practiced second temple Judaism. I see him as a fellow Jew like myself, brother J so to speak. I just don't see him as the messiah or God.
An apostate is a Jew who has converted to a foreign religion.
But these difference came up to be in post-Christ era.They were created after.
Erm, if we are comparing the Christian OT to the Jewish tanakh, of COURSE the Christian NT was created after the advent of Chrsitianity. I mean that is too obvious for words. Am I missing something? Is there a point in there somewhere?
That is what i am saying , the organization of books came up post-Christ era.
Do you mean the organization of the Tanakh? It is simply organized by which section was accepted as canon first. Thus, the Torah (the oldest section) is at the beginning. The prophets were accepted next, and are in the middle. And the Writings were accepted last, and are at the end.
The Works of Josephus
The Antiquities of the Jews, Book 18, Chapter 3
"3. (63) Now, there was about this time Jesus, a wise man, if it be lawful to call him a man, for he was a doer of wonderful works-a teacher of such men as receive the truth with pleasure. He drew over to him both many of the Jews, and many of the Gentiles. He was [the] Christ; (64) and when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men amongst us, had condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at the first did not forsake him, for he appeared to them alive again the third day, as the divine prophets had foretold these and ten thousand other wonderful things concerning him; and the tribe of Christians, so named from him, are not extinct at this day.
We know that this passage was altered by Christians later in history. For example, Josephus never said that Jesus rose from the dead. Here is the original text as scholars have reconstructed it:
"Now there was about this time Jesus, a wise man. For he was a doer of wonderful works—a teacher of such men as receive the truth with pleasure. He drew over to him both many of the Jews and many of the Gentiles. And when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men among us, had condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at the first did not forsake him; and the tribe of Christians, so named from him, are not extinct at this day."
Because they rejected Jesus as the Messiah and so they organized the Books according to their own interpretation.
I'm sorry, I really don't wish to be disrespectful to you. But that is just not the case. It may hurt your feelings a bit, but the truth is that Jesus was simply irrelevant to the Rabbis. Saying that Jews organized the books the way we did in order to deny that Jesus was the messiah is simply a narcissistic way of viewing things.
It doesnt matter who he is , what matters is that he confronted them , and they confronted him.
Are you referring to Jesus and the Pharisees? It is not clear.
It is part of Jewish tradition to debate the Law. Indeed among the Pharisees there were different schools that argued about how to interpret Torah. The teachings of Jesus are firmly in the camp of Hillel. The Sanhedrin at that time was governed by the school of Shammai. It is completely normal for Jesus to have had these debates. In fact, many such debates are recorded in the Talmud.
Neither your own sources?
Huh? I was talking about the inadequacy of translations and you bring up my "sources?" This is the second time in this post that you have replied to my comments with stuff that is entirely unrelated.
Yes , The Pharisees..
He argued the most with, corrected the most, and called out the Pharisees the most. He would not have done so if he didn't see them as the ones to minister to and correct. When the Temple was destroyed, the Sadducees were destroyed with it, and the Phrisees, no longer being 'separatists' (which is what Pharisee means,) became the Rabbis, and have remained so to this day.Jesus hardly bothered with the Saducees except on a couple of major occasions, mainly the resurrection of Lazarus (The sadducees did not believe in the resurrection of the dead.)
He then harshly lampooned Caiaphas with the parable of the rich man. Caiaphas had 5 brothers in law, and everyone knew he was talking about the temple gate. 'Your brothers have the law; if they don't believe that, the dead rising sure won't convince them!' I suspect Jesus had his audience rolling on the floor laughing. They all knew what he was talking about.He also harshly shaded the Sadducees and gave tacit approval to the Essenes by getting baptized by John son of Zachariah, as the Essenes claimed legitimate priesthood-in-exile over the Sadducees who were installed by the Empire into the Temple. Jesus legitimized John the Baptist was the rightful Cohen, and having him administring the Baptism using, of all things, the Jordan, way out in the countryside, as his Mikvah, was a prophesy of doom against the Temple.
Jesus may not have been a lawyer of the Pharisees, and he hammered them for being bad guides to the laity, but he agreed with them on doctrine of the prophets' inspiration (the sadducees only acknowledged Torah), doing what he could to pry away their burdensome oral additions to it. (which would later become the Talmud.)
The Sadducees were destroyed with the Temple, and the Zealots, Sicarii and Essenes were snuffed out by the Empire. The Pharisees inherited what was left.
This is the third time that you have replied to my text with information that is unrelated. My comments were about how only the Writings were added to the Jewish canon after Jesus time, and instead of replying to that, you have waxed eloquent on the Pharisees etc.
Some events in Acts are dated very early.
Because it is not uncommon for someone to write about things in the past, even the distant past.
Acts is letters , it is not a Book.
No, it is not a letter. It is a narrative, a story. This narrative was written to Theophilus. That doesn't make it a letter.