Arabic Christianity in the Monasteries of Ninth-Century PalestineVariorum Sidney H Griffith ISBN: 0860783375 price: $122.95 hardcover
The history of Christian literature took a new turn in the 8th
century when monks in the monasteries of Palestine began to write
theology and saints1 lives in Arabic; they also instituted a
veritable program for translating the Bible and other Christian
texts from Greek (and Syriac) into the language of the Qur1an,
the lingua franca of the Islamic caliphate. This is the subject
of the present volume.
Two key factors leading to this change, as Professor Griffith
indicates, were that the confrontation with the developing
theology of Islam created a direct need for apologetics to face
this new religious challenge in its own language; and, second,
simply that as the memory of Byzantine power waned, so too did
the knowledge of Greek. Issues of particular interest in this
apologetic literature are those of the freedom of the will, a key
topic in the controversies between Melkites and Muslims, and of
the legitimacy of icon veneration, a subject of great
contemporary concern at the time of Iconoclasm in the Byzantine
Empire.
Contents: Preface; The prophet Muhammad, his scripture and his
message, according to the Christian apologies in Arabic and
Syriac from the first Abbasid century; The Gospel in Arabic: an
inquiry into its appearance in the first Abbasid century; The
monks of Palestine and the growth of Christian literature in
Arabic; Eutychius of Alexandria on the emperor Theophilus and
Iconoclasm in Byzantium: a 10th-century moment in Christian
apologetics in Arabic; Theodore Abu Qurrah's Arabic tract on the
Christian practice of venerating images; Free will in Christian
kalam: the doctrine of Theodore Abu Qurrah; Stephen of Ramlah and
the Christian kerygma in Arabic in 9th century Palestine; Greek
into Arabic: life and letters in the monasteries of Palestine in
the 9th-century; the example of the Summa Theologiae Arabica; A
9th-century Summa Theologiae Arabica; The Arabic account of 'Abd
al-Masih an-Nagrani al-Ghassani; Anthony David of Baghdad, scribe
and monk of Mar Sabas: Arabic in the monasteries of Palestine;
Additions; Index.
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