Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
2013 Acton Institute Houston Luncheon Highlights
2013 Acton Institute Houston Luncheon Highlights
Dec 25, 2025 5:27 AM

On Oct. 3, the Acton Institute held its annual luncheon and lecture in Houston at the Omni Houston Hotel.

Kris Alan Mauren, co-founder and executive director of the Acton Institute, emceed the event. The Rev. Martin Nicholas, pastor of Sugar Land First United Methodist Church, gave the invocation for the afternoon and the Hon. George W. Strake gave the introduction. Rev. Robert A. Sirico, president and co-founder of Acton, gave the keynote lecture for the afternoon: “Religious Liberty and Economic Liberty: Twin Guarantees for Human Freedom.”

Rev. Sirico began the lecture by giving a background of the Christian faith and religious liberty in the Roman Empire with the story of the emperor Constantine and ing of the Edict of Milan in A.D. 313. This edict declared religious liberty and tolerance in the empire at the moment when Christianity was on the rise and established tolerance for all religions not just Christianity. It also restored properties to the church if they had been previously confiscated by the state.

Rev. Sirico mentioned that in our day there is the expression, “the right to the freedom of worship.” This is not what the Constitution speaks about. He said that it speaks about the right to the freedom of religion. The difference between the freedom of worship and the freedom of religion is that the freedom of religion includes the freedom of worship but it also includes the freedom to build institutions and that is what we have done since the founding of the United States.

Continuing with his talk, Rev. Sirico observed that it was through religious institutions that many other institutions were built in this nation such as hospitals and schools with private property. Today those property rights are being dictated by our government and others when that was never the intention of our founding fathers. Property rights are, in their essence, sacred and private property and the church go hand-in-hand.

Rev. Sirico referred to the abolitionist movement in the 19th century and the civil rights movement, headed by Martin Luther King Jr., which were societal movements deeply rooted in religious rights and doctrines:

If we were to eliminate religious discourse from our public conversation, as is repeatedly being not only advocated but institutionalized and legalized in our country, then we would have never had an abolitionist movement in this country. If we were to eliminate religious freedom of speech in public discourse about important social, moral and civic matters then we would have put Martin Luther King in jail. I suggest to you, for reasons other than he was put in jail and I suggest to you that if you listen to the great “I Have a Dream” speech, in today’s context, with secular ears, you would wonder if he was speaking hate crimes or trying to impose his religious views on a nation—indeed he was. And indeed, in many respects, he did, by converting the hearts and minds of men and women to the beautiful moral ideal that he articulated. But you could not understand that speech if you did not know the King James Bible because line after line was taken right from the pages of the Scriptures.

Rev. Sirico ended the afternoon lecture by emphatically calling for a new Edict of Milan for this country; for a new restoration for freedom of religion and a new restoration to the rights of our property.

A time of questions and answers with Rev. Sirico concluded the afternoon. Questions and topics tackled included:

What do you see as the counterpart today to the free land Lincoln gave to settlers in 1862 and how might we move in that direction?

Markets are great for cell phones and clothing but you can’t really put health care into a market. How do respond to that assertion?

plete audio recording of the afternoon with Rev. Robert Sirico is available below.

Special thanks to our sponsors:

EnCap Investments, L.P.

Craig and Paige Moore

Wiley L. Mossy, Jr.

Joe and Marianne Quoyeser

Western Academy

Sugar Land First United Methodist Church

[product sku=”1262″]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Social justice math
This EducatioNation blog post contains the text of an incisive WSJ editorial, along with a sample curriculum that illustrates the idiocy outlined in the editorial. In “Ethnomathematics,” Diane Ravitch writes, “In the early 1990s, the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics issued standards that disparaged basic skills like addition, subtraction, multiplication and division, since all of these could be easily performed on a calculator.” She goes on to outline some characteristics of the “new, new math,” including “using mathematics as...
Interesting discussion
There’s an interesting discussion going on over at Mirror of Justice about Catholic Social Teaching and the Preferential Option for the Poor: here, and here. ...
Green gospel of Biblical proportions
Courtesy the Evangelical Ecologist, “A group called ‘Operation Noah’ has re-written parts of Scripture to fit their climate change message,” and goes on pare two “versions” of Psalm 24. I suppose this is just the next logical progression; if Scripture can’t be twisted by some perverse hermeneutic to fit your agenda, just change the text! Author Ruth Jarman writes, “I hope it doesn’t look sacrilegious to re-write the word of God according to Ruth.” No matter if it actually is...
A report from symposium
The first Acton Institute Summer Symposium was held last week, and John H. Armstrong, president of Reformation & Revival Ministries, gives a report. Here’s an excerpt: The group I am attending is titled, “Business, Faith and Ethics.” It is part of Acton’s Center for Entrepreneurial Stewardship. I have been in a room with twenty-five successful business entrepreneurs and one other mission related person, a leader in the Christian Reformed Church. This is not my normal venue so it has been...
‘But not only did God make Sunday…’
“But not only did God make Sunday, He made Monday, too, and Tuesday, Wednesday…. So if God made all those days, he’s in all our days, not just the one you want to put him in.” Words of wisdom from Rev. Al Green. HT: GetReligion ...
Where are Matt and Brandon?
In response to the title of this post, you might reply: “Who cares?” I’ll tell you why you should perhaps care who these guys are and where they are. Matt and Brandon are two Michigan natives who mitted to running across the continental U.S. These two Christians (Brandon is a freshman at Cornerstone University in Grand Rapids, and Matt teaches at Montego Bay Christian Academy in Jamaica) are making the run for charity, Water for Children Africa. I’ve never heard...
Gifts that keep on giving
Having been tagged by Kathryn at Suitable for Mixed Company, I duly submit my list within the guidelines of the following (and pledge not to repeat any placed on my initial list): Imagine that a local philanthropist is hosting an event for local high school students and has asked you to pick out five to ten books to hand out as door prizes. At least one book should be funny and at least one book should provide some history of...
Causes of increasing tuition
Harvey Silverglate on the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) blog, The Torch, passes on one explanation for why college tuition costs have been increasing at double digit rates for years on end. He writes in part: Alan Charles Kors and I posited one answer to the seeming puzzle in our book The Shadow University. We noted the extraordinary increase in administrative staff on the student life side of colleges and universities. We attributed this in large measure to...
‘This Fierce Spirit of Liberty’
As noted in an earlier post, this week is marks the 790th anniversary of the signing of the Magna Carta. Five years ago, Religion & Liberty published a series of essays on foundational documents in the history of Western civilization, or, as Edmund Burke called it, “this fierce spirit of liberty.” The first of these essays was on the Magna Carta, “In the Meadow That Is Called Runnymede.” Here are the others: John Milton’s Areopagitica, “The Liberty to Know, to...
Day and Sirico: Common Ground?
This post at a blog hosted by the Ratzinger Fan Club, Against the Grain, gives a brief overview of the “preferential option for the poor” in Catholic Social Teaching. In the process, Christopher writes, Fr. Robert Sirico’s approach strikes me as being suprisingly close to Dorothy Day’s — at least in spirit, if not in policy. Browse through her extensive writings and you’ll encounter a strong believer in personal responsibility and self-empowerment, highly critical of state-sanctioned welfare and handouts which...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved