Woodrow
May Allah have mercy on him رحمة الله عليه
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Keep in mind the Jews do not accept the Injeel as being part of their scripture and do not see I'sa as a prophet. the thoughte are pretty individual among them. He has no meaning in their religion.
Source: http://www.answers.com/topic/judaism-s-view-of-jesus
Although I found that on wikipedia, it is what I have also heard from Jews that I know.
The defining elements underlying Judaism's view of Jesus are that Jesus did not fulfill the qualifications of the Messiah or Messianic prophecies, he was not a prophet, and that it is heresy to believe that he was divine, part of a Trinity, or an intermediary between mankind and God. Very few texts in Judaism directly refer to or take note of Jesus.
Mainstream Jewish eschatology, Judaism's views of the Messiah, of prophecy, and of the nature of God, are derived from the Torah and Biblical prophecies expressed by Isaiah, Ezekiel, and others prior to the time of Solomon's Temple up to the time of its destruction in the 6th Century BCE. These statements and the rabbinic views derived from them present a specific picture of the indivisible nature of God, and of the events and characteristics that would be associated with the coming of the Messiah. Therefore, the Jewish view of Jesus per se reflects the Jewish view of these cosmological issues.
Finally, some Jews doubt the historical existence of Jesus. Based on a Talmudic tradition [1] some [2] believed that Jesus lived 130 years prior to the date that Christians believe he lived, contradicting the Gospel's account in regards of the years.
Source: http://www.answers.com/topic/judaism-s-view-of-jesus
Although I found that on wikipedia, it is what I have also heard from Jews that I know.