The Didache: Faith, Hope, and Life of the Earliest Christian Communities, 50-70 C.E.The Didache Didache (dĭd`əkē) [Gr.,=teaching], early Christian work written in Greek, called also The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles. Dates for its composition suggested by scholars have ranged from A.D. 50 to A.D. 150. : Faith, Hope, and Life of the Earliest Christian Christian flees the City of Destruction. [Br. Lit.: Pilgrim’s Progress] See : Escape Christian travels to Celestial City with cumbrous burden on back. [Br. Lit. Communities, 50-70 C.E. By Aaron Milavec. New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of and Mahwah, N.J.: The Newman Press, 2003. xxxviii and 985 pages. Cloth. $64.95. The Didache; Text, Translation, Analysis, and Commentary. By Aaron Milavec. Collegeville: The Liturgical li·tur·gi·cal also li·tur·gic adj. 1. Of, relating to, or in accordance with liturgy: a book of liturgical forms. 2. Using or used in liturgy. Press, 2004. xxi and 111 pages. Paper. $9.95. Two editions of the same early Christian text by the same scholar published almost simultaneously are unique. The first is massive, a major work of reference on the Didache, exhaustive in coverage, in effect a history of doctrine of the topics covered. The second is a manual edition for persons encountering the text with little background in early Christian history. The second is written out of the fuller knowledge of the first. Milavec is convinced that the Didache is a unity, written with a plan in the author's mind from the beginning. He holds that it is independent from the Gospels, not indebted in·debt·ed adj. Morally, socially, or legally obligated to another; beholden. [Middle English endetted, from Old French endette, past participle of endetter, to oblige to Matthew as is often held. He also holds that it originated as an oral composition, written down many years later. This implies that the Didache is the oldest Christian document in existence. I find this claim hard to accept. It would put the origins of the episcopate extremely early and would demand a complete revision of the course of early Christian history. Nonetheless, there are many keen insights here. I would urge students to purchase the small edition and scholars to consult the larger one--though reading it with a hermeneutic her·me·neu·tic also her·me·neu·ti·cal adj. Interpretive; explanatory. [Greek herm of suspicion always. |
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