When people discover the Didache for the first time, many come away with the impression that Christianity took a wrong turn somewhere along the way. The document appears simple, practical, ethical, and deeply rooted in the teachings of Jesus. It focuses on what is often called "The Way of Life" and "The Way of Death." It emphasizes prayer, fasting, generosity, humility, and community. There is little theology, little speculation, and virtually none of the grand cosmic language found in Paul. For many modern Christians, especially those attracted to Red Letter Christianity, the Didache appears to confirm their suspicion that Paul changed Christianity.
I understand why they feel that way.
The Didache seems closer to the historical Jesus than much of what later became Christian theology. It presents a faith centered on living as Jesus taught. If all we possessed from early Christianity were the teachings of Jesus and the Didache, Christianity might have remained a Jewish reform movement focused on ethical transformation and preparation for the coming Kingdom of God.
The problem with this perspective is that it ignores what actually happened.
Without Paul, Christianity almost certainly would not have become what it became. More importantly, it may not have survived at all beyond a relatively small Jewish sect. The earliest followers of Jesus were Jews. Jesus himself was Jewish. The original church in Jerusalem was Jewish. The great question facing the first century movement was whether Gentiles could enter the people of God without first becoming Jews.
Paul's answer changed history.
His mission opened the door to the Gentile world. His letters provided the intellectual and theological framework that allowed Christianity to move beyond the boundaries of Judaism and become a universal faith. Whether one agrees with every conclusion Paul reached is ultimately beside the point. Historically speaking, Paul was the bridge through which Christianity crossed from a regional movement into a global one.
For me, that fact carries profound implications.
If Christianity's purpose was merely to preserve the ethical teachings of Jesus, then Paul appears almost unnecessary. If, however, Christianity's purpose involved revealing something universal about humanity, consciousness, spirit, and the divine relationship between God and creation, then Paul suddenly becomes indispensable.
This is where I believe the conversation becomes much more interesting.
Once we step away from the assumption that every word of the Bible is the direct, infallible, and verbally dictated Word of God, we are free to evaluate the various streams of early Christianity on their own merits. We no longer have to force every text into perfect agreement. Instead, we can ask what each voice contributed to the larger evolution of Christian thought.
Viewed this way, Paul becomes less a corrupter of Christianity and more an interpreter of its deeper implications.
In Paul's writings we begin to see something that goes far beyond ethics. We encounter a cosmic Christ. We encounter the Logos. We encounter the idea that Christ is not merely Israel's Messiah but the divine principle through which all things exist and in whom all things are reconciled. This is not simply religion. It is mysticism.
The mystical strain within Christianity owes an enormous debt to Paul.
When later Christian mystics spoke of union with God, participation in Christ, divine indwelling, spiritual transformation, and the restoration of humanity to its original condition, they were often drawing upon Pauline foundations. Even many ideas that later appeared in Christian Gnosticism can be seen as developments of themes already present in Paul's writings.
This does not mean that the Gnostics were entirely correct. Nor does it mean that every Gnostic cosmology should be accepted literally.
In fact, I suspect much of the elaborate cosmology found in various Gnostic texts is mythological rather than historical. The archons, aeons, emanations, heavenly hierarchies, and complex maps of the spiritual universe strike me as symbolic attempts to describe realities that transcend ordinary language. Myth is often the vehicle through which spiritual truths are expressed.
The value of these systems may lie less in their cosmology and more in their insight into the human condition.
At their best, the Gnostic traditions recognized that humanity suffers from a kind of spiritual amnesia. We forget who we are. We become identified with the material world, social conditioning, fear, guilt, and separation. Salvation is not primarily about escaping divine wrath. It is about awakening. It is about remembering. It is about recovering the knowledge of our true origin in the Divine.
That theme resonates deeply with the teachings of Jesus and with Paul's understanding of transformation in Christ.
In this sense, I find it difficult to dismiss the Gnostic contribution altogether. The persistence of these ideas suggests that they were addressing something important within the early Christian experience. The church eventually marginalized many of these movements, but suppression does not necessarily prove falsehood. Sometimes it merely reflects the outcome of historical power struggles.
The Didache, meanwhile, remains valuable precisely because it preserves an earlier and simpler voice. It reminds us that spirituality cannot become detached from ethical living. It keeps Christianity grounded in compassion, humility, forgiveness, and practical discipleship.
Yet the Didache ultimately occupies the place it does in history because it was not sufficient by itself to carry Christianity into the wider world.
Paul's vision did that.
His universalism did that.
His willingness to embrace Gentiles did that.
His mystical interpretation of Christ did that.
Without Paul, Christianity might have remained a small Jewish movement remembered primarily by historians. With Paul, it became a civilization-shaping force that spread across continents and cultures.
For that reason, I cannot fully embrace either extreme. I cannot accept the view that Paul simply corrupted Jesus. Nor can I accept the notion that every word of scripture must be harmonized into a single infallible system.
Instead, I see Christianity as containing multiple streams that together reveal a larger picture.
Jesus provides the example.
The Didache preserves the path.
Paul reveals the universal and mystical horizon.
The Gnostics explore the inner dimensions of awakening.
Each contributes something important.
The challenge for modern seekers is not choosing one voice and silencing the others. The challenge is learning to hear them all while recognizing their strengths, limitations, and historical contexts.
When viewed through that lens, Christianity begins to look less like a rigid system of beliefs and more like a centuries-long conversation about the nature of reality, consciousness, transformation, and humanity's relationship to the Divine. The historical Jesus may have planted the seed, but it was Paul who helped reveal the vast forest hidden within it.
It then becomes obvious that the Gospel of John was written
in an attempt to bridge the gap between the red letters and Paul.






