http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharisees
Some historians, however, have noted that Jesus' actions are actually similar to and consistent with Jewish beliefs and practices of the time, as recorded by the Rabbis, that commonly associate illness with sin and healing with forgiveness.
[29]. Jews reject the New Testament suggestion that the healing would have been critical of, or criticized by, the Pharisees as no surviving Rabbinic source questions or criticizes this practice.
[29]
Another argument along the same lines is that according to the New Testament, Pharisees wanted to punish Jesus for
healing a man's withered hand on the
Sabbath. No Rabbinic rule has been found according to which Jesus would have violated the Sabbath.
[30]
Although the New Testament presents the Pharisees as obsessed with avoiding impurity, Rabbinic texts reveal that the Pharisees were concerned merely with offering means for removing impurities, so that a person could again participate in the community. According to the New Testament the Pharisees objected to Jesus's mission to outcast groups such as
beggars and tax-collectors, but Rabbinic texts actually emphasize the availability of forgiveness to all. Indeed, much of Jesus' teaching, for example the
Sermon on the Mount, is consistent with that of the Pharisees and later Rabbinic thought.
Some scholars believe that those passages of the New Testament that are most hostile to the Pharisees were written sometime after the destruction of
Herod's Temple in 70 CE.
[31][32] Only Christianity and Phariseeism survived the destruction of the Temple, and the two competed for a short time until the Pharisees emerged as the dominant form of Judaism. Once it had become clear that most Jews did not consider Jesus to be the messiah (see also
Rejection of Jesus) Christians sought most new converts from among the gentiles. Christians had to explain why converts should listen to them rather than the Jews, concerning the
Hebrew Bible, and also had to dissociate themselves with the rebellious Jews who so often rejected Roman authority. They thus would have presented a story of Jesus that was more sympathetic to Romans than to Jews.