Jeff said:
The Mishna (part of the Talmud) states, "To heal a blind man on the Sabbath it is prohibited to inject wine into his eyes. It is also prohibited to make mud from spittle and smear it on his eyes." With this miracle, Jesus not only healed a man at a forbidden time, but he also did so in a forbidden way.
Yeah, except you (or your source) is getting the chronology all wrong. Jesus died in 30 CE. The Mishnah didn't appear until almost 200 yrs later.
From Wikipedia:
The Mishnah or Mishna (Hebrew: ???? , "repetition", from the verb shanah ??? , or "to study and review", also "secondary" [ 1 ] (derived from the adj. shani ??? )) is the first major written redaction of the Jewish oral traditions called the "Oral Torah". It is also the first major work of Rabbinic Judaism. [ 2 ]
It was redacted 220 CE by RabbiYehudah haNasi when, according to the Talmud, the persecution of the Jews and the passage of time raised the possibility that the details of the oral traditions dating from Pharisaic times (536 BCE – 70 CE) would be forgotten. It is thus named for being both the one written authority (codex) secondary (only) to the Tanakh as a basis for the passing of judgment, a source and a tool for creating laws, and the first of many books to complement the Bible in a certain aspect. The Mishnah is also called Shas (an acronym for Shisha Sedarim – the "six orders"), in reference to its six main divisions. [ 3 ]
That's specifically why I said you may have been referring to the oral traditions, but not the Talmud: those oral laws and traditions hadn't yet been written down when Jesus was alive.
Needless to say, Jesus no doubt wouldn't have approved of the Talmud, but Jews have plenty of other good (valid) reasons for rejecting his as the Jewish Messiah, since he missed on many of the Jewish Messianic prophecies in the OT....