Starman3000m
New Member
at the time of the "christian prophets" it would have probably been the Tanakh
As you may know, the Tanakh is the Old Testament writings of the Holy Bible.
The Tanakh contains the complete story of how the Children of Israel rebelled against God and how the religious leaders accepted "prophets" who were not real prophets of God and killed the ones who were.
The Tanakh comprises the Old Covenant (Old Testament) with the Children of Israel and prophesied the coming Saviour of mankind whereby God would establish a New Covenant and, thus the sacrifices of bulls would not be necessary.
The Tanakh explicity states that the Jewish people would come under God's wrath because of their hard hearts and calls the religious leaders stiff-necked people who worship God with ther lips while in reality their hearts are far from God.
If the laws and rituals of the Tanakh were to be imposed by the Jews today, there would be stonings, burnings, strangulations and decapitations imposed as a form of capital punishment (Mosaic Laws). Plus, parents would be allowed to kill unruly children - according to the Torah (the first 5 books of the Tanakh).
The New Testament is God's New Covenant with mankind and opens the door of Salvation to all, not only Jews. That is the basic message and is a fulfillment of what had already been prophesied in the Tanakh.
So, the teachings of Jesus are actually the completion of the "original religion" that you refer to. The reason that Orthodox Judaism did not accept Jesus is because they were looking for a military leader like King David, not a pacifist leader who taught us to love our neighbors and even our enemies. They used Jesus' claim to be the Son of God as the basis to have Him put to death. But, then again, it had to be in order to fulfill God's Plan of Salvation once and for all and for all mankind through Christ's Atoning Blood. That is the basic message to this world. Meanwhile, religious denominations try to capitalize on that message and control people through doctrines and traditions of men while fleecing their flocks and profiting monetarily at the same time.