Finding that the Didache existed and reading it was the beginning of my questioning Protestantism and looking into the Eastern Orthodox church. My adult son converted first and I followed a year later.
I would never use the term convert coz we all are follower of christ,orthodox, catholics and protestants. I logged in to orthodox or it's the denomination that i serve.
People need to read about the Church Fathers more. Their writings should all be part of the New Testament to show current Christians and non how the original Church was meant to be and believed to be.
As a protestant that is diligently studying Orthodoxy for my own sake, this is a great channel. This is about 4 videos in for me and I really like the content.
Just found your channel from Jonathan Pageau's endorsement! Incredibly polished content; shocking to find on a sub-1000 channel! I will have to share your content with my Protestant family (my mother thus far has been especially intrigued by Orthodoxy).
Great video! I come from an evangelical background and have been looking in to Orthodoxy for a little over a year now. This writing is big blow to the last remnants of what I was taught about Christianity growing up. Every Christian should read this.
Another interesting thing is that the commonly known ending of the Lord’s Prayer, “for Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever,” is not in the earliest manuscripts from the Gospels, but it does appear as an addendum in the Didache. Scholars have generally concluded that its presence in later manuscripts of Matthew (and hence the KJV) is by the influence of the Didache. I like to think that the Didache continues to show its influence on us.
Honestly, the Didache is my favourite writing of the apostolic fathers, with the letters of Ignatius of Antioch, and the letter of Polycarp. After that video, I love that book even more.
Holy cow, you definitely need more views. I’ve been looking into the Didache for the last few months now and your video is just what I needed. Thanks for the great content!
Thanks for coming to the channel! Hope you like the videos. We have a lot of links in the descriptions to help on the topics, and recommend visiting an Orthodox Church with questions. God bless!
@@Patristix I’ve emailed my local church who were extremely hospitable inviting me into his home for a cup of tea and a chat. He shown me around his church describing what was what and what for, very kindly gifted me a bible which I am reading every day. It is a Catholic Church and I’m finding with my learning that I am more in line with the Orthodox Church. I have googled my local Orthodox Church but I cannot find the address for it anywhere. Google brings up a different church as well but I will email them and ask if I can come by. I am currently waiting on some study material while reading the ESV bible. I don’t even know if there is a “correct” bible to read as it were. I have also ordered a King James study bible as well so plenty of reading to be done and some brilliant content for me to learn from in between like yours. I am very early on in this path so going into it totally blind and uneducated on the subject at 40 years of age. Thank you for taking the time to reply.
@DamnItCarl- i don't know what has happened since you posted this but the Orthodox Study Bible is a great resource. . Even if you only get the NT volume at first.. ☦️💜📿💜☦️
Cradke Catholic here. I also fast on Wednesdays and Fridays and I try to include Saturdays as I pray the rosary everyday. Your videos are wonderful. Thank you
Neil Degraide of Dirt Poor Robins sent me. Loving your channel already. I wrote a research paper on the Didache (back in the day...). I argued for an early extant version of the text based on it's linguistic construction being closely rooted in oral tradition. Plus, I found a great paper basically making the case that the writers of the Gospels had a copy of the Didache on their desk when they compiled their texts. Some make great arguments for the Didache as being the mysterious 'Q' source that Matthew and Luke used. Fascinating text. Solid video essay you produced here. Cheers.
Thank you! It wasn't too quickly, and only in the west did people run from it, all the practices recorded were near universal for Christians for a thousand years. When a full Didache was rediscovered in the 19th century, we saw that the Eastern Orthodox Church hadn't run away at all and the Didache was still relevant. In any case, it's a fascinating document to read
Don't forget the Christian graffiti and the two "Sator" squares (Pater Noster prayer anagram) were found in Pompeii. The Didache was known there, almost certainly.
It was a monastic rule since Nazarenes or Early Christians were consecrated religious like Essenes just that they were permitted marriage. The rule of Benedict, etc are descended from it
Glad this work is mention and discussed. Just a quick historical fact, it is still held by most scholar that this works was written during the 2nd second century and It is what I teach.
So how does the section on Bishops and Deacons align with Apostolic Succession when it says to "appoint bishops for yourselves?" I'm very interested in Orthodoxy and other churches that claim to carry on the "Apostolic" faith in continuity from the beginning, but when I read the Didache (and I love the Dydack pronunciation btw) it seems to far more align with my protestant beliefs. What am I missing?
I always pronounced it Did-ah-Ch-ee. With the ch pronounce like the ch in Church. That’s how I pronounced it when I first read it when I was 19. Thank God for hearing, because there’s a great many words that I would mispronounce if I hadn’t heard them.
I remember going to mass in Wednesdays in catholic school, but I was never taught anything about fasting twice a week or praying the Lord’s Prayer 3 times a day! 😮
we replaced this in the west with the angelus prayer whch i have always prayed but I will start praying the Lord's Prayer now as that was the more ancient tradition. 12-6-12. Fun fact, in Mexico at 12am, 6pm and 12pm the Lord's prayer is prayed on many radio stations-or at least it was when I was young. Its called "La hora del Angel" and I oved that deep Catholic prayerful culture in a Catholic country.
Question, out of curiosity! About something said at 4:40 The 2nd and 5th days are said to be tuesdays and thursdays, and the 3rd and 6th days are wednesdays and fridays. But, historically speaking, sunday was the first day of the week, right? Not monday? So wouldn't it be the 2nd and 5th days are mondays and thursdays, while the 3rd and 6th days are tuesdays and fridays? (Edit: changed the last word from saturdays to fridays)
This was an error on our part that I'm only just now seeing... not sure how we made it. The text itself is '4th day' (Wednesday) and 'preparation day' (Friday). Our bad. Sorry!
Wasn't there a recently discovered copy of this, or a part of it was discovered in some very ancient texts?...like as in the last year or two it was discovered? I thought I heard about this, but am not finding anything via Google.
A great way to know if a book is ancient or later, is if it shows christian or jewish, the closer to jewish tora Law is closer to the original apostles.
GREAT video! I struggle with the Didache. I love it and think it's great in many ways but fully agree it doesn't belong in the NT. "The Judaizers" also predate many books of the NT and they obviously had false teaching. I'm not saying the Didache is false teaching but it is a bit hollow and leans a little on the legalistic side. Romans is, in my opinion one of the best guides for the Church and it opens with an incredible pronouncement of the Gospel which is conspicuously lacking in the Didache. If the Didache was indeed simply meant as a "how to order your life and conduct yourself in the Church" then, great. Again it doesn't say anything that can't be found in the NT (for the most part). But is it really focused on what the 12 were teaching? I'm not so sure.
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
The Didache was lost for centuries and was not rediscovered until 1873, long after the various liturgies and canons had been established. Most historians date it to c. 110.
Wasn’t abortion at that time mostly about leaving infants to die of exposure? If there is evidence of abortifacients used and the root translation of abortion in that time I’d like to know more
There were some violent tools for this and Tertullian (2nd century) describes a few of them in 'A Treatise on the Soul'. Also the Didache makes a distinction between killing the unborn and infants as two seperate things. More resources are available online
@@kode.7637 Similarly to other ancient texts, it is not 'validated' on its own. It was consistently used and quoted by the Church, and stands in line with the continuing traditions of the Christian faith and the Scriptures
Wait, Orthodox actually go vegan twice a week? Wednesday and Friday fasting isn't considered mandatory except during Lent for Catholics, although encouraged; however, for Catholics we only need to give up meat, with the exception of fish. Do you actually give up all animal products? or just meat?
All animal products. Wednesdays, Fridays, Great Lent and other fasting seasons. While as you say it has changed, it used to be the norm for all Catholics too, and in some traditional Catholic areas (some parts of Poland I believe) the old fasting traditions are still followed. Some Byzantine Catholics also follow these traditions.
@@Patristix Awesome, thanks for the response. I think I'm going to make this change in my life. It saddens me when traditions like this are lost over time. Sometimes I feel like we're not even being taught the bare minimum of true worship of our Lord this day and age. If I can't offer up animal products every Wednesday and Friday, why should Jesus show me any mercy?
Thankfully, Jesus is merciful beyond our comprehension! I would also say that before you make life changes regarding fasting, that you seek out spiritual counsel from your priest. Maybe also visit an Orthodox Church to talk to a priest there about fasting.
When I first heard of the Didache about 6ish years ago I read it and remember thinking that I didn’t even know people were capable of having an abortion in the ancient world. Shows how ignorant I was.
I was sent this Didache by my spiritual mentor but did not understand what she was trying to say, thought it was a fake one and deleted it. Glad I felt the need to give it a go but first I found u explaining what it was. Now I believe it is legitimate and want to read it again. Particularly about it mentioning abortion.
I thought the cannon bible teaches that there will be no more prophets after Jesus. But the didache talks about discerning a good prophet from a bad prophet. Can you explain this please? I made sure that I was not confusing an apostle for the word prophet
A lot of postOT writings use the word prophet in a more universal sense which could imply any of the faithful unlike the OT where a prophet is explicitly chosen by God. So for example if I were to start preaching and asking people to repent I could be considered a prophet even though I may not be called by God in the sense that Moses was.
A lot of old-school Catholics in Europe, like my mother, still fast on Wednesdays and Fridays. By fasting they mainly mean they don't eat meat or sweets, but usually eat fish.
😆 Speaking from experience, Matthew Chapter 1 is a very stressful chapter to read in Church. So many names... BUT while it seems overkill today, it was VERY useful to the Early Church. Establishing identity was vital to knowing who somebody was, and establishing Jesus' connection to the Line of David showed the Jewish people that He was king. And there have been stories of people choosing to join the Christian faith thanks to this one chapter of begats.
Great intro to the Didache, but you forgot to mention the very important fact about it being lost for almost 2000 years and that it was only rediscovered in 1873!
Yep. Couldn't really fit that in! But interesting as it is, when it was rediscovered it held no surprises. We already knew most of the contents from substantial quotes and references in other texts! We just discovered a whole document and felt rather good about that
their was an ethiopic version called didiscilia in Ethiopian orthodox tewahdo church with manuscripts dating even in the middle ages and was constantly in use till today
This is true, it has changed a lot. The Orthodox, and actually still some Catholics in certain areas, continue to hold the fast EVERY SINGLE Wednesday and Friday through the year, not just in Lent, as the Didache says.
Thank you! This little book gave me several answers to questions I had. I wondered what is the blasphemy of the Holy Spirit, this book has the answer. Also it said an interesting thing about the AntiChrist, who will appear to us as the Son of God and do many miracles and deceive many.
Finding that the Didache existed and reading it was the beginning of my questioning Protestantism and looking into the Eastern Orthodox church. My adult son converted first and I followed a year later.
"To be deep in history is to cease to be Protestant." John Henry Newman
So your catholic now?
So glad you didnt go catholic
@@carolynbohannon4602Its Greek Catholic
I would never use the term convert coz we all are follower of christ,orthodox, catholics and protestants. I logged in to orthodox or it's the denomination that i serve.
The Didache and Nicene Creed should be in every intro or appendix of the NT. The Church has always been ecclesiastical.
Shephard of Hermas as well!
@NavelOrangeGazer I think it should be better known Church literature, but not canon
People need to read about the Church Fathers more. Their writings should all be part of the New Testament to show current Christians and non how the original Church was meant to be and believed to be.
That's how you spread Orthodoxy 😂@@Bubba-23nineteen
As I research it, this I agree with. I think we need a solid canon update that could bring all 3 churches together
As a protestant that is diligently studying Orthodoxy for my own sake, this is a great channel. This is about 4 videos in for me and I really like the content.
Same happened for me. I was finally baptized last year. Make the plunge brother. God bless you. ☦️
I pray you've made it home.
Heaven? @@mando9362
Honestly I like orthodox.
@@Bazzini78 Join us
I'm new in orthodoxy.
But how is this little book not known everywhere by everyone?
Incredible
I was literally just looking for a version of the Didache to read, and then opened RUclips and saw your video today is about it.
I love those moments! Enjoy the read
I was reading the Didache with my mother just 2 hours ago. Perfect timing :)
Just found your channel from Jonathan Pageau's endorsement! Incredibly polished content; shocking to find on a sub-1000 channel! I will have to share your content with my Protestant family (my mother thus far has been especially intrigued by Orthodoxy).
Thanks for the kind words and for coming along! Hope you and your mother enjoy the content!
Great video! I come from an evangelical background and have been looking in to Orthodoxy for a little over a year now. This writing is big blow to the last remnants of what I was taught about Christianity growing up. Every Christian should read this.
Another interesting thing is that the commonly known ending of the Lord’s Prayer, “for Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever,” is not in the earliest manuscripts from the Gospels, but it does appear as an addendum in the Didache. Scholars have generally concluded that its presence in later manuscripts of Matthew (and hence the KJV) is by the influence of the Didache. I like to think that the Didache continues to show its influence on us.
Facinating
We were just talking about the Didache with the priest in our parish. Very timely video!
Honestly, the Didache is my favourite writing of the apostolic fathers, with the letters of Ignatius of Antioch, and the letter of Polycarp. After that video, I love that book even more.
Brilliant work brother! Thank you ☦️
Holy cow, you definitely need more views. I’ve been looking into the Didache for the last few months now and your video is just what I needed.
Thanks for the great content!
We were reading the Didache together with a group of young believers almost 35 years ago. I just did a search and found your video. Well done!
I have a book of the apostolic fathers, and the die-dack is included at the very back. It’s not very long.
I read the Didache at adoration a few months ago; after watching this I'll have to reread it.
Came here from someone else ripping off your content.
Extremely useful for me recently converting to Christianity. Thank you.
Thanks for coming to the channel! Hope you like the videos. We have a lot of links in the descriptions to help on the topics, and recommend visiting an Orthodox Church with questions. God bless!
@@Patristix I’ve emailed my local church who were extremely hospitable inviting me into his home for a cup of tea and a chat. He shown me around his church describing what was what and what for, very kindly gifted me a bible which I am reading every day.
It is a Catholic Church and I’m finding with my learning that I am more in line with the Orthodox Church.
I have googled my local Orthodox Church but I cannot find the address for it anywhere. Google brings up a different church as well but I will email them and ask if I can come by.
I am currently waiting on some study material while reading the ESV bible.
I don’t even know if there is a “correct” bible to read as it were.
I have also ordered a King James study bible as well so plenty of reading to be done and some brilliant content for me to learn from in between like yours.
I am very early on in this path so going into it totally blind and uneducated on the subject at 40 years of age.
Thank you for taking the time to reply.
@DamnItCarl- i don't know what has happened since you posted this but the Orthodox Study Bible is a great resource. . Even if you only get the NT volume at first..
☦️💜📿💜☦️
Praying for growth for your channel. You have certainly blessed me by helping me to grow in my faith.
You all are good at these presentations. Thank you for the e-book.
I recently ran across the Didache, and it was great to see how the teachings of the Church have been preserved over 2000 years. Thanks for sharing.
“Anyway, the die-dak” got me
Cradke Catholic here. I also fast on Wednesdays and Fridays and I try to include Saturdays as I pray the rosary everyday.
Your videos are wonderful.
Thank you
Neil Degraide of Dirt Poor Robins sent me. Loving your channel already. I wrote a research paper on the Didache (back in the day...). I argued for an early extant version of the text based on it's linguistic construction being closely rooted in oral tradition. Plus, I found a great paper basically making the case that the writers of the Gospels had a copy of the Didache on their desk when they compiled their texts. Some make great arguments for the Didache as being the mysterious 'Q' source that Matthew and Luke used.
Fascinating text. Solid video essay you produced here. Cheers.
Woah that sounds amazing actually. It's a very interesting little text indeed, and what you're saying just adds more to it. Thanks for your comment
Awesome explanation. I’m surprised how we quickly ran away from this.
Thank you! It wasn't too quickly, and only in the west did people run from it, all the practices recorded were near universal for Christians for a thousand years. When a full Didache was rediscovered in the 19th century, we saw that the Eastern Orthodox Church hadn't run away at all and the Didache was still relevant. In any case, it's a fascinating document to read
As a Catholic oh, I thank you for doing the series. Pax Christi
Thank you so much!!!! God Bless you, your family, friends, team and your channel!
I love the Didache and wish more Christians knew about this helpful book. Thank you for your video.
Thank you for making this video.
Thanks for the PDF it's an amazing book.
great subject, great video. Very on point for the present pivotal point in our history.
Thank you for this information. I didn't even know about this book.
Thank you for this, found your channel from 'O K' a channel mod on the crucible he posted your video about the Christmas tree
Just bought it, thanks for sharing about it, I cam’t beleive i had never heard if it
Don't forget the Christian graffiti and the two "Sator" squares (Pater Noster prayer anagram) were found in Pompeii. The Didache was known there, almost certainly.
It was a monastic rule since Nazarenes or Early Christians were consecrated religious like Essenes just that they were permitted marriage. The rule of Benedict, etc are descended from it
Thank you
Glad this work is mention and discussed. Just a quick historical fact, it is still held by most scholar that this works was written during the 2nd second century and It is what I teach.
Pretty sure the current consensus is late 1st century to early 2nd. Between 70-120 AD
@@JoshieboyStudios good point.
Thank you, God bless.
I enjoyed this information.
Great video, thank you
Another brilliant video
So how does the section on Bishops and Deacons align with Apostolic Succession when it says to "appoint bishops for yourselves?" I'm very interested in Orthodoxy and other churches that claim to carry on the "Apostolic" faith in continuity from the beginning, but when I read the Didache (and I love the Dydack pronunciation btw) it seems to far more align with my protestant beliefs. What am I missing?
Wonderful explanation!
Also has many of the prayers prayed in mass to this very day!
I always pronounced it Did-ah-Ch-ee. With the ch pronounce like the ch in Church. That’s how I pronounced it when I first read it when I was 19. Thank God for hearing, because there’s a great many words that I would mispronounce if I hadn’t heard them.
I remember going to mass in Wednesdays in catholic school, but I was never taught anything about fasting twice a week or praying the Lord’s Prayer 3 times a day! 😮
we replaced this in the west with the angelus prayer whch i have always prayed but I will start praying the Lord's Prayer now as that was the more ancient tradition. 12-6-12. Fun fact, in Mexico at 12am, 6pm and 12pm the Lord's prayer is prayed on many radio stations-or at least it was when I was young. Its called "La hora del Angel" and I oved that deep Catholic prayerful culture in a Catholic country.
Everything mentioned is also preserved in the Oriental Orthodox Church too
Question, out of curiosity! About something said at 4:40
The 2nd and 5th days are said to be tuesdays and thursdays, and the 3rd and 6th days are wednesdays and fridays.
But, historically speaking, sunday was the first day of the week, right? Not monday?
So wouldn't it be the 2nd and 5th days are mondays and thursdays, while the 3rd and 6th days are tuesdays and fridays?
(Edit: changed the last word from saturdays to fridays)
This was an error on our part that I'm only just now seeing... not sure how we made it. The text itself is '4th day' (Wednesday) and 'preparation day' (Friday). Our bad. Sorry!
A great work, well worth reading! Also, fruit flavored tea is anathema! :)
I think you're right on both counts there
It is so surprising to see how ignored is this book and yet how alive it is in our lives after so many centuries.
I encourage all Christians to read the Didache. I am a protestant by the way.
The Dedache correctly pronounced “Didahi, with a bit harder “h” and not Didaki. in Greek is Διδαχή meaning the teachings.
Wasn't there a recently discovered copy of this, or a part of it was discovered in some very ancient texts?...like as in the last year or two it was discovered? I thought I heard about this, but am not finding anything via Google.
A great way to know if a book is ancient or later, is if it shows christian or jewish, the closer to jewish tora Law is closer to the original apostles.
I try to but this book on amazing and there are many and i don’t witch one is good one please help me thanks God bless u
It is a very short book, and can be found for free online :) There's a link in the description to a free download
"It's not die-dak, do not call it that, it's did-ah-kay. So anyways, the die-dak.."
Lol, alright that made me chuckle a bit XD
I pronounce it di-da-ché (like che guevara) how much steam would come out of a Greek Theologians head?
The pair of us having a conversation about it would cause damage for sure
Actually it's pronounced Dhi-dha-KHI
I pronounce it the same way 😂
GREAT video! I struggle with the Didache. I love it and think it's great in many ways but fully agree it doesn't belong in the NT. "The Judaizers" also predate many books of the NT and they obviously had false teaching. I'm not saying the Didache is false teaching but it is a bit hollow and leans a little on the legalistic side. Romans is, in my opinion one of the best guides for the Church and it opens with an incredible pronouncement of the Gospel which is conspicuously lacking in the Didache. If the Didache was indeed simply meant as a "how to order your life and conduct yourself in the Church" then, great. Again it doesn't say anything that can't be found in the NT (for the most part). But is it really focused on what the 12 were teaching? I'm not so sure.
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
Well, i see it more like an kind of leviticus for the Christians, it clarifies a lot about how to do certain things, i think that it would reduce the amount of Protestant branches if it were in the Protestant Canon
The Didache was lost for centuries and was not rediscovered until 1873, long after the various liturgies and canons had been established. Most historians date it to c. 110.
Amen
Wasn’t abortion at that time mostly about leaving infants to die of exposure?
If there is evidence of abortifacients used and the root translation of abortion in that time I’d like to know more
There were some violent tools for this and Tertullian (2nd century) describes a few of them in 'A Treatise on the Soul'. Also the Didache makes a distinction between killing the unborn and infants as two seperate things. More resources are available online
The Hippocratic Oath also includes the refusal to do abortions from the 5th Ce BC. GBY
Ok, so according to this document. Every church, even the Apostles baptized in the Trinity?
Yes
@@Patristix I have to ask, who validated the Didache?
@@kode.7637 Similarly to other ancient texts, it is not 'validated' on its own. It was consistently used and quoted by the Church, and stands in line with the continuing traditions of the Christian faith and the Scriptures
The Jesuit priest I had for Freshman Theology called it "Did-a-key" but he had a pretty heavy Boston accent.
The Didache is literally like Torah teaching, but for Gentile converts to Christianity. It's surprisingly Mosaic in it's structure and content.
❤❤❤
All the Books of the New Testament, as they are commonly received, we do receive, and account them Canonical. 39 Articles of Religion
All NT books are written before 70 ad
Well done. I had read that the Didache was written by Jewish Believers for gentiles who were coming into the Church.
Can some drop the link to it.
It's in the "...more"
by the title above. The link is there for the .pdf download
Wonderful video! btw I think the link stopped working :(
Thank you!
Which link? I've checked the Didache download and it seems fine to me?
@@Patristix It was the link to the book, seems to be working now, thanks🙏
Wait, Orthodox actually go vegan twice a week? Wednesday and Friday fasting isn't considered mandatory except during Lent for Catholics, although encouraged; however, for Catholics we only need to give up meat, with the exception of fish. Do you actually give up all animal products? or just meat?
All animal products. Wednesdays, Fridays, Great Lent and other fasting seasons.
While as you say it has changed, it used to be the norm for all Catholics too, and in some traditional Catholic areas (some parts of Poland I believe) the old fasting traditions are still followed. Some Byzantine Catholics also follow these traditions.
@@Patristix Awesome, thanks for the response. I think I'm going to make this change in my life. It saddens me when traditions like this are lost over time. Sometimes I feel like we're not even being taught the bare minimum of true worship of our Lord this day and age. If I can't offer up animal products every Wednesday and Friday, why should Jesus show me any mercy?
Thankfully, Jesus is merciful beyond our comprehension!
I would also say that before you make life changes regarding fasting, that you seek out spiritual counsel from your priest. Maybe also visit an Orthodox Church to talk to a priest there about fasting.
Sunday? I thought Saturday was the Christian Sabbath.
A bit more on the topic here: ruclips.net/video/MCn18uhe9Pg/видео.html
Διδαχή means to teach or teaching . In Greek ..
I've never heard of this channel
Welcome aboard! We've only been going a few months so we're still pretty young. Hope you enjoy it!
When I first heard of the Didache about 6ish years ago I read it and remember thinking that I didn’t even know people were capable of having an abortion in the ancient world. Shows how ignorant I was.
Seems quite clear it advocates credo baptism.
I was sent this Didache by my spiritual mentor but did not understand what she was trying to say, thought it was a fake one and deleted it. Glad I felt the need to give it a go but first I found u explaining what it was. Now I believe it is legitimate and want to read it again. Particularly about it mentioning abortion.
Wow.
I thought the cannon bible teaches that there will be no more prophets after Jesus. But the didache talks about discerning a good prophet from a bad prophet. Can you explain this please? I made sure that I was not confusing an apostle for the word prophet
A lot of postOT writings use the word prophet in a more universal sense which could imply any of the faithful unlike the OT where a prophet is explicitly chosen by God. So for example if I were to start preaching and asking people to repent I could be considered a prophet even though I may not be called by God in the sense that Moses was.
A lot of old-school Catholics in Europe, like my mother, still fast on Wednesdays and Fridays. By fasting they mainly mean they don't eat meat or sweets, but usually eat fish.
No school like the old school!
“Early Christianity was organized “
* PAUL entered the chat* 👀
You shall not murder. not kill
Seems more useful and enlightening than A begat B begat C begat D begat ad nauseam.
😆 Speaking from experience, Matthew Chapter 1 is a very stressful chapter to read in Church. So many names...
BUT while it seems overkill today, it was VERY useful to the Early Church. Establishing identity was vital to knowing who somebody was, and establishing Jesus' connection to the Line of David showed the Jewish people that He was king.
And there have been stories of people choosing to join the Christian faith thanks to this one chapter of begats.
@@Patristix Thank you for kind and informative response!
Im a recent comvert to Orthodox, I love reading through these old Church documents and seeing that we still have it in Orthodoxy.
Hi there, what's a comvert?
@StRaphael-we9qn It's a typo 😅, meant to say convert. M and N is next to each other on my small phone keyboard and I have thick fingers.
Hi there, what orthodox do you belong to?
@@StRaphael-we9qn Eastern
@albabialdayaqi5885 Hi there, spell check is next to the send button.😖
Me: de datch ee? Did Ache?
Everyone: 😱🔥💀
I was saying something like Die-dash😂
It's the first catechism of the Universal Christian Church.
...anyway the Die-dak... hahaha
😬
A book can't be written before Mark and after Matthew.
That’s how I pronounced it too due to playing Halo 4. 😂
By the time a friend showed us Halo we were already mispronouncing Didache and thought it was so cool hearing it in a game 😆
I am pretty sure it is the Deedash
It’s not pronounced di-dah-chay?! 😂Great video thank you!
"Did Atch EE" from the American South. LOL
It doesn't predate any bible books, rather it gathered some Jewish and New Testament writings. ruclips.net/video/IJA-wIRctmE/видео.html
Great intro to the Didache, but you forgot to mention the very important fact about it being lost for almost 2000 years and that it was only rediscovered in 1873!
Yep. Couldn't really fit that in! But interesting as it is, when it was rediscovered it held no surprises. We already knew most of the contents from substantial quotes and references in other texts! We just discovered a whole document and felt rather good about that
their was an ethiopic version called didiscilia in Ethiopian orthodox tewahdo church with manuscripts dating even in the middle ages and was constantly in use till today
Catholics too fast on Ash Wednesday and every Friday up to Good Friday.
This is true, it has changed a lot. The Orthodox, and actually still some Catholics in certain areas, continue to hold the fast EVERY SINGLE Wednesday and Friday through the year, not just in Lent, as the Didache says.
Dang. I’ve been calling it “Did-ah-schay”…
The day of the Lord is the Sabbath… not Sunday…. They would have met every Sabbath
Thank you! This little book gave me several answers to questions I had. I wondered what is the blasphemy of the Holy Spirit, this book has the answer. Also it said an interesting thing about the AntiChrist, who will appear to us as the Son of God and do many miracles and deceive many.
Don't call it the DyeDak anyway, the DyeDak...😂
Very informative video but you seem to have a fundamental misunderstanding of Protestantism