The Sermon on the Mount list the Beatitudes, blessings to come, and in no way relates to this Apoplectic mumbo-jumbo that was twisted and wrung out of the early teachings in the 6th century to control the masses through fear and intimidation.
I have no idea what 6th Century "mumbo-jumbo" you're talking about. I'm talking about what's actually in the Gospels.
BTW - my memory was off. I thought that the "seven woes" were part of the Sermon on the Mount; turns out they're later in Matthew.
That being said, the Sermon on the Mount have enough threats of violence on their own. They refer to "fiery hell" (Matt 5:22), "hell" (5:30), "destruction" for non-followers (Matt 7:13), and throwing people "into the fire" (Matt 7:19).
And even in the Apostles Creed, the words of judgement say nothing of horrific punishment as the "controllers" formulated out of many of the texts.
They refer to judgment for an audience that would have understood what running afoul of God's judgment entails.
I'm not 100% sure what the most common phrase in the Gospels is, but "wailing and gnashing of teeth" has to be in contention (8 times).
That's why I stated the "history, or tradition" to clarify what has been used and abused from the loving message of hope, brotherhood, and endurance that is the core to Christianity in is pure and abiding form. And yet many churches close their services with “as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end.”
There is no "pure and abiding form" of Christianity. There's just what it is, which changes somewhat over time.
Christianity is a diverse religion; I don't think there's any specific tenet of Christianity that every Christian believes and denomination proclaims, but there are some things that are so common that they're
almost universal. My general impression is that, among Christians, a belief in violence for dissenters is probably not as common as Trinitarianism, but more common than belief in the Virgin Birth. Do you have a different impression?