Yahshua Christ
Yahshua Christ (commonly known in modern times as Jesus Christ) is the Messiah promised in the Old Testament and an incarnation of Yahweh God on Earth. During His ministry in Judea (often referred to as His First Advent), he called and taught many students and performed miracles for various remnant Israelites who had remained in the land. The extraordinary nature of Yahshua's life and ministry brought him into constant conflict with the ruling classes of Judea, namely the Pharisees, who had a signifcant Edomite population by the time of His ministry. This antagonism reached a crescendo when Judas Iscarot (an Idumean) betrayed Christ to the Pharisees, who subsequently trialed Him and manipulated the judgements to result in His death by crucifixion.
The crucifixion of Christ was explicitly foretold in the Old Testament, and as Christ repeated several times was a neccesary event for the fulfillment of scripture. Being Yahweh God incarnate on Earth as a man, the death of Christ on the cross released the wife (Israel) from the law of the Husband (Yahweh), allowing for a fruitful and eternal remarriage in fulfillment of several prophecies. Christ having risen Himself from the dead three days after His burial stands as a testimony that one day all Adamic men will join Him in that glorified state within a Kingdom on Earth which Christ Himself is promised to rule as King.
The length of Yahshua Christ's ministry can be measured through counting the passovers described in the Gospel of John, which amounting up to three and a half years coincides with the description given in Daniel's 70 Weeks. The feats and accomplishments of Yahshua's ministry are described in the four canonical Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.