We learned that apparently, according to the New Testament, about 80% of the Jewish population at the time of Christ DID accept Christ as their Messiah, which is why the Sanhedron was so upset.
OK - point one: where's their reference for this assertion?
point two: "according to the new testament" is not exactly what i call an accurate reflection of the jewish socio-political context of the time, being edited later by people with a vested interest in pointing out how important jesus was and, lest we forget, pointing out how judaism was nothing more than the prelude to christianity.
point three: there is a considerable body of C1st-2nd jewish literature, none of which thinks jesus is terribly important until his followers gain access to the levers of power and start to influence policy and implement anti-jewish measures, all of which becomes possible after the failure of the jewish revolt against the romans and the destruction of the Temple, as well as the end of the power of the sanhedrin.
The Sanhedron had made a political "promise" to Rome to never elect a King, and if they did, Rome would consider it treason, and send troops in to basically ahnilate the general population, and take away the nation of Israel from the Jewish leadership.
to be precise - the romans had already appointed a family of client kings, the herods. the choice of a king would, therefore, constitute a threat to the roman hegemony.
So the Leadership had to make a tough choice - kill Jesus, whom the population wanted elected as King, or allow Rome to kill everyone and wipe the nation off the map.
again, this has been twisted to make jesus more significant than he was at the time - there is no evidence that "the population" wanted jesus elected as king (and, in fact, the sanhedrin would have a large say in this) in other sources. in fact, without significant military backing, it is hard to see how anyone could be considered king material, let alone messiah material. add to this the fact that about 3 messiahs a week used to pop up and suddenly this all looks inflated and spun after the fact.
I really doubt it was just a few families, or 20% of the population or some small number, because his populariety with the people apparently offended the Jewish Leadership enough that they spoke with him privately (Nicodemus and Joseph of Aramathea, for example),
we only have the NT's word for it that these guys were actually bigwigs - all this is is post-hoc propaganda.
On the other hand, look at someone who really "did" something that caused national attention: OJ Simpson, David Koresh, 9-11 Bombings - you have to do something pretty large scale to get noticed by the government, and for one large Government to take your case to a higher power...it must have been a pretty big deal, even in those days.
if that was the case, there'd be some record of it. what you are basically saying is that the equivalent of OJ simpson's diary, or david koresh's followers' website, is a reliable indicator of how significant these people are in the wider scheme of things.
At any case, IF you get brave enough to read the New Testament, you will find that Jesus was not the monster that some groups think
which groups are these? i'm not aware of any jewish group that actually demonises jesus, whilst considering his actions and motivations (insofar as we can work out what these are) misguided and heretical. but if you take, say, the sermon on the mount as an example of what he thought, there's nothing in there that would even raise eyebrows in mainstream rabbinic judaism.
not if he publicly desecrated the sabbath and objected to the Temple sacrificial system, as well as not accepting the authority of the Sanhedrin.
if you believe the NT, but if you don't...? our sources say that jesus was known for being a "wonder-worker", but this was not the same thing as a bona fide miracle as understood in jewish law. furthermore, the comment is made that he more or less performed magic tricks to lead the faithful astray, which would also not make him terribly popular with anybody other than the uneducated.
he did offer his opinion to the religious leaders of his time, disagreed with them
the highest jewish authority was the sanhedrin. if he did indeed testify in front of them (and there's no jewish record that he did, which is exceedingly surprising if it had been that significant) and they told him he was wrong, then that's like having your appeal turned down by the supreme court.
and took authority to say what he thought his religion taught instead of relying on the opinions of other authorities.
judaism is not taught according to internal intuitive criteria, but largely relies upon exactly these other authoritative opinions. so what you've just described there is someone who was teaching something which was not supported by religious authority - in other words, something which was heretical.
By the way, the New TEstament referrs to the religious leaders as "the jews", since the entire population was jewish.
not true. there were samaritans, greeks, syrians, romans, idumaeans, persians, etc, etc.
The "Bad" jews in the text are really the hippocrites in the homogenous jewish society, and not jews generally.
all of this is nothing more than to say the sanhedrin, pharisees etc were in fact unrepresentative, hypocritical, wicked etc and that the vast majority of ordinary jews actually followed jesus, instead of their evil leaders. which is, of course, exactly what i'd expect them to be telling you at a "messianic synagogue" - and, it is, of course, total bollocks.
As far as my own personal knowledge and ability to back stuff up, I really can't...
and there's a reason for that....
b'shalom
bananabrain