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calebio | 11 months ago

I think there's a decent case to be made that he was considered a "rabbi", or teacher in the time period prior to the destruction of the second temple, by a group of jewish folks.

As far as I understand it, the more formalized, institutional rabbinic structure came after the destruction of the second temple.

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drekipus|11 months ago

That's fair. Thanks

VOIPThrowaway|11 months ago

That's the Christian viewpoint in that Christians view themselves as the valid continuation of the first convenient between god and the Hebrews.

calebio|11 months ago

Sure, but as far as I understand it, his followers were Jewish people, those followers called him Rabbi, so at that time... it was a "Jewish viewpoint".