"Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?" (Matthew 22:36 NIV). Jesus replied, " 'Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.' This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: 'Love your neighbor as yourself.' All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments" (Matthew 22:37-40 NIV).
gilbagoes
He preached the core message of Jesus - the Kingdom of God.
Throughout the Gospels Jesus' every message was a witnessing event, which he preached daily.
According to Christian beliefs, Jesus preached a message of hope and redemption to the souls in Hades, offering them the opportunity for salvation and forgiveness of sins.
He preached of the coming of a new kingdom. They thought he was possibly planing a rebellion but the kingdom he preached was not a earthly one but in the hearts of men.
He preached
no he implemented and then preached.
A:As a Palestinian Jew, Jesus would have preached in Aramaic. The gospels were written in Greek.
It is not recorded that Jesus ever left Israel.
They were jealous of him, and did not believe in the resurrection which Jesus preached.
Apart from their obvious roles as Messiah and Apostle, scholars have long debated the apparent mismatch between the teachings of Jesus and Paul. One normal way of stating it is that Jesus preached about God but Paul preached about Jesus. Or, Jesus announced the kingdom of God and Paul announced the Messiahship of Jesus. Also, Jesus called people to a simple gospel of repentance, belief, and the practice of the Sermon on the Mount while Paul developed a complex theology of justification by faith, something Jesus never mentioned. Some say that Jesus preached a wonderful universal message and that Paul scrunched it back into the small distorting framework of his Jewish, rabbinic mind. Others say that Jesus preached a pure Jewish message and that Paul falsified it by turning it into a Greek, philosophical and even anti-Jewish construct. In defense of Paul here, he thought of it this way: Jesus was the Composer and he was the conductor or Jesus was the Architect and he was the builder. Paul was explicitly honouring Jesus by not saying and doing the same things but by pointing people back to Jesus' own unique achievement.
Aramic.