One of the earliest names given to the followers of Jesus. In Acts 24:5 the lawyer Tertullus calls Paul "a ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes", and Paul subsequently (Acts 24:14) connects the epithet to the more common name, "The Way". At that point, the "sect" was in fact a sect of Judaism, in the same way that Essenes, Sicarii and Pharisees were sects of Judaism. In later centuries several Church Fathers refer to the Nazarene sect, but by that time it was considered a sect of the church, a sect of Jewish Christians. These post-NT Nazarenes left Jerusalem shortly before it was destroyed in A.D. 70 and fled to the Decapolis city of Pella. After the war some returned to Jerusalem while others moved further north, into Coele Syria. They are reported to have maintained a Christology compatible with that of the Nicene church (unlike their offshoot cousins, the Ebionites).
They continued to observe the commandments of the Mosaic covenant, however, for which they incurred the condemnation of the Church Fathers. Their continued existence as a distinct community can be traced clearly into the 3rd or perhaps the 4th century A.D.
Concordance
Acts 24:5




