Raymond Carr is an international public theologian. His research interests are theologically ecumenical, historically sensitive, and radically inclusive. He is a visiting professor and director of the Codex Charles H. Long Papers Project at Harvard Divinity School, a research scholar at the Moses Mesoamerican Archive and Research Project at Harvard University, and the president elect of the Society for the Study of Black Religion (SSBR).
""Many of us who know the brilliance of Raymond Carr have waited for these volumes. They are epic. Here in volume 1, Carr sets the stage for an astounding re-reading of Karl Barth and James Cone through the music of Thelonious Monk. The depth, subtlety, and artistic dexterity through which he articulates Barth and Cone's theological projects is unmatched by any text I have ever read. This book is a turning point in Barth studies and emerging Cone studies."" --Willie Jennings, associate professor of systematic theology and Africana studies, Yale Divinity School Raymond Carr is one of the few groundbreaking and path-blazing theologians of his generation! This magisterial trilogy on three of the towering spiritual giants of the past one hundred years gives us new terrain in our grim and dim times."" --Cornel West, professor of philosophy and Christian practice, Union Theological Seminary ""Thelonious Monk's unprecedented aesthetics allow Raymond Carr to innovate brilliantly a mode that creates the interpenetration of James H. Cone and Karl Barth as supplementation and correction in counterpoint. In this groundbreaking first volume, Carr, himself a theological jazz creator and trickster theoretician, deploys history and interpretation to set us up for the Monkian melodies in his forthcoming volumes 2 and 3."" --Dwight N. Hopkins, professor of theology, University of Chicago ""Raymond Carr undertakes an audacious attempt to construct 'irregular theology' in an aesthetic mode through which Karl Barth encounters James Cone. He interrogates and advances Barth's thinking of freedom (Mozartean) down a line that includes James Cone's spirituals and blues and Thelonious Monk's jazz. In Carr's groundbreaking proposal, Friedrich-Wilhelm Marquardt's 'logos of society' finds significance in the Black experience of sociopolitical struggle. Do not miss this book!"" --Paul S. Chung, director, Karl Barth and Public Theology Center ""Raymond Carr is the Conjunto Cat! 'Conjunto' is Spanish for 'to join together' or a 'set' or a musical group. In Theology in the Mode of Monk, Carr has arranged a new polygonal bandstand on which appears a theological vision and practice whose main players are Karl Barth, James Cone, and Thelonious Monk! Watch out! Give a listen! Read deep! Conjunto can also mean totality, everybody! Come onstage by reading this book and join Raymond Carr's conjunto."" --Davíd Carrasco, professor of the study of Latin America, Harvard Divinity School ""Raymond Carr has emerged as one of the most creative minds in contemporary African-American theology. His intensive engagement with James Cone and Karl Barth has already made a mark in the field but is now assured with the appearance of these remarkable volumes."" --George Hunsinger, professor of systematic theology, Princeton Theological Seminary ""With great erudition and care, Raymond Carr cleverly utilizes the jazz aesthetic of Thelonious Monk to help explore the theological relationships between Karl Barth and James Cone. As he does so, we see the importance of Christ's faithfulness as our cantus firmus and hear an urgent call for the church to be prophetic as it hears the higher frequencies of God and the lower frequencies of the cries of the oppressed."" --Gary W. Burnett, senior fellow in New Testament, Belfast Bible College