Toledot Yeshu
Jewish sources avoid the Greek name "Jesus", meaning 'savior', and abbreviate Jeschua to "Jeshu' which means "may his name be blotted out!"
"...the Toledot Yeshu relates with the most indecent details that Miriam (mary), a hairdresser of Bethlehem,. affianced to a young man named Jochanan (Joesph), was seduced by a libertine, Joseph Panther or Pandira, and gave birth to a son whom she named Johosuah or Jeschu. According to the Talmudic authors of the Sota and the Sanhedrim, Jeschu was taken during his boyhood to Egypt, where he was initiated into the secrets doctrines of the priests, and on his return to Palestine gave himself up to the practice of magic. The Toledot Yeshu, however, goes on to say that on reaching manhood, Jeschu learnt the secret of his illegitimacy, on account of which he was driven out of the Synagogue and took refuge for a time in Galilee."
"To Christians, the central tenet of their religion is the belief that Jeshuis the Son of God, part of the trinity, the savior of souls who is the messiah. He is God's revelation through flesh. Jeshu was, in Christian terms, God incarnate, God in the flesh who came to Earth to absorb the sins of humans and therefore free from sin those who accepted his divinity. To Jews, whatever wonderful teacher and storyteller Jeshu may have been, he was just a human, not the son of God (except in the metaphorical sense in which all humans are children of God). In the Jewish view, Jeshu cannot save souls; only God can. Jeshu did not, in the Jewish view, rise from the dead."
"Judaism does not accept the notion of original sin, the idea that people are bad from birth and cannot remove sin by themselves but need an act of grace provided by the sacrificial death of Jeshu as atonement for all of humanity's sins. For Christians, there are no other forms of salvation other than through Jeshu."
Toledot Yeshu*-*Program in Judaic Studies, Princeton University