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I am quite interested to know this and would like references to your scriptures to back this up.

2006-11-03 07:59:43 · 6 answers · asked by green_kiwi18 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

6 answers

he did not fulfill a single one of them.

"According to the Jewish definition of the term, the Real Messiah will make changes in the real world, changes that one can see and perceive and be able to prove because these changes take place in the real world. It is for this task that the real messiah has been anointed in the first place, hence the term, messiah -- one who is anointed. These changes, that one will be able to see and perceive in the real world, include:

The Messiah is preceded by Elijah the prophet who, with the Messiah, unifies the family (Malachi 4:5-6), which is contradicted by Jesus in Matthew 10:34-37.
The Messiah re-establishes the Davidic dynasty through the messiah's own children (Daniel 7:13-14). But Jesus had no children.
The Messiah brings an eternal peace between all nations, between all peoples, and between all people (Isaiah 2:2-4; Micah 4:1-4; Ezekiel 39:9). Obviously there is no peace. Furthermore, Jesus said that his purpose in coming was to bring a sword, and not peace (see Matthew 10:34, as referenced above.)
The Messiah brings about the universal world-wide conversion of all peoples to Judaism, or at least to Ethical Monotheism (Jeremiah 31:31-34; Zechariah 8:23; Isaiah 11:9; Zechariah 14:9,16). But the world remains steeped in idolatry.
The Messiah brings about an end to all forms of idolatry (Zechariah 13:2). But the world remains steeped in idolatry.
The Messiah brings about a universal recognition that the Jewish idea of God is God (Isaiah 11:9). But the world remains steeped in idolatry.
The Messiah leads the world to become vegetarian (Isaiah 11:6-9). It isn't.
The Messiah gathers to Israel, all of the twelve tribes (Ezekiel 36:24). Many of the ten lost tribes remain lost.
The Messiah rebuilds The Temple (Isaiah 2:2; Ezekiel 37:26-28). It hasn't been rebuilt.
There will be no more famine (Ezekiel 36:29-30). People starve to death every day.
After the Messiah comes, death will eventually cease (Isaiah 25:8). People die every day.
Eventually the dead will be resurrected (Isaiah 26:19; Daniel 12:2; Ezekiel 37:12-13; Isaiah 43:5-6);
The nations of the earth will help the Jews, materially (Isaiah 60:5-6; 60:10-12;
The Jews will be sought out for spiritual guidance (Zechariah 8:23);
All weapons will be destroyed (Ezekiel 39:9,12);
The Nile will run dry (Isaiah 11:15)
Monthly, the trees of Israel will yield their fruit (Ezekiel 47:12);
Each tribe of Israel will receive and settle their inherited land (Ezekiel 47:13-13);
The nations of the earth will recognize that they have been wrong, that the Jews have been right, and that the sins of the Gentile nations, their persecutions and the murders they committed, have been borne by the Jewish people (Isaiah 53)"

2006-11-03 08:03:09 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 5 0

These are the criteria for the Jewish Messiah:
1) He has to be Jewish.
2) He must be a member of the tribe of Judah (from his biological father's side).
3) He must be a direct male descendant of King David and King Solomon (through his biological father).
4) He must gather the Jewish people from exile and return them to Israel.
5) He must rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem.
6) He will rule at a time of world-wide peace.
7) He will rule at a time when the Jewish people will observe G-d's commandments.
8) He will rule at a time when all people will come to acknowledge and serve one G-d.
All of these criteria are best stated in the book of Ezekiel Chapter 37 verses 24-28, and Jesus fulfilled only the first criterion. If an individual fails to fulfill even one of these conditions, then he cannot be "The Messiah."

2006-11-03 10:44:39 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The Jews rejected Jesus as the Messiah or King of the Jews who shall come from the descendant of David, (Mathew 1:1-17) and(John 1:43-51) having the characteristics of a mighty man, a prophet and a king having the personality of a king as reflected in Solomon that will rule the Jews and deliver them from their oppressors and their enemies, who cannot be conquered and cannot die, but his kingdom will stay for ever with the Jews selected as the chosen people of the king who would rule the world with him and his kingdom will be established to include all the the gentiles to the end of the Earth.(John 3:22-36)

The Jews expected to see this sort of a man that reflected a complete paradox to the personality of Jesus, who said that the Son of man came to serve and not to be served,(Luke 22:24-30) and to die as a sacrifice of sin for the sake of His people and all mankind. Not even His own disciples understood Him when ever He talked about his death as a sacrifice of sin.(Luke 9: 18-22).

2006-11-03 08:34:19 · answer #3 · answered by lonelyspirit 5 · 0 0

Jesus fullfilled all the scriptures as he said he would

2006-11-03 08:02:56 · answer #4 · answered by fordtruck1992 1 · 1 1

They don't believe that he was actually Christ.

2006-11-03 08:03:00 · answer #5 · answered by LesHug 4 · 1 1

they thought that jesus wasnt the messiah

2006-11-03 08:04:13 · answer #6 · answered by emilehx 2 · 0 1

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