Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Rev. Robert Sirico’s ‘Catholique et Libéral’ launched in Paris
Rev. Robert Sirico’s ‘Catholique et Libéral’ launched in Paris
Oct 5, 2024 5:15 AM

The full-house at Paris Story theater brought together many ranks of French leadership from economics think tanks, businesses, human rights advocacies, and the Catholic Church. From left to right: David Briend (publisher), Rev. Robert Sirico (author), Emmanuelle Gave (interpreter), Jean-Philippe Delsol (IREF president), Charles Gave (preface author and president of Institut des Libertés)

Recently, on September 6, Acton’s president and co-founder Rev. Robert Sirico launched his first trade press book in French Catholique et Libéral. Les raisons morales d’une économie libre (Editions Salavator, trans. Solène Tadié) before a standing-room-only crowd at Paris Story, a theater in the French capital’s Opera cultural district.

Invited by the publisher Editions Salvator, Institut des Libertés and some other local supporters, over 170 persons (a cross-current of entrepreneurs, think tank representatives, journalists, professors and Church leaders) came from all over the City of Light to hear an American Catholic priest defend the free market according to profound moral and religious convictions about human liberty and human dignity.

In making his case for why he supports free enterprise, Rev. Sirico argued that we cannot appreciate economics simply from false anthropological constructs like “homo economicus”, that is, viewing human flourishing through the mere satisfaction of determinate material needs. Nor can we appreciate economics as a vehicle for mitigating economic inequality or class warfare as we find in socialist and Marxist political-economic manifestos.

Rather, Rev. Sirico said, a moral defense of free market economics is more about defending our inalienable rights to live out our vocations according to our conscience and according to the dignity we associate with human innovation while freely and ingeniously contributing to mon good of mankind.

“The human freedom in the market, the right to private property, contract, and similar things…(are) intimately tied to human persons, because all these things are created by human beings and for human beings, who are themselves created by God in whose image they are fashioned, and are endowed with a vocation to be creative and productive and responsible,” Rev. Sirico said.

Spurring discussion of Rev. Sirico’s book at Paris Story was Institut des Libertés’s president Charles Gave, author of the book’s French preface and former international financial executive in Hong Kong.

Mr. Gave writes in his preface that human freedom is ultimately order to Christ’s demanding mand to give freely and entirely of ourselves, of all our talents, and all our resources to projects so as to take full responsibility of our moral choices and acts to contribute to mon good.

As Gave writes, “He who has not given everything, has really given nothing…The essence of the Christian religion is not to ask for mechanical adhesion to a rule let alone obey a master as does a dog [obeys his owner]. This is not the full exercise of our free will.” ( trans. from French inCatholique et Libéral, p. 8) Gave, therefore, argued that economies must be maximally disposed to increase and embolden our freedoms so we may act to our fullest, freest, most responsible capacity to respond to Christ’s high moral demands for us as individuals when caring for human society as a whole.

Jean-Philippe Delsol, president of IREF, an economics and tax reform advocacy, was invited to provide mentary as Rev. Sirico’s discussant (see English translation here). According to Prof. Delsol, who wrote a favorable review of the book, much of the socialist-capitalist debate pivots around whether the moral precepts of Christianity are patible” with the secular political, economic and cultural norms established to sustain free enterprise.

“Liberals must find God,” he said. “But Christians should also find freedom.” Delsol went on to explain that in fact, “there is no responsibility without freedom” and that the highest political end of the State is human freedom and, thus, must support economic and legal systems that nourish and protect freedom.

“Having said this,” he told the attentive audience in Paris, “Freedom is not the end of man, but the necessary means of attaining (human happiness)…Freedom, despite the natural human yearning for it, is not a goal or a virtue in itself. We have freedom for something…. Freedom is an instrumental goal. Once it is achieved, we naturally ask, “And then?” What is the answer to the “and then?” with regard to our freedom? Ultimately the aim of freedom must be the Truth” of God and man.”

The problem today, Prof. Delsol concluded, is that many Western governments crowd out creative human charity due to the largesse of “Nanny” Welfare States whose subsidies, impersonal agencies, and bureaucratic machines “take the place of [loving, free] individuals making them more and more mediocre every day.”

The evening concluded with a lively question and answer session with the author Rev. Sirico. Many of those in attendance spoke of the ways in which the Church, as with Pope Francis, actively speak out against the free market where “the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer” or simply demonize entrepreneurs as self-aggrandizing, greedy Gordon Geckos, like in the 1980’s Hollywood blockbuster film Wall Street“who care not for poor but only themselves and maintaining their luxurious lifestyles,” one mented.

Rev. Sirico responded saying we must not just make moral claims about wealth creation. Moral claims are important, he said, and certainly “we have plenty of Gordon Geckos out there” bent on ameliorating only their own fate. However, he said, we must base our opinions about the free market on the facts. Without the facts our moral case is less credible, he said.

“What no one can honestly deny is that over last few hundred years, since the Industrial Revolution, it’s not just the rich that are getting richer, but the poor are getting richer as well.” While not necessarily at the same rate or in direct proportion to the rich, we cannot deny, Sirico said, that today’s poor are better off and have more access to global market exchange and to goods that were “yesterday’s luxuries” but which are monplace affordable necessities, like penicillin and cell phones.

The world is a much better place to flourish today, he said, and we can thank human invention made possible in a global market context.

To purchase a copy of Rev. Sirico’ Catholique et Libéral. Les raisons morales d’une économie libre, please order from the Editions Salvator web site.

Note:Solène Tadié contributed to this blog.

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
What Are the Conditions for Human Flourishing?
“A Christian society is not going to arrive until most of us really want it: and we are not going to want it until we e fully Christian… I cannot learn to love my neighbour as myself till I learn to love God: and I cannot learn to love God except by learning to obey Him.” –C.S. Lewis In Economic Shalom, John Bolt’s Reformed primer on faith, work, and economics, he includes a chapter on how we might understand flourishing...
Obama Administration to Revise HHS Contraceptive Mandate Rule
Today the Department of Health and Human Services issued yet another revision regarding its contraception mandate. Details on the new regulations should be announced within a month. According to the Wall Street Journal: Justice Department lawyers said in a brief filed Tuesday with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit that the federal government would issue new regulations in the next month that will apply to all nonprofit institutions that say the faith with which they are affiliated...
Women Are Dying, But Where Are The Feminists?
If there is one woman who has the ear of the president of the United States, it’s Cecile Richards. The president of Planned Parenthood campaigned for him, and has called him the best friend women could have. In a campaign video, Richards said, Since day one, President Obama has stood with women. The very first bill he signed was the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, allowing us to make sure that women get equal pay to men. And under the...
How Much Does Poverty Drive Crime?
I’m about to make a prediction that is incontrovertible — a claim that cannot be controverted because (a) I am absolutely right in my prediction, and (b) because I will be long dead before my rightness can be proven. Here’s what I predict: By the year 2114 social scientists will have established with 90 percent confidence that the “root cause” of the majority of the social maladies we experienced in the early twenty-firstcentury (i.e., right now) were attributable to family...
Bellow on the Freedom and Nature of the Soul
I’m slowly working my way through James Atlas’ biography of Saul Bellow, and I came to the section where Saul Bellow returns to his birthplace in Lachine, Quebec, for the dedication of the municipal library in his name. At the dedication he gave a speech, which includes this section: I am here as a kind of testimony to the fact that it’s possible for a child from Lachine to do some things which have been called—not by me but by...
Would Christian Militias Help In Iraq and Syria?
Just as armed citizens have been protecting themselves and their property in Ferguson, Mo., small groups of Christians are forming in militia-style units in areas of Syria and Iraq. While most Christians believe they are allowed to protect themselves and others using force if necessary, it is a religion of peace. Christ himself urges us to “turn the other cheek.” Yet the outrageous and barbaric violence against Christians is moving some to call for a more aggressive stance against ISIS....
Ralph Lauren Corp. Prevails Against Religious Shareholder Activists
Earlier this month, religious shareholder activists from the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, Mercy Investment Services and the Sisters of Mercy nabbed headlines by attempting to force Ralph Lauren Corp. to conduct a needless and politically driven human-rights risk assessment of offshore vendors. The ICCR effort is another “name and shame” tactic intended to publically embarrass pany refusing to play ball with a left-leaning organization. According to the Huffington Post, the nominally religious shareholders’ proposal is … … backed by...
The Problem with Catholic Social Teaching
Jeff Mirus, president of CatholicCulture.org, recently wrote about some problems with Catholic social menting on Samuel Gregg’s piece, ‘Correcting Catholic Blindness.’ Mirus argues that “Catholic social teaching goes beyond strict principles to assess specific social, economic and political policies, it has too often tended to see the possibilities with a kind of tunnel vision. It sees (or rather its writers tend to see) through the lens of ‘what might be loosely labeled a mildly center-left Western European consensus.'” …when es...
7 Figures: Hunger in America
Feeding America is a nationwide network of 200 member food banks, the largest domestic hunger-relief charity in the United States. The Feeding America network of food banks provides food assistance to an estimated 46.5 million Americans in need each year, including 12 million children and 7 million seniors. The report “Hunger in America” is Feeding America’s series of quadrennial studies that prehensive demographic profiles of people seeking food assistance through the charitable sector. Here are seven figures you should know...
Ideological Tribalism: How Evangelicals Go About Social Ethics
I recently had an exchange with a Duke Divinity School student regarding many of things I’ve written at the Acton Institute over the past 12 years. The student said this about me: When es to fort to power and castigating the most vulnerable in our society, there is perhaps no public theological voice more eager than that of Anthony Bradley’s. His body of work is a textbook in blaming the victim and reducing problems to pathology. Not only had the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved