I am going to agree with PRR here.
It takes no particular skill other than good eyes to spot flamed components. As a repairperson, the task is to figure out what circuit conditions caused the scorched parts to scorch. Sure, it is possible that simply replacing scorched parts with new parts fixes the problem. Any decent repairman, if they get away with that, should be watching over their shoulder to wait for the next shoe to drop. Because that rarely fixes the problem. These R's are not like tires that pick up a nail and go flat and you just have to buy and stick on a new tire. To burn out 5 watt resistors requires a fair amount of power...that's why the mfr chose to specify power resistors in the first place. Yeah, maybe the amp was just left on for a few days and just got too hot. But maybe, indeed probably not.
To be frank, you don't sound like you have the prerequisite skills to troubleshoot this amp and there are some lethal voltages running around in it. That means you may not have the descriptive tools to properly describe what's going on, even if everyone on this forum joined in and worked with you to attack the issue. I don't think the repair is a big deal nor difficult, but really, and please take this the right way, this is not anyone's idea of a first project.
So I would urge you to proceed more slowly, and see if you can get the repair done by a qualified tech. At the very least, shouldn't this be good cause to ask the seller to lower his price? Alternatively, you could insist the seller have the amp repaired at his expense (which he'd be justified in passing on to you) but then you would be buying a "gone-through" amp instead of a pig in a poke.