The apostolic Church was founded 40 days after the death of Jesus.
Actually, it was founded 50 days after, 10 days after Jesus' Ascension, on Pentecost, at the descent of the Holy Spirit.
For the first three decades this Jewish Jesus sect known as the Nazarenes were almost all Orthodox Jews. They were the first Jewish Jesus Sect. Their differences back then differed less radically from the Pharisees than Catholics versus Protestantism today.
Three decades? It was one or two decades at best, before they started evangelizing to the Gentiles as well.
The first fifteen Bishops were all circumcised and the congregation that they presided united the Laws of Moses with the doctrines of Jesus.
And when the Gentiles started coming in, they decided to not make the Law of Moses binding on the Gentiles.
They Apostolic Church did not possess the Epistles of Paul or the four Gospels as they had not been written yet.
This is true.
The Apostolic Church had no concept of a resurrected Christ.
I hate to burst your bubble, but if Christ was not resurrected, then the Apostles wouldn't have been preaching. Even while Christ was in the tomb, they were all packing up and getting ready to go home. Jesus had been crucified, humiliated before all of Judaea, and
everyone was mocking him as a false Christ and had wanted Him dead. The Apostles had absolutely nothing to preach if Christ had not risen from the dead; they would have just been disciples of a dead, disgraced teacher, trying pathetically to carry on whatever of His teachings that people would listen to.
He was viewed not as a divine being but as the anointed one the rightful King of Israel who would one day help liberate the land from the giant oppressor of the world which was the Roman Empire.
How could He do that if He was dead?
The Nazarenes remained devoted to the Jewish Law as Jesus has been.
The Jewish Christians may have been, but they did not make this binding on the incoming Gentiles.
The only difference between the Nazarenes and the Pharisees was that the Nazarenes had believed that the Messiah had arrived while the Pharisees were still waiting for one.
That's a pretty big difference. One big enough for Christian blood to be shed over.
Peter was the head of the Apostolic Church for the first two decades (30-50) Ad.
James the brother of Jesus then became the head of the Apostolic church .
Over the Church at Jerusalem, yes. The Church also had its own centers at Caesarea and Antioch and elsewhere with their own heads.
The Epistles of James written in 45 AD reflect Apostolic thinking and not a Pauline one that preached salvation through the cross.
And what do you make of the Epistles of St. Peter, which
do preach salvation through the death and Resurrection of Christ?
These are the dates when the epistles where written
Alright, and the Torah was first written down waaaayyyyy after Moses' time. Your point?
The Gospels were written way over 30 years after the original Church was founded
So what, are you going to throw out the Gospels, too?