I'm not sure the logic here is correct. How do you know there wasn't a Hebraic/Aramaic TaNaKh?
We know that the location you gave of Beroea neither you nor I can find any historical information about any Jews there. Thus, neither you nor I have any information that proves a) that they knew Hebrew, b) that such a Jewish community even existed, and c) that they even had a Tanakh that they looked.
Even if they did exist they could have easily been considered heretically Chrsitians by the Nicene Counsel like so many Christians were.
The text would obviously be about Yeshua Hamashiach -- why would they search anything else? Paul was preaching from the TaNaKh.
With all due respect that is what you say. Yet, I find it a bit odd that the entire NT was written in Greek and no NT text survives from the time frame in Hebrew. In fact, I find it strange when I offer for Christians to do a Zoom with me where they show me in the Hebrew Tanakh, w/o translation, where their historical and theological claims are supported they utterly refuse.
Concerning Paul preaching from the Tanakh. I don't have proof that Paul knew Hebrew. He certainly did not write anything in Hebrew that survived. If he did it must not have been very important to the early Churches. Also, the Ebionites sure did not beleive that Paul was Teaching for the Tanakh. The Ebionites beleive in Jesus and considered Paul to be a heretic.
Further, on the point of Paul supposidly "preaching from the Tanakh." I don't mean to be disrespectful when I say this but. David Koresh was supposidly preaching from the Tanakh and the NT, Jim Jones was supposidly preaching from the Tanakh and the NT, there is a Sacred Name cult that supposidly teach from the Tanakh and the NT. Are all of these people correctly teaching from the Tanakh and the NT? If not, then that means that preaching from the Tanakh, even theoritically, doesn't mean what you are teaching is accurate. I.e. people start cults all the time and base them on something.
In that as a Pharisee which had a more traditional approach and in that he knew the Hebraic language and studied under Gamaliel, I think he could present it correctly.
I don't see any proof of Paul being a Pharisee or that he learned from anyone named Gamliel. BTW there has been more than one Gamiliel in Jewish history. Paul was supposidly from Tarsus and there is no well known Gamliel from there. And yes I know that some Christians come later and claim that he moved from Tarsus Jerusalem and all that. Yeah, what is the source for that and when did he claim to have done such?
Paul, in his own writings never claimed this. Only the writer of Acts, who was not Paul, makes this claim. Besides, if Paul was a Pharisee he was not much of one since he was willing to do work for the Saducees. Yet, all of these claims about Paul come from the NT and not from any external Jewish sources where Paul is virtually unheard of it.
Hmmmm... no there was no "New Testament" as the complication of these books happened after they were written individually. So the postulate isn't acceptable.
So, that brings up back to the original question. You mentioned the Jews of Beroea. Did they agree with version of the NT that the Church counsels came up with? If so, what is your proof? How do you know the didn't agree with Ebionites or the Marceonites? Again, not your opinion but something that proves the point historically.
You could say that of hundreds of synagogues as they existed throughout the Roman empire since you would be hard pressed to find substantiation.
There is no reason for me to say anything about synagogues that I have no evidence about them. I can simply say that I have evidence that they existed and if they did I don't have evidence as to their beleifs. That is what I can say based on the evidence. Again, I didn't bring them up - you did. If neither of us can find any independant information about them they are not pertinent to the discussion.
There is no reason for someone not to believe there was a Synagogue in Berea. Time has a way from erasing history.
There is also no evidence that they existed and there is no evidence as to their beliefs, AND if there is no evidence that they kept Torah (correctly) or that they were experts in the Torah then there is no reason to bring them up in this type of discussion. They have literally to add to such a discussion, based on the OP, and thus we are debating our own imaginations of theories. If time erased them off the historical map then that tells me that they are not of any interest for a Torath Mosheh Jew or an Orthodox Jew to even consider. There are a loads of Torath Mosheh Jewish communities that existed in the 2nd Temple period that time did not erase. I will go by those groups, just as Hashem commanded me to do.
So, I think we can be drop the so called Jews of Beroea from this discussion and allow time to continue to erase them historically. Agreed?
You are assuming the ceased to exist as Jewish believers in Yeshua. But how do you know they ceased to exist?
I am not assuming anything. You brought them up and I asked you for some details about them. As you found from your research there is nothing there. That is proof enough. If they didn't cease to exist can you point me to some "identifialble" Jews from between 1,500 years to the modern day that descend from Jews of Beroea who beleived in Jesus based off of meeting Paul and reading Hebrew/Aramaic Tanakhs? If not, then that speaks for itself. You also mentioned earlier that they were erased from history by time.
Obviously from the TaNaKh we can see that very often the Jews did not follow the Torah... but they continued to exist. So I don't follow your point.
A lot of "suppositions" IMO
Would you mind giving me the names of Jews/Jewish communities from the time of the Tanakh who didn't keep Torah and whose communities/descendants survived not keeping the Torah from their time to the modern era? I will make it easier for you - from the time of the Tanakh to 1,500 years ago.
Again... I wouldn't follow that logic. There are still Messianic Jews and, as my list showed, many believed after the fact.
The Messianic Movement, by their own admission started in the 1960's. None of them descend from 1st Century Christians. In fact, most Messianics are not even Jewish. I did a paper video and a paper on this topic. Here is the link to the video and attached below is the paper.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXECa6N2EVJVk6DFRCTRtYjeCCwd3kTR-
Were there some that stayed as believers in the Torah Mosheh? Sure.
And the Church Fathers considered those kinds of Christians heretics and those groups of Christians disappeared off the historical map more than 1,700 years ago. In facgt, none of writings survived and they are only known today because of the writings of the Chruch Fathers calling them heretics.
Even in the Jewish faith you have a variety of beliefs and teachings from the Hasidic Jews to the progressive Judaism and everything in between.
Can you show me where the Progressive Jews and the everything in between claim to hold by Torath Mosheh?
Hasidic Jews claim to hold by Torath Mosheh, Orthodox Jews claim to hold by Torath Mosheh, Yemenite Jews claim to hold by Torath Mosheh, Moroccan Jews claim to hold by Torath Mosheh, Sephardic Jews claim to hold by Torath Mosheh, Chabad claims to hold by Torath Mosheh, Ethiopian Jews claim to hold by Torath Mosheh, Mizrahi Jews claim to hold by Torath Mosheh, the Ahharonim-Rishonim-Geonim-Amoraim-Tanaim all claimed to hold by Torath Mosheh AND the Pharisees claimed to hold by Torath Mosheh, the Maccabees claimed to hold by Torath Mosheh, the prophets of the Tanakh claimed to hold by Torath Mosheh, Dawith ben-Yishai and his son Shlomo ben-Dawith claimed to hold by Torath Mosheh, and the generation of Yehoshua bin-Nun claimed to hold by Torath Mosheh. So, as you can see those who hold by Torath Mosheh have a long history of survival and can be identified throughout Jewish history as being Jewish and Torah based.
The following link may help in understanding what that means.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXECa6N2EVJXImK1wGbwAQnGGeVPia6aE
My point is simply that the Gospel of God's Kingdom was preached from the TaNaKh and many had no problem with believing.
And my point is that the Jewish Christians disappeared off the historically map for a reason. It is a pretty powerful sign of what the result of their beleif system was and how shaky their whole system was.
Hashem warned Torath Mosheh Jews to not get involved in groups who can easily be historically erased by time. Not being erased by time is a mitzvah and gift that Hashem gave to Torath Mosheh Jews to take seriously - and as you can see from Torath Mosheh and Orthodox Jews on this site and others we take it seriously.