Which is not a part of Judaism at all. Claiming that Jesus fulfills the Jewish myth of the messiah, and then deciding that some of the myths don't count, is nonsense. Judaism has no second coming.
Show me in the OT where the Messiah only appears once? And how do you reconcile the "Two faces of the Messiah (Messiah ben Joseph and Messiah ben David) with each other. Do you even know anything about Messiah ben Joseph, the "suffering servant" who dies?
Jesus did not fulfill the only important prophecy. That is, bringing about the kingdom of god on Earth. Everything else is window dressing.
He already did that. He said the "Kingdom is within you."
The virgin birth (which is not referenced in Judaism at all, no matter what modern translations of Isaiah like to say), nor the birth in Bethlehem (How exactly what Jesus of Nazareth from Bethlehem again?), nor the coming on Passover and being heralded by Elijah (which did not happen to Jesus). If someone doesn't, while still alive, usher in the kingdom of god on Earth (which is a worldwide government directly ruled by god, not a metaphor), then that person is 100% not the messiah as predicted by Judaism.
Tsk tsk. The virgin with child is Isaiah 7:14; born in Bethlehem Micah 5:2, Jesus is the sacrificial suffering servant of Isaiah 53, and Jesus will wrap everything up at his 2nd Coming.
Hi, actual Jew here. There is no such notion as this in Judaism. The messiah does one thing and one thing only. There are not two faces. There are not two comings. There are not separate myths. There's just one story.
You're not very well informed for being a Jew.
Messiah ben Joseph - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New translation, huh? According to Judaism, the messiah's appearance marks the end of war.
Daniel chapter 9 says otherwise. And ancient Jewish rabbis believed Daniel 9 spoke of the Messiah. Here's just two:
In the 12th Century A.D., Rabbi Moses Ben Maimon (Maimonides), one of the most respected rabbis in history, said:
"Daniel has elucidated to us the knowledge of the end times. However, since they are secret, the wise (rabbis) have barred the calculations of the days of Messiah's coming so that the untutored populace will not be led astray when they see that end times have already come but there is no sign of the Messiah."
In addition, Rabbi Moses Abraham Levi said regarding the time of the Messiah's coming:
"I have examined and searched all the Holy Scriptures and have
not found the time for the coming of Messiah clearly fixed, except
in the words of Gabriel to the prophet Daniel, which are written
in the 9th chapter of the prophecy of Daniel."
Logicman: Isaiah 53 is another Messianic prophecy confirmed by numerous rabbis, and in that one the Messiah also dies.
That doesn't actually have anything to do with the messiah. Again, cherry picked translations and "confirmations". What does that even mean, anyway? They "confirmed" it. Rabbis don't reach a consensus on anything. There's an old joke, that if you put four rabbis in a room overnight, in the morning you'll get five different opinions.
Hey listen - your own Jewish rabbis confirm Isaiah 53 speaks about the Messiah. So don't try to sluff it off just because you don't like it.
Rabbi Moses Alschech (1508-1600) said:
"Our Rabbis with one voice accept and affirm the opinion that the prophet is speaking of the Messiah, and we shall ourselves also adhere to the same view."
Many more quotes from the rabbis in the following link:
Isaiah 53 Rabbinical Commentary
I'm going to correct your errors about what Judaism has to say.
You can start anytime. So far it's you who was corrected.