During the earliest centuries of church history, many subjects that are relevant to an assumption of Mary are discussed without any mention of her being assumed. There are discussions about people who were resurrected and people who were bodily taken up to heaven, for example. Enoch, Elijah, Jesus, Paul, and other figures are mentioned when the relevant topics come up, and there are even occasional references to lesser figures we don't normally think about in these contexts, like Habakkuk and the two witnesses in Revelation 11. See here, here, here, and here, among other posts in our archives, for more about the background to this post.
Here are a few other relevant sources, which I don't think I've posted here before:
Cyprian (Treatises, 7, On The Mortality, 23), citing Enoch and the righteous in Wisdom 4:11
Didymus the Blind (in Robert Hill, trans., Commentary On Genesis [Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University Of America Press, 2016], 5, pp. 138-40), citing Enoch and Elijah
Ambrose (On The Death Of Satyrus, 2:94), citing Enoch and Elijah
John Chrysostom (Commentary On The Acts Of The Apostles, 2), citing Elijah and Jesus
The Gospel Of Nicodemus, 2:9, citing Enoch and Elijah as the two witnesses of Revelation 11
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