Seems he must have said or done something that isn’t mentioned that would have angered them. Has anyone else ever noticed this and wondered? I just don’t understand how in such a short time span the people changed in their view of Jesus so much.
A little different take…
A priest of my acquaintance once made the statement that "If I were a faithful Jew standing in the courtyard before Pilate, i probably would have been yelling “Crucify Him” too.
Asking for clarification his reply was interesting. False prophets and fake messiahs were the bane of the Jewish people. Whenever they (the Jews) went off the reservation so to speak, God punished them to correct their errant ways. Jesus made any number of claims equating Himself with God (i.e. Before Abraham came to be, I AM, I and the Father are one and the same, etc.) To the Jew, this was blasphemy, something God didn’t tolerate. Add in the skepticism about the miraculous works of Jesus and the priest’s statement made sense. The Sadducees and Pharisees, while their motives may have been born of jealousy or fear, did have some credibility from the standpoint of countering what they saw as blasphemous behavior.
Of course as a faithful Christian in the 21st century, I certainly don’t see Christ’s words or actions as blasphemous, but understanding the 1st century context from a 21st century perch compels me to grant some tolerance for the Jewish leaders of that time, IMHO.
And Jesus came to give his life for the ransom of the world. Something like the events of Good Friday were ordained and had to come to pass in some way. This is the way chosen by God. A reason, I think, that compels us now to place no blame for Christ’s death on the Jewish people as so many have through history.
My :twocents: