Aaron Milavec has written: 'Salvation Is from the Jews' 'The Didache' -- subject(s): Christian ethics, Church, Didache, Early works to 1800, History, History of doctrines 'A pilgrim experiences the world's religions' -- subject(s): Religions, Voyages around the world
1. kerygma 2. didache 3. liturgy
It is an anonymous work not belonging to any single individual as it was written so long ago with no author recorded.
Gunnar Garleff has written: 'Urchristliche Identit at in Matth ausevangelium, Didache und Jakobusbrief' -- subject(s): OUR Brockhaus selection, Bible
Didache is a treatise from the first or early second century ad, on Christian morality and practices. The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles.
Like this: did-ache.
Tony Jones has written: 'The teaching of the twelve' -- subject(s): Christian ethics, Didache, History of doctrines, Church, History 'Ask, seek, knock' -- subject(s): Prayers, Christianity, Prayer 'The teaching of the twelve' -- subject(s): Christian ethics, Didache, History of doctrines, Church, History 'The new Christians' -- subject(s): Christianity, Religious aspects of Postmodernism, Postmodernism, Emerging church movement
James Muilenburg has written: 'Specimens of Biblical literature' -- subject(s): Bible as literature 'The literary relations of the Epistle of Barnabas and the Teaching of the Twelve Apostles' -- subject(s): Didache, Epistle of Barnabas
Assuming you are referring to the book "Didache" or "The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles", the book is written anonymously, and its date is very disputed. However, there is a tendency to date it quite early because it appears to describe a very primitive church (lacking in much hierarchy or heavy rituals, and having roles such as apostles (missionaries) and prophets, that were not found in 2nd century churches and beyond). Perhaps a date in the late 1st century or early 2nd century would be wise. If so, it puts the Didache up there with I Clement and the Epistle of Barnabbas (perhaps) as among the oldest post-NT Christian documents. Rather than being a name, "Didache" means "doctrine" or "teaching". It shares the root where we get the word "didactic".
9 billion can be written in scientific notation as 9 x 10^9.
Charles Taylor has written: 'The two ways in Hermas and Xenophon' 'The witness of Hermas to the four Gospels' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Bible, Evidences, authority, Gospels, Bible. N.T. Gospels 'Enoch and Clement' -- subject(s): Hebrew book of Enoch 'The homily of Pseudo-Clement' 'An essay on the theology of the Didache with the Greek text' -- subject(s): Didache 'An introduction to the ancient and modern geometry of conics' -- subject(s): Conic sections 'The dirge of Coheleth in Ecclesiastes XII discussed and literally interpreted' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Bible
-9 = -9/1