I figured I needed to read more about the Didache and its
connection to Antioch and the early church. I chose two books in hard copy.
This was the shorter, but it looked more technical, in part because of the
extensive notes and the much smaller print. I figured it would take longer to
read than the other and would be less interesting. Surprisingly, that turned
out not to be the case. This was by far the better book of the two. Perhaps,
that's because I was looking for something that would be more historical in
focus, and this certainly was that.
Varner discusses the history of the discovery of the Didache,
a handbook used by earlier Christians, and how that discovery led us to
understand that we'd had versions of what was referenced in other works all
along in yet other early works. Varner than provides his own translation of the
Didache with extensive notations regarding how various passages mirror passages
in the New Testament, which itself was very useful. He then focuses on the
where and when it was written and to whom; whether the work, which uses
parallel passages in Matthew, predated Matthew, postdated Matthew, or drew from
the same source, presenting various interesting theories; posits an idea that
the first part of the work (the so-called Two Ways chapters) was intended as a
baptismal preparation guide; questions whether Jewish sources were the origin
of that material; discusses the various rites and church organization
guidelines discussed in the second half of the book (baptism, eucharist,
ordination) and the short apocalypse section at the end of the book, offering
cogent points at each about what this community was likely like.
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