J. Kameron Carter

J. Kameron Carter’s Followers (12)

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J. Kameron Carter



Average rating: 4.15 · 150 ratings · 30 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Race: A Theological Account

4.12 avg rating — 138 ratings — published 2008 — 5 editions
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The Anarchy of Black Religi...

4.60 avg rating — 10 ratings2 editions
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In Sheep's Clothing: The Id...

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4.67 avg rating — 3 ratings2 editions
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Political Theology on Edge:...

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4.50 avg rating — 2 ratings4 editions
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The Anarchy of Black Religi...

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In Sheep's Clothing: The Id...

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Quotes by J. Kameron Carter  (?)
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“Since God did not create out of necessity, God's relationship to creation is not held together through a master-slave relationship in which bondage and necessity are the central features. Instead... the creature's existence is a gift. It is the product of the sovereignty or freedom of God. It is just this freedom that the human being images as the mirror of the very Being, which is the very act, of freedom that brought it forth.”
J. Kameron Carter, Race: A Theological Account

“The new vantage from which Christian theology as a discourse on Christian identity must operate in the modern world, then, is the Christological horizon of Mary-Israel. To be Christian is to enter into this horizon. But where is the horizon concretely displayed, where is it made visible if not in despised dark (and especially dark female) flesh? Is this not the flesh of homo sacer . . .the flesh that is impoverished, "despised and rejected of men," flesh that in shame we "hide our faces from" (cf. Isa. 53:3)?
But if this is the case, it follows that the poverty of dark flesh is where one finds the wealthy God. . . In (Christ"s) taking on the form of the slave, the from of despised dark (female) flesh there is the diclsoure (sic) of divinity, a disclosure that undoes the social arrangement of the colonial-racial tyranny (tynannos,), as the seventh-century theologian Maximus the Confessor called it, that is the darker side of modernity”
J. Kameron Carter , Race: A Theological Account



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