Those who wrote the Scripture were witnesses of what Jesus said, and they have passed his teachings on to us.
The phrase is Much Ado about Nothing and is the title of one of William Shakespeare's plays. It means a lot of fuss over nothing.
Nothing. Philo of Alexandria was a near contemporary who wrote extensively about every religious movement in Judaism and who would have written about Jesus had he known of him, but said nothing. Even the gospels were written decades later, by anonymous authors who appear never to have met Jesus or have any first-hand knowledge of his mission.
Jesus said it. This phrase comes from Matthew 26:52 in the Bible.
Christ Said that anything we request of the Father in His Name, The Father Will Give.
The phrase early in the peace comes from the Bible. It's what the angels said to the shepherds after the birth of Jesus.
The 'Shepherd' is Jesus Christ and nothing is said bad of Him in the Bible.
There is no record in the Bible that I can remember of Jesus ripping his clothes. Only the soldiers which supervised his crucifixion, 'parted his garments', which may be interpreted as ripping; but Jesus said nothing.
The Bible doesn't seem to record Jesus saying the exact phrase, "do as you do." This is close, however, and may be what you have in mind:John 13:27 - Now after the piece of bread, Satan entered him. Then Jesus said to him, "What you do, do quickly." [NKJV]
I think since Jesus was known a lot that they can just remember it.
The song Jesus I Believe What You Said was made popular by singer Evie Tornquist. Lyrics and music to the song were written by Bill and Gloria Gaither.
Father Jesus probably spoke Aramaic which was not written at the time. "father" is the English translation of a translitteration of what someone a few hundred years after Jesus died assumed that Jesus said.
It's written with an accent over the 'u', and pronounced: khaySOOSS ('kh' as in 'loch')