The Miaphysite Abu Qurrah: Transmitting Christian-Muslim Polemic across Confessional Lines

A series of hybrid research seminars presented by the IICPT TORCH Network and the Centre for Muslim-Christian Studies, Oxford

In person: The Schwarzman Centre, Seminar Room 63 (University Members Only)

Online: Register for Online Attendance

Week 8: The Miaphysite Abu Qurrah:  Transmitting Christian-Muslim Polemic across Confessional Lines 

Speaker: Shane Patrick, University of Oxford

 

The Miaphysite Abu Qurrah: Transmitting Christian-Muslim Polemic across Confessional Lines

In this paper, I intend to examine the Miaphysite recension(s) of the “Debate of Abu

Qurrah with Muslim scholars at the court of the Caliph al-Maʾmūn,” paying close attention to

confessionally-motivated editing, and considering its relevance to wider questions regarding

Christian confessional boundaries in the Islamic world and the role of Islam in transforming

intercommunal relations among Middle Eastern Christians.

 

The relevance of this topic to different subfields of history, theology, and philology is readily

apparent, but what might it portend for political theology? An obvious answer is that the political

theology of the Melkite and Miaphysite recensions vis-à-vis Islam may differ substantially. I also

propose the following answer, with a narrower focus on the political-theological dynamics of

intercommunal textual transmission. The relevance of the christological schisms to political

theology is well-known. Christian political leaders aligning themselves with particular

christological camps prompted subsequent developments in Christian political theology. A study of

the long-term aftereffects of Chalcedon in the Middle East and the transformation of christological

tensions following the Islamic conquests can provide us with a chance to see what happened to

christology-centric political theology when a new batch of christologically-indifferent rulers took

power. I tentatively suggest that the impact of Islam on Christian political theology, specifically in

the case of Chalcedon’s aftershocks, was to diminish the political-theological tensions between

warring christological factions, and instead enable their intercommunal boundaries to become more

porous. The idea that non-Christian conquest might resolve some of the problems of Christian

political theology may seem at first counterintuitive. But, it is important to recognize that while

there were new political-theological questions raised by the rise of Islam, there were other old

questions which were resolved, which in turn shaped the way that different Christian communities

interacted.

 

 

Find out more about the MT2025 seminar series here: 

iicpt_cmcs_mt_seminar_short_poster_updated.pdf

 

Contact Dr Steven Firmin at iicptnetwork@ox.ac.uk for more information.


The Impact of Islam on Christian Political Theology, TORCH Networks