Jews don't consider Jesus to be a Messiah.

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Jews reject Jesus as the Messiah for theological, historical, and cultural reasons, primarily because he did not fulfill the messianic prophecies as understood in Jewish tradition. For Jews, the idea of a divine or resurrected messiah is also incompatible with the core tenets of Jewish belief.
Judaism holds that the Messiah's arrival will bring about a series of specific, world-altering events that did not occur during Jesus' lifetime. These include:
- Restoration of Israel: The Messiah will be a political leader who gathers all Jews back to the Land of Israel from exile.
- Universal peace: The arrival of the Messiah will usher in an era of world peace, with the end of all hatred, oppression, and war.
- Third Temple: The Messiah will oversee the building of the Third Temple in Jerusalem.
- Monotheism: The world will come to recognize and worship the one God of Israel.
Judaism does not include the concept of a messiah who would be killed and then resurrected. Many Jews at the time were looking for a powerful political king from the lineage of King David who would liberate Israel from Roman rule, not a figure who would be executed by their enemies.
For centuries, Jews have experienced persecution at the hands of Christians, a history that includes the Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, pogroms, and the Holocaust. This historical trauma has understandably made many Jews wary of Christian teachings, which some have used to justify violence and antisemitism.
Jewish people do not accept Jesus as the messiah because:
- Jesus did not fulfill the messianic prophecies.
- Jesus did not embody the personal qualifications of the Messiah.
- Biblical verses "referring" to Jesus are mistranslations.
- Jewish belief is based on national revelation.
But first, some background: What exactly is the Messiah?
Do Jews believe in Jesus? Read on to learn more about why for 2,000 years Jews have rejected the Christian idea of Jesus as messiah.
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