Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
2013 Acton Institute Houston Luncheon Highlights
2013 Acton Institute Houston Luncheon Highlights
Jan 11, 2026 7:52 PM

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
The Fate of the Family Farm
To hear the NYT tell it (and Sojourners, for that matter), the family farm is facing severe threats. With no small degree of dramatic flourish, the NYT editorial linked above concludes: For the past 75 years, America’s system of farm subsidies has unfortunately driven farming toward such concentration, and there’s no sign that the next farm bill will change that. The difference this time is that American farming is poised on the brink of true industrialization, creating a landscape driven...
Environmental Stewardship News Round-Up (cont.)
The following items are the continuation of the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation Newsletter, August 15, 2007: Those first five major developments are themselves worthy of an entire issue of this newsletter, and the last two are significant as well. But here are some additional stories worth noting since our last issue: 1. Natural explanation for all climate variability in last century? Science Daily, August 1, 2007 [University of Alabama climatologist Roy Spencer informed us of this article,...
College Professors Biased Against Christians?
Many students who identify as Evangelical Christians and attend a state or public university are reporting severe bias against their beliefs in the classroom. “Tenured Bigots,” is the title of Mark Bergin’s article in World Magazine which highlights statistical proof of enormous prejudice by faculty members against evangelicals. Surprised? Of course not! The findings about attitudes toward Evangelicals actually turned up in a study designed to gauge anti-Semitism. The analysis was conducted by Gary Tobin, president of the Institute for...
The Greatest Lawsuit Ever
For your reading pleasure, I present you with a partial list of defendants from the case of Riches v. Bush et al: George W. Bush, Hillary Rodham Clinton, James Hoffa, , Pope Benedict XVI, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, John Deere, , Adolf Hitler’s National Socialist Party, Roc-A-Fella Records, Shawn Carter (doing business at Jay-Z), Japan’s Nikkei Stock Exchange, Gambino (crime family), Three Mile Island, Tony Danza, Islamic Republic of Iran, University of Miami, GEICO Insurance, Jewish State of Israel, Soledad...
Youth and the Relevance of the Gospel
There’s been a spate of stories lately in various media about the difficulty that evangelical denominations are having keeping young adults interested in the life of the institutional church. Here’s one from USA Today, “Young adults aren’t sticking with church” (HT: Kruse Kronicle; Out of Ur). And here’s another from a recent issue of my own denomination’s magazine, The Banner, “Where Did Our Young Adults Go?” I wonder if the push to be “relevant,” initiated largely by the baby boomer...
Asylum vs. Assistance
In connection to Acton’s recent coverage of the New Sanctuary Movement, which shelters illegal immigrants in churches to protect them from deportation, see this fascinating Christianity Today piece that explains the history of the church sanctuary concept. A few excerpts…. “As a product of a time when justice was rough and crude,” law professor Wayne Logan summarized in a 2003 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review article, “sanctuary served the vital purpose of staving off immediate blood revenge.” If the...
Marketing is the New Finance
No doubt feeding the fears of those who believe that global corporations pose the greatest threat to the future flourishing of humanity, such multi-nationals are beginning to hire their own economists, much like governments have their own financial and economic experts. See, for instance, this interview on the WSJ Economics Blog with UC-Berkeley economist Hal Varian, who has taken a position as chief economist with Google, Inc. Where will Varian be focusing his attention? In his words, “I think marketing...
The Global Warming Debate: Yada, Yada, Yada
I am not a prophet, not even a futurist. I do study trends, now and then, and I try to pay careful attention to popular culture. One thing I am quite sure about: global warming will be a central issue in public debates and political campaigns for some time e. It has e the Apocalypse Now issue of our generation. (Overpopulation, the nuclear threat and global cooling did it only a few decades ago.) The simple premise, virtually unchallenged in...
Evangelizing the Powers
As one might infer from Lord Acton’s maxim, the question has been raised: Did proximity to political power corrupt Billy Graham’s chaplaincy to the presidency? GetReligion’s Douglas LeBlanc surveys the recent attention paid by the mainstream media to this part of Graham’s pastoral mission, and concludes in concord with Randall Balmer, “The gospel is better served when religious leaders keep a healthy distance from political power. The challenge for future presidents will be to find spiritual guidance and solace from...
Sicko and the Sick Man of the Great White North
Time sure does fly. It’s been almost two years since I called Canada’s government-run health care system “The Sick Man of the Great White North” and wrote: Canada’s system may be the gold standard for government-run health care, but only if you’re looking for a system that can’t provide essential medical services in a timely manner. Sadly, nothing much has changed in the interceding time between that post and now. In fact, things are very much the same: Canadians still...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved