Theodore Abu Qurrah (c.750-c.825) was an intellectual heir of St. John
of Damascus. Both became monks of Mar Sabas monastery in the Judean
desert. Whereas John of Damascus was prominent among the generations of
Greek writers in the Holy Land in early Islamic times, Theodore Abu
Qurrah was the first Orthodox scholar whose name we know regularly to
write Christian theology in Arabic. He spoke and wrote the Arabic
language at a time when it was just becoming the cultural language of
classical Islamic civilization, as well as the lingua sacra of the
Qu'ran and of the new world religion. He was among the first Christians
to exploit the apologetic potential of the new Arabic medium of public
discourse. Abu Qurrah's Arabic tract in defense of the veneration of the
holy icons was a response to the problem of the public veneration of the
symbols of Christianity in an Islamic environment in which the caliph's
policies since the time of 'Abd al-Malik (685-705) had been to claim the
public space for Islam. In this treatise one finds arguments once
expounded by earlier Greek writers, now deployed to meet the needs of a
new generation of Arabic-speaking Christians, who were more evidently in
contact and debate with Muslims.