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Torah for Gentiles?
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The Didache as a mediating document between Jewish and gentile Christians, advocating Mosaic law without full conversion.Dating from the first century, the Didache offers a unique window into early...
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27 July 2023

The Didache as a mediating document between Jewish and gentile Christians, advocating Mosaic law without full conversion.
Dating from the first century, the Didache offers a unique window into early Jewish Christianity. Its Jewish-Christian author seeks to mediate the Torah for the text's gentile recipients, steering diplomatically between the Scylla and Charybdis of the Law-observing church in Jerusalem and Paul's more open teaching. The Didache is thus very clear that gentile believers do not need to convert to Judaism, but at the same time its author argues that the Torah - particularly the second table of the Decalogue - is universal. The Deuteronomic paradigm of the 'Way of Life' against the 'Way of Death' applies to all.
In Torah for Gentiles? Daniel Nessim explores this juxtaposition in depth. How is Jesus' 'easy yoke' to be held alongside the strenuous commands of Mosaic Law? What does it mean to attain perfection? The path the Didache offers is not as straightforward as one might suppose, yet both Jews and Christians would recognize its moral basis as largely the same as that which underpins Judaeo-Christian values today. Moreover, the Christian community it describes, from a time when that community still looked very much to its Jewish forebears, makes it a fascinating example of the origins of Christian life and worship.
Dating from the first century, the Didache offers a unique window into early Jewish Christianity. Its Jewish-Christian author seeks to mediate the Torah for the text's gentile recipients, steering diplomatically between the Scylla and Charybdis of the Law-observing church in Jerusalem and Paul's more open teaching. The Didache is thus very clear that gentile believers do not need to convert to Judaism, but at the same time its author argues that the Torah - particularly the second table of the Decalogue - is universal. The Deuteronomic paradigm of the 'Way of Life' against the 'Way of Death' applies to all.
In Torah for Gentiles? Daniel Nessim explores this juxtaposition in depth. How is Jesus' 'easy yoke' to be held alongside the strenuous commands of Mosaic Law? What does it mean to attain perfection? The path the Didache offers is not as straightforward as one might suppose, yet both Jews and Christians would recognize its moral basis as largely the same as that which underpins Judaeo-Christian values today. Moreover, the Christian community it describes, from a time when that community still looked very much to its Jewish forebears, makes it a fascinating example of the origins of Christian life and worship.
Price: $36.95
Pages: 288
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Lutterworth Press
Publication Date:
27 July 2023
Trim Size: 5.98 X 8.98 in
ISBN: 9780718896621
Format: Paperback
A fresh and measured study of how the Didache understood the application of the Torah to Gentile followers of Jesus and Jews respectively. I highly recommend it!
— David Rudolph, The King's University, Southlake, Texas
In this stimulating and original monograph, Nessim argues that the author of the Didache mandated the same Torah followed by the Jewish people for gentiles, insofar as it was deemed to apply to them. The claim is controversial, but in arguing it, Nessim touches on an array of issues pertinent to the study of Jewish and Christian identity and their relationship to each other.
— James Carleton Paget, University of Cambridge
'Much has been written since the rediscovery of the Didache on its relationship to Judaism and Torah, but most of the work has been piecemeal, focusing on particular texts and problems. . . . In this book Daniel Nessim has provided a plausible and holistic account of its background in the historical context of the failed revolt against Rome and its aftermath in Antioch, drawing particularly on the Dead Sea Scrolls and other Jewish sources. He locates the struggle in the emergence of the earliest movement of Jesus believers around the position of Torah, God's covenant with Israel, and continuing Jewish ethnic identity in mixed communities of Jesus believers. . . . His study provides intriguing possibilities for rethinking relations today between Jesus-believing Jews and gentiles who identify with and wish to live and worship in common with them.' - Jonathan Draper, University of KwaZulu
— Jonathan Draper, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
— David Rudolph, The King's University, Southlake, Texas
In this stimulating and original monograph, Nessim argues that the author of the Didache mandated the same Torah followed by the Jewish people for gentiles, insofar as it was deemed to apply to them. The claim is controversial, but in arguing it, Nessim touches on an array of issues pertinent to the study of Jewish and Christian identity and their relationship to each other.
— James Carleton Paget, University of Cambridge
'Much has been written since the rediscovery of the Didache on its relationship to Judaism and Torah, but most of the work has been piecemeal, focusing on particular texts and problems. . . . In this book Daniel Nessim has provided a plausible and holistic account of its background in the historical context of the failed revolt against Rome and its aftermath in Antioch, drawing particularly on the Dead Sea Scrolls and other Jewish sources. He locates the struggle in the emergence of the earliest movement of Jesus believers around the position of Torah, God's covenant with Israel, and continuing Jewish ethnic identity in mixed communities of Jesus believers. . . . His study provides intriguing possibilities for rethinking relations today between Jesus-believing Jews and gentiles who identify with and wish to live and worship in common with them.' - Jonathan Draper, University of KwaZulu
— Jonathan Draper, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Preface | ix
Abbreviations | xi
Introduction | xiii
Part One: Didache and Torah | 1
1. The Didache and the Torah: A Literature Review | 3
2. Text and Transmission | 22
Part Two: A Comprehensible and Authoritative Teaching | 45
3. Crisis and Community | 47
4. Two Ways and the One Way of Torah | 74
5. An Authoritative Torah and Teacher | 90
Part Three: Torah for the Lord's Community | 113
6. The Two Ways Choice | 115
7. The Sectio, Jesus, and the Torah | 129
8. The Sectio and the Two Ways | 140
9. The Torah and the Two Ways | 158
10. The Yoke of the Lord | 177
11. The Two Ways Disciple | 196
Conclusion | 221
Bibliography | 225
Author Index | 243
Subject Index | 247
Index of References | 253
Abbreviations | xi
Introduction | xiii
Part One: Didache and Torah | 1
1. The Didache and the Torah: A Literature Review | 3
2. Text and Transmission | 22
Part Two: A Comprehensible and Authoritative Teaching | 45
3. Crisis and Community | 47
4. Two Ways and the One Way of Torah | 74
5. An Authoritative Torah and Teacher | 90
Part Three: Torah for the Lord's Community | 113
6. The Two Ways Choice | 115
7. The Sectio, Jesus, and the Torah | 129
8. The Sectio and the Two Ways | 140
9. The Torah and the Two Ways | 158
10. The Yoke of the Lord | 177
11. The Two Ways Disciple | 196
Conclusion | 221
Bibliography | 225
Author Index | 243
Subject Index | 247
Index of References | 253