The considerable theological heritage of the Arab Christian communities in the Middle East is still relatively little known outside of specalised circles, and the impression is still too common that "Arab" necessarily means "Muslim." This artiche evokes the flourishing of Christian Arab thought and theology between the eighth and the thirteenth centuries, at a time when Christian Arab thinkers, theologians and pastors were striving to meet the intellectual and other challenges posed to their received faith by then victorious Islam, with which engagement was an existential imperative.
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