The earliest Gospel accounts were written within a century of his execution and Paul's Epistles about 20-30 years after the event, so within living memory for some people and within a couple of generations at most, so it's not beyond credibility that accurate accounts could've been passed along.Ah, good old gut feeling. Faith is a cover all when you have no good reason to believe something.
By word of mouth initially. There are no contemporaneous records of Jesus. Worshipping a specific god (there are thousands) is just the luck of the draw, depending on where you were born.
God - "Worship me and I will save you".
Me - "Save me from what?"
God - "From all the bad things I'm going to do to you if you don't worship me".
The rest of your post regards Old Testament teaching so isn't really relevant...
...but it did remind me of Ashoka, the Buddhist ruler who initiated 'The Law of Piety' and "sent large numbers of missionaries to places as far afield as Greece and China, among all his neighbours as far as six hundred leagues, where the king of the Greeks named Antiochos dwells, and to the north of that Antiochos (where dwell) the four kings named severally Ptolemy, Antigonos, Megas, and Alexander (likewise) in the south, the Cholos and Pandyos as far as the Tamraparni river - and here, too, in the King's dominions - among the Greeks, Kambojas, the Nabhapantis of Nabhaka; among the Bojas, Pitinikas; Andhras and Pulindas - everywhere they follow the instruction of His Sacred Majety in the Law of Piety. Even where the envoys of His Sacred Majesty do not penetrate, these people, too, hearing His Sacred Majesty's ordinance based upon the Law of Piety and his instruction in that Law, practise, and will practise the Law.
@IRC.org
[The] "Presence of Buddhism in Palestine and Middle East is also mentioned in a number of Web sites under a number of topics but evidence is insufficient to identify any particular region. But a Web site under Dead Sea Scrolls mention of King Asoka of India sending Buddhist monks to Qumran region in Palestine."
BuddhistChannel.tv
The fabled tale of The Three Wise Men has always been taken to mean their origin was Persia but there's similarities between New Testament Christianity and Buddhism to ask whether it's possible travelling monks spread word of Ashoka's Piety Law and planted a seed that grew into a new religion. There's very little evidence so it becomes a matter of faith, i suppose. It's certainly possible.
I think Bertrand Russell pointed out the Sermon on the Mount was taken from a much older text, written by a Pharisee priest, 'The Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs' and texts from the Maccabees are also in the mix, and explain so much about the origins of Christianity that became absorbed - or omitted - from the official Bible text, set down by the Septuagint.
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