No, it's just a coincidence. I'm not Jewish by faith or ethnicity neither I'm affiliated with any religion or church. I perceive the Messiah as someone who is sent by God to be accepted by the chosen people. And in the Gospel it's written that those people didn't accepted him what was a grave mistake. Usually when God sent a prophet He expected to be accepted by people, not to be persecuted and killed by them. Prophets were supposed to prepare the hearts of people for the coming of Messiah in order to accept him and to build God's kingdom altogether. But if they will not perceive that particular person as a Messiah they will persecute and try to kill him. It was not predestined that Messiah has to suffer and to die. The result was in the hands of people. If they accept him, the will of God is done, if they reject him, the will of Satan is done (Who entered Judas before he betrayed Jesus?) So God is giving His word and people have choice to accept it or reject it. Everything depends on people. It was similar with Adam and Eve. God wanted they had kept commandment not to eat (not to fornicate) but they didn't endure Lucifer's temptation and sinned. But the choice was in their hands and definitely God expected them not to fall and when they fell He was full of sorrow. The same happened during crucifixion of Jesus, God was full of anguish for what people did even He gave a dream to Pilate's wife not to kill Jesus and to save him desperately at least this way. Well, there are many “mysteries” easily to be understood properly if people are not reading Bible by what they believe but by using logic of God's suffering parental heart. Then everything is clear. But everybody has the right to believe what they want but important is if what they believe makes them a better persons. Well, particularly Christian era, maybe because it started by death and even the cross - symbol of death and Satan victory - became a center of its belief, has been the most bloody period of human history sometimes simply because someone didn’t want to believe some nonsense stuff enforced by church when the truth was more than obvious.