I agree that Jesus sinned numerous times.
For example....
Chronologically, the first commandment by God was at Genesis 1:28.
""God blessed them; and God said to them, "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth""
This commandment is repeated several times in the Bible.....a sure sign that this is important to God. It is one of the 613 Mitzvot. [Commandments]
Yup.
This commandment has been interpreted to obligate a man to marry and attempt to have children.
As far as we know, Jesus never married and never had any children. At least this is the traditional Christian view.
If Jesus never married nor had children he sinned by failing to attempt to be fruitful and multiply.
BigRed
You can ask HARMONIOUS, the resident Jewish scholar, her opinion.
I would be interested to read her opinion.
Well...
You see... In general, I would say that you are right. As far as the gospels are concerned, Jesus is never seen to look for a wife, to be married (which fulfills a LOT of commandments right there, all by itself), and to fulfill the commandment of being fruitful and multiplying.
However... There are a few examples of when that is impossible for a born Jew to fulfill.
That would be if the child is born a Mamzer, or a Halachic *******. This would not be simply a child born out of wedlock, but a child born from incest or adultery.
Mary and Joseph were married. And Jesus was NOT Joseph's biological child. Therefore, Jesus might have been considered a child born of adultery. As such, he was a Mamzer, and it would have been forbidden for him to marry a woman who was born Jewish.
Oddly enough, there are two categories of Jewish women a Mamzer is permitted to marry. One, is a Mamzeret - a woman born in the same forbidden circumstances. Should that be the case, the children of that marriage would not be permitted to marry other born Jews "until the tenth generation."
The other is a woman who was a convert to Judaism.
Jesus could have tried to marry a convert to Judaism. Or he might have been sensitive to the idea that he would not have been able to marry a born Jewish woman.
If THAT were the case, Jesus' whole lackadaisical attitude towards family and the importance of family makes a lot more sense, though it isn't exactly the most flattering light to put on the man...