MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Fri May 30, 2025 7:01 pm
Did the earliest oral traditions include any significant beliefs
now rejected by LDS or mainstream Christians?
In the first texts is it true that these teachings were foundational:
Jesus was the Messiah and Son of God.
He died for humanity’s sins, was buried, and rose from the dead.
He appeared to his followers after his resurrection.
Salvation was available through faith in Jesus.
Is it your belief that any additional teachings found in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints would have been found/recorded in the original traditions recorded immediately after the crucifixion or during the life of Christ?
If so, why?
Regards,
MG
"Jesus was the Messiah and Son of God."
They believed this but these terms meant different things to different people. Minimally "son of God" can just mean God's chosen human representative. Others believed him to be a quasi divine being, either made divine at his resurrection, his baptism, or his birth.
"He died for humanity’s sins, was buried, and rose from the dead."
Some early Christians believed that, others believed he died to inspire men to repent, because Jesus, while innocent, was made to suffer and die. So we, being guilty, should have cause to repent. Still others believed that it was Jesus' teachings that saved, not his death/resurrection. Jesus himself did not teach salvation based on his atonement.
"Salvation was available through faith in Jesus."
This was not Jesus' teaching, but some version of this was taught by some early followers.
"Is it your belief that any additional teachings found in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints would have been found/recorded in the original traditions recorded immediately after the crucifixion or during the life of Christ?"
In those days it was really a Jewish faith, not a Christian one. The similarities would mostly have been around certain universal ethical teachings (do not kill, do not commit adultery, do not lust). But even there there were stark differences. For example, Jesus taught marriage was inferior to being single, and taught that marriage was for life only. He also taught that remarrying a second person after a divorce constituted adultery.
The idea of a pre-existence of souls is not found in Jesus' teachings. He also taught that the punishment for the wicked was destruction the of the self. Neither is the idea of priesthood authority in the way that LDS people teach it.