Didache
Didache, also known as The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, is an early Christian treatise that combines ethical instruction, liturgical guidance, and ecclesiastical organization. Most scholars date its composition to the late 1st or early 2nd century, making it one of the earliest Christian writings outside the New Testament. It is not part of the canonical Bible, but it was widely read in some communities and is considered a key source for early Christian practice. The text was first published in 1883 by the Greek scholar Philotheos Bryennios, from a manuscript likely younger than the original composition but preserving a much earlier tradition.
The work is traditionally divided into two broad parts. The first, the Two Ways, presents a moral
Significance lies in its windows into early Christian worship, baptismal practice, Eucharistic formulae, and ecclesiastical order.