No. Jesus called them hypocrites in Matthew 23.:
13. But woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go in [yourselves], neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in.
so they were not supporting his teachings
Some scribes were bad and were arguing against Jesus, however , not all were bad. Nicodemus, Gamaliel and Hillel were scribes.
The teachings of Jesus ARE Christ's message because he was Jesus Christ. Christ and Jesus are the same person.
The scribes and Pharisees charged Jesus with blasphemy, claiming that he was claiming to be God, which was punishable by death according to Jewish law.
Throughout the whole life of Christ the Scribes were among his most watchful and determined opponents. Their many accusations were continually recorded in the gospel accounts.
The Pharisees, the Priests, the Lawyers, the Scribes, and the Sadducees.
Jesus sent his disciples out to spread his teachings to all nations.
Jesus was not like the Jesus that they had read in the prophets. The believed that law over mercy.
Although, I'm not sure of the context in which you are asking this question -- scribes had two or perhaps three key roles in Jesus' ministry. 1. The scribes (although not all of them) were His greatest antagonists. At every turn, they challenged His teachings and His position of being the Son of God. 2. The scribes, before Jesus matured into ministry, were the experts on the Law of Moses and the ONLY people given full authority in teaching AND interpreting it with accuracy. Some of them saw the rise of Christ's ministry and His growing popularity as a threat to their belief system, teachings, authority, power and influence. 3. While this isn't the only area of significance, scribes (recorders) had the responsibility of chronicling biblical history and historical facts -- including genealogy.
The Bible is where the written teachings of Jesus are kept.
Yes, as interpreted by his Disciples. It is also based on the teachings of the Hebrew religion as it existed at the time of Caesar Augustus and Jesus.
Jesus and his teachings are primarily found in the 4 Gospels in the New Testament: Matthew, Mark, Luke & John and in Revelation. Jesus and his teachings are used as a basis for the writings of the remainder of the New Testament.
The teachings that came from religion and not the Bible.