📖 Tractate Sanhedrin — The Messiah's Identity, the Second Throne, and the Nature of Sin
Tractate Sanhedrin governs capital cases, the authority of courts, and the criteria for judgment. It contains the Talmud's most extensive discussions of the Messiah — who he is, what he does, and what characterizes him — making it the single most apologetically productive tractate for engagement with Jewish objections.
What the Talmud Saw — Rabbinic Witnesses to the Messiah
The Talmud was compiled by rabbis who rejected Jesus as Messiah. Yet across multiple tractates it preserves traditions that, taken together, constitute a hostile-witness confirmation of the gospel: a dying Messiah, a God who does not distinguish Jew from Gentile, a second enthroned figure beside God, an atonement sign that permanently stopped working in 30 CE, a messianic era the rabbis placed in the first century by their own arithmetic, and a prophetic era they declared closed after Malachi.