Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Human Flourishing: Seeking More For The Oppressed
Human Flourishing: Seeking More For The Oppressed
Mar 20, 2026 11:02 AM

The February issue of Sojourners magazine presents various perspectives on the surge in evangelicalism’s interest in exploring new national and international peace initiatives. For example, The World Evangelical Alliance’s Peacebuilding and Reconciliation Initiative acknowledges “that in our zeal for evangelism, we have often overlooked the biblical mandate to pursue peace. mit ourselves anew to this mandate within our homes, munities, and among the nations.” Evangelicals for Social Action (ESA) promotes itself as an evangelical organization that “consistently campaigns at the grassroots and policy level for a world that is pro-life and pro-poor, pro-family and pro-racial justice, pro-sexual integrity and pro-creation care.” “We want Christians to look deeply, act justly, and love radically,” says ESA.

Justice and peace are, of course, themes we can all support. What Christians are there in the world who are pro-war and pro-injustice? Even with these themes, however, is it possible that those who are oppressed and suffering need more than a society that is merely peaceful and where people are acting justly? Because “peace” and “justice” are normally situated in light of negative realities, more often than not, the discourse tends to focus on what we should not do in society instead what allows people to be free to live out their vocation to be human. The solutions offered tend to narrowly focus on lofty hoped for visions that deny trade-offs necessary in a broken world.

Additionally, we find the surprising promotion of a ruling class of elites in government having concentrated decision-making power over those with less money and less political power, rather than considering ways to allow people to make decisions that empower them to seek their own solutions to meeting their needs. We need to do more than “end slavery” or “end poverty.” We need to think more deeply about what it means to be human and how we can put people in positions, in accordance with their design by their Creator, to live well. In other words, we need to focus our attention on human flourishing.

In a 2003 article on human flourishing,” Dr. Edward W. Younkins helps us get a sense of the advantages of focusing on human flourishing:

“Human flourishing (also known as personal flourishing) involves the rational use of one’s individual human potentialities, including talents, abilities, and virtues in the pursuit of his freely and rationally chosen values and goals. An action is considered to be proper if it leads to the flourishing of the person performing the action. Human flourishing is, at the same time, a moral plishment and a fulfillment of human capacities, and it is one through being the other. Self-actualization is moral growth and vice-versa.”

Moreover, in order for human flourishing to be properly applied, we are reminded that the human person requires certain social, political, legal, and economic conditions to do so:

It follows that the proper role of the government is to protect man’s natural rights through the use of force, but only in response, and only against those who initiate its use. In order to provide the maximum self-determination for each person, the state should be limited to maintaining justice, police, and defense, and to protecting life, liberty, and property.”

Being made in the image and likeness of God means that each person should be given freedom, “in decision making and behavior,” as a “necessary operating condition for the pursuit and achievement of human flourishing,” observes Younkins. This decision-making freedom is also how men and women mature in moral virtue. It is on this point that a mere focus on “justice” or “peace” fails to do the heavy lifting necessary to think long-term about a society that is truly just and free.

Far too often, organizations like Sojouners and ESA promote surrogate decision-making by elites that rob minorities in the United States and the poor around the world from the free and virtuous use of their own creativity, gifts, and talents. The promotion of concentrated decision-making inadvertently robs suffering minorities and the poor of their full humanity. We see this, for example, in the ESA’s promotion of the cultural imperialism es from suggesting foreign aid as a strategy for “ending poverty” (ESA) or in Jim Wallis’ recent pastoral letter to Congress where he affirms, referencing Romans 13, “the government’s responsibility concerning poor people” (Sojourners) — although Romans 13 does not teach this nor does any other part of the Bible.

In the end, then, it seems that we need a broader conversation. One that includes justice and peace but also includes the additional aspects of the human experience including: moral formation; the implications of human dignity; the rule of law; wealth creation; the role of the family, human action; the social nature of the human person; principles in the Christian tradition like solidarity, subsidiarity, and sphere sovereignty; the role of mediating institutions in serving the poor; and so on. If Christians want to truly help those who are suffering, and mature those who are not, there will be a growing need to re-think why it is that God created us free and wants human persons to live freely in this life and in the one e.

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
Masses and Quantity vs. Duty and Love
Anthony Esolen, in an on-going series in Crisis Magazine, ponders Catholic Social Teaching, as presented by Pope Leo XIII. Esolen says that Pope Leo’s rich view of humanity arms us today in not only promoting the free market, but bating the meager thoughts proposed by socialism and liberalism. How does Leo XIII do this? By truly understanding the human person. Human beings are embodied rational souls, and everything they touch they mark with the fire of their spirit, the gift...
Rev. Sirico on the Hugh Hewitt Show
Rev. Sirico will be on the Hugh Hewitt Show today at 8:20pm EST to discuss his book, Defending the Free Market. Listen to the show on your local Salem station or live online here. ...
‘Jesus Had An Economic Plan’: Was it Redistribution?
Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite, professor of theology at Chicago Theological Seminary believes that Jesus had an economic plan. She’s written a book, #Occupy the Bible: What Jesus Really Said (and Did) About Money and Power, and claims that Jesus came to reverse economic inequality. When Jesus announced his ministry as “good news to the poor” and to “proclaim the Year of the Lord’s favor” (Luke 4: 18-19), he meant that he wanted his society to have a year when economic inequality...
Video: Novak Award Winner Says Religion Inspires Hope, Creativity in Crisis
Prof. Giovanni Patriarca, recipient of the Acton Institute’s 2012 Novak Award given recently in Rome at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, was interviewed by RomeReports Television News Agency in a video released Friday. Articulating the main points of his lecture “Against Apathy: Reconstruction of a Cultural Identity,” Patriarca told RomeReports that Western democratic society is abandoning its traditional values and, therefore, its very culture of responsible freedom and creativity. He placed part of the blame of the West’s...
Magnanimity and Humility Make for Good Entrepreneurs
Alexandre Havard leading a recent “Virtuous Leadership” seminar with CEOs and entrepreneurs in Latvia, one of the most industrialized and wealthy republics of the former Soviet Union The Acton Institute’s Rome office led its recent Campus Martius Seminarwith Alexandre Havard, the Russian-French author of Virtuous Leadership(2007), Created for Greatness: The Power of Magnanimity(2011)and founder of the Moscow- and Washington, D.C.-based Harvard Virtuous Leadership Institute. Havard, speaking with Zenit’s Ed Pentin in an article following the seminar, said that during today’s...
The ‘High Tide of American Conservatism’ and Where We are Today
Given all the reassessment going on today about conservatism and its popularity and viability for governing, I mend picking up a copy of The High Tide of American Conservatism: Davis, Coolidge, and the 1924 Election by Garland Tucker, III. The author is Chief Executive Officer of Triangle Capital Corporation in Raleigh, N.C. Over the years, I’ve highlighted how Coolidge’s ideas relate to Acton’s thought and mission. And while I’ve read and written a lot about Coolidge, I knew next to...
Where Capitalism Ends, the Covenant Continues
As we reap the benefits of market exchange and observe the many achievements of free trade and globalization, it’s easy to give credit to the market itself, either ignoring or forgetting the munities, and institutions who actively leveragedit for mon good. Capitalism is, after all, a mereframework for human engagement. Although the constraints it imposes (“thou shalt not steal”) and the features it elevates (ownership, stewardship, risk, and sacrifice) may fit well within a broaderChristian context, it says more about...
‘Liberating Labor’ and Right-to-Work
The Michigan legislature’s historic vote today on the right-to-work issue raises the important question: Do labor unions offer the best protection for the worker? Liberating Labor: A Christian Economist’s Case for Voluntary Unionism by Charles W. Baird answers that question and explains the Catholic social teaching on the issue. In theory, unions foster good relations between employers and workers and prevent mistreatment or exploitation in the workplace. Pope Leo XIII sanctioned trade unions in Rerum Novarum during the Industrial Revolution;...
Economic Freedom: Vital for All
On Nov. 28, the Canada-based Fraser Institute released the eighth edition of its annual report, Economic Freedom of North America 2012, in which the respective economic situation and government regulatory factors present in the states and provinces of North America were gauged. Global studies of economic freedom, such as the Heritage Foundation’s 2012 Index of Economic Freedom and the Fraser Institute’s Economic Freedom of the World 2012, rank the United States and Canada as two of the most economically free...
This Week on AU Online: Lectures on Development and Trade
Poverty, development, and stewardship tend to be topics both of discussion and personal reflection as we are reminded to count our blessings around this time of year. If similar ideas have been on your mind, you may be interested in Globalization, Poverty, and Development, anAU Online lecture series thatexplores the theme of human flourishing and its relation to poverty, globalization, and the Church in the developed world. Join Mr. Brett Elder, a director at Acton Institute and creator of the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved