Whence and Wherefore? Forms and Functions of the Two Ways Traditions [for SBL Nov 1997]

Two Ways Forms We have two explicit early Christian examples of this "basic binary" form of instruction for living: Barnabas 18-21 Didache 1-6 [For the texts in parallel, see my 1965 Translation and Commentary in the series edited by Robert M. Grant, The Apostolic Fathers: a New Translation and Commentary, vol. 3 Barnabas and the Didache (Nelson); this material is available electronically at URL under Electronic Publications > Kraft > Christianity > Barnabas; the copyright is held by myself, and non-commercial use of the materials is freely permitted] Barnabas describes the material as "another gnosis" (not explicitly as "wisdom") pertaining to teaching and authority, and uses the imagery of light/darkness as associated with angels of God/Satan and with eschatological continuity/temporality. The Didache, on the other hand, speaks simply of life/death -- a binary lurking in the background in Barnabas (light leads to the appointed place, glory is due to the one who redeemed from death, the way of the Black One leads to eternal death), but not stated as such until the appended concluding words in Barn 21.1-3: The one who does these things will be glorified in God's kingdom; The one who chooses those will perish with his works -- The day is near when all things will perish with the Wicked One! But the Lord is near, and his reward. Whether the short Latin document called the "Doctrina" actually constitutes a separate third witness to the two ways tradition, as many have argued, or is to be understood as somehow derivitive of both Didache (to which it stands very close overall) and Barnabas need not be argued here. What is especially interesting about Doctrina's form of presentation is that it includes both life/death (ala Didache) and light/darkness (as in Barnabas), followed by the mention of angels (see Barnabas) of righteousness/iniquity! At this point, the imagery of 1QS ("Manual of Discipline") also comes quickly to mind, on the one side, and of Shepherd of Hermas, on the other. As the group of binary-minded sources enlarges, we find the following additional pairs: truth/error (1QS, Testaments), good/evil, law of the Lord/works of Belial, straight/crooked, and right hand/left hand [Kraft 135 commentary to Barn 18.1]. The apocalyptic connections in Barnabas and Doctrina are striking, and fit with other passages in the earlier portions of Barnabas. The lack of such apocalyptic tones in Didache is also striking, if also strikingly mitigated by the presence of the separate apocalyptic "appendix" at the end of the Didache! In my youth [Kraft 1965], I argued that the evidence suggested that a two ways "common source" lay somewhere in the shadowy background of Barnabas and the Didache, although neither probably used the source directly [pp. 8f]. I was undecided "whether, or to what extent, eschatology appeared in the source" [p. 12], although I tended to suspect (and perhaps, wished to believe) that an eschatological connection was more likely than not, based on other clues in the two early Christian compilations. This much was clearer to me: the two ways materials in Barnabas must have been derived from an earlier form of this ever-growing two ways tradition which already was united with eschatological emphases in the school tradition on which Barnabas is dependant; while the Didache form of the two ways (perhaps based upon an older Doctrina, and developed further in various other Christian forms such as the Apostolic Church Order, Life of Shenuti, etc.), gave evidence of relatively more reworking (including expanding) and was almost completely free of exchatological connections or nuances (except in the Doctrina framework).

Two Ways Contents The materials common to these two streams of two ways tradition, apart from the question of introductory or concluding frameworks, are almost exclusively ethical -- concerning duties towards God, neighbor, children, rulers and slaves, vice lists, and the like. There is a tendency to parallelistic couplets strongly reminiscent of Jewish "wisdom" literature as represented in Proverbs and Sirach (and also reflected in some of the Testaments of the Patriarchs) -- in synonymous, antithetical, and constructive (steps) combinations. There are straightforward prohibitions as well as positive admonitions, and occasionally "theologically" tinged comments (e.g. Barn 19.6c = Did 3.9c [nothing happens without God], Barn 19.7c = Did 4.10 [references to trusting and fearing God who calls those in whom the spirit is prepared], Barn 19.8 = Did 4.8 [sharers in what is imperishable/immortal]).

Locating the Roots of the Two Ways Approach By definition, what is distinctive about the two ways approach to ethical wisdom is the FORM in which it is presented -- the binary framework. There seems to be nothing particularly characteristic about the two ways ethical contents that would be of special help in tracing the background of the two ways formulation(s), beyond the obvious "Jewish" context of some of the instructions -- various God references (including creator connections), warning against idolatry, prohibition of abortion, various echoes of laws and standards known from other Jewish sources (including biblical). That such contents are older than their occurrence in what come to be "Christian" sources is not difficult to demonstrate. But is it possible to determine significant details about the development and connections of this two ways FORM prior to its incorporation into Barnabas and the Didache and their "Christian" predecessors? Here we are reduced to assessing the various parallels. That two ways imagery is very old in the Jewish biblical tradition, for example, is clear. Already in the pentateuchal materials, we find such words as "I have set before you life and good, death and evil..., life and death, blessing and curse; therefore choose life..." (Deut 30.15-20). Whether this reflects the existence of such a FORM of teaching already in the period from which this section of Deuteronomy comes (Persian or earlier) cannot be determined, but is certainly possible. Was this a form that was known and used in other Near Eastern cultures? I should know the answer, but don't. In the Greek worlds, the image of Heracles at the crossroads (Xenophon, Memorabilia 2.1.21ff) provides another sort of parallel, but brings us no closer to a concrete solution. We don't appear to be any better informed today than when I wrote 3 decades ago that "there is no reason to think that the form of the Two Ways tradition shared by Barnabas and the Didache had direct and immediate ties with Semitic Judaism. Rather it seems to have flourished in the Greek schools of Hellenistic Judaism for decades, if not centuries, before early Christian writers came to adopt it. Its ultimate origins are obscure and its family tree in terms of Greek and Smeitic (and even Egyptian) developments cannot be reconstructed with any assurance" (p.4). The Dead Sea Scrolls are of some help, as I already knew then [see commentary to Barn 18.1b-2]. But the parallels in the Manual of Discipline have less to do with establishing the presence of a two ways FORM of ethical instruction, than with casting light on the eschatological mood in which the form appears in Barnabas (see also the Testaments and 2 Enoch). To warn about conflicting options, related to angels and rulers and spirits and inclinations, is not to arrange ethical or other instructions according to such a format. Perhaps 4Q392, a very fragmentary "liturgical work" that speaks about God creating darkness and light in relation to the "deeds of God" and the understanding of humans, would have given us something like our two ways format, had more of it survived [GM 438]. Similarly some of the "wisdom" texts presented by GM on 371-404 come closer to giving similar "ethical" instruction and lists (e.g. 4Q416-424 "sapiental works" dealing with the "mystery of existence," perhaps in contrast to the "mystery of sin/iniquity" in 1Q27, 4Q299-300), but in general, what has survived in the DSS is not particularly focused on "ethics" in the sense of the two ways traditions! Even the copies of biblical Proverbs (2 MSS from cave 4) and Sirach (one MS from cave 2) are rare among the DSS.

Directions, Hopes and Suggestions What can this all mean for those who wish to shed light on the development of "apocalyptic" and "wisdom" traditions in early Judaism? I'm convinced, although the evidence is far from compelling in and of itself, that there were traditions of collecting and transmitting ethical instructions and exhortations governed by an oral/written two ways organizational devices (light/darkness, life/death, etc.) in Greek speaking Judaism prior to the emergence of identifiable "Christian" literature. The contents thus transmitted focused on "ethical/practical wisdom" -- how to live in a manner pleasing to the creator God, with focus both on attitudes (e.g. don't be arrogant) and moreso on specific actions that relate mostly to social situations (e.g. share things with neighbors, judge justly, avoid murder, etc.) and almost never to cultic or ritual practices (unlike much of what has been preserved in the DSS; Barn 19.12b-c = Did 4.14a-b on confession of sins and appropriate prayer comes closest). God rewards right conduct and punishes its opposite, although this context is more assumed than explicated in the preserved materials. There is little that merits the label "apocalyptic" in the specific instructions contained in these two ways materials. The framework in which the two ways section of Barnabas is cast, however, is explicitly "apocalyptic," with reference to angels of God and of Satan, contrast between the present lawless time and the eternal age, and between eternal death and its opposite. This sounds very similar to some passages from the DSS, and especially the Manual of Discipline. Indeed, the idea that the two types of angels oversee the two ways could easily be associated with the traditions about the fall of the watchers and their harmful relation to humankind, and with the ideas about the heavenly tablets from which humans learn what things ought to be done, etc. But I have no clear evidence for such associations. That the non-apocalyptic framework of the Didache branch of the two ways tradition can also be brought into association with Jewish "practical wisdom" traditions is also clear, when one considers the presentations in such works as Proverbs and Sirach. Can anything be gained by attempting to determine whether the origins of the two ways form was in an apocalyptic or a non- apocalyptic setting? Perhaps, as long as we keep in mind that both settings have strong and early rootings as well as complex developmental histories. Probably a stronger argument can be presented for the antiquity of pre-apocalyptic "ethical/practical wisdom" (as in Proverbs) than for the apocalyptic context. If we assume that the fairly obvious life/death binary, or even light/darkness (see Prov 4.18f!), created an organizational format that came to be used in that sort of setting, it is a fairly easy step for emergent apocalyptic to adapt the tradition to its perspectives. This would help explain why the contents of the common two ways tradition is so devoid of eschatological/apocalyptic language -- it was never there in the first place! On the other hand, it is possible to see apocalyptic contrasts and concerns as the magnet for creating the two ways form as we know it, and subsequent discomfort with apocalypticism as the reason for the rise of the alternate approach. In this scenario, more attention would be paid to any clues that survive in the Barnabas two ways material suggesting apocalyptic connections that may have been deleted by an alternative tradition -- e.g. Barn 19.10a "remember the day of judgment night and day" (Did 4.1a "remember day and night the one who proclaims God's word to you"), or the virtual identity of Barn 4.9b (not located in the two ways section) and Did 16.2b (in the apocalyptic appendix), which may well be fragments of an older two ways stream exhorting endurance in the last times [discussed in Kraft, pp. 6-7]. I have no final wisdom at this endpoint except to repeat the obvious. However these materials originated, or arrived at the forms in which we find them (associated with apocalyptic or not), both types of two ways traditions have left their impact on early Christian literature, and probably both derive from variations already present in the Jewish roots from which Christianity emerged. More I cannot say on the basis of available evidence. /end/