Jesus stood up for the pure worship of God. This is especially true in regards to his ministry, his message of salvation, his understanding of God's will and especially his commandment of love. (John 13:34,35) It also was true in regards to Jesus fellowship with sinners and those that were considered by the zealots to be social outcasts.
When Jesus rode the jews into jeruselum the zealots where the ones laying down the palm leaves
The Zealots were the people just under the Pharisees. They absolutely hated the Romans because they ruled their land. The Zealots wanted Jesus dead because He did not live up to their expectations as the Messiah. As Messiah Jesus was expected to deliver all the other nations into the hands of the Zealots but He did none of these things, therefore the Zealots got annoyed and they wanted Him dead. The Zealots also wanted to kill Jesus for his sympathetic behaviour towards tax collectors. This is because the Zealots as a group were strongly different to any form of Roman rule and therefore would have been angry with Jesus for encouraging other Jews to pay their taxes to Caesar whom they opposed. The Zealots wanted to be in charge instead of the Romans: they didn't like the Romans but Jesus liked them! Jesus talked to them, told people to accept them and Jesus welcomed EVERYONE so this also meant the Romans and the Zealots definitely did not like that.
In Jesus' time the Zealots were a fanatical underground group of Jewish patriots who were sworn to try and drive the hated Romans from Israel.
The Zealots, a group of devout and patriotic Jews, wanted to drive the Romans from the land of Israel and restore it to Jewish rule. The conflict was not open to the extent of having battles between the two sides, but it was beneath the surface. There was group of Zealots called the Iscari, the dagger bearers, and they were said to be pledged to murder any Roman soldier they found alone, and also to assassinate any Jew who collaborated with the Romans. There is some speculation that Judas (Judas Iscariot) was a member of this group.
Which Zealots do you have in mind?
Zealots
Because the teachers of the law were annoyed because only God has the right to say your sins are forgiven, and they thought Jesus was committing blasphemy. But what they didn't realize was that Jesus is God in the flesh.
The beliefs of the zealots was that in order to succeed from rome you would need a violent rebellion and they killed several Jews who opposed this theory some scholars even believe that the zealots set fire to an abondent amount of grain Jerusalem had in order to withstand the longest of sieges but when the grain was burned some citizens turned to cannabalism they burned the grain in order to make citizens come to the zealots that's all I really know I cant find much other answers either
The Zealots called for the violent overthrow of Roman rule.
Abraham was probably a mythical figure. The genealogies in Matthew 1 and Luke 3 (which conflict with each other) trace Jesus' lineage through Joseph, Mary's husband; however, the Gospels claim that Joseph was not Jesus' father.
No, "zealot" was not a term applied to the twelve, though it can rightly be said that they were "zealous" for Jesus.Only one of Jesus' twelve, a second Simon (not Peter), was known as "the zealot" (Luke 6:15).
Ancient Hebrew tribe or group of people who were zealous, that is fanatical or uncompromising.