Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
TCC: Lessons in Liberty & Restraint
TCC: Lessons in Liberty & Restraint
Dec 19, 2025 3:11 AM

Dan Clements, an American student studying at the University of Leuven, and I help greet conference attendees

Last week, an exciting new organization called the Transatlantic Christian Council(TCC) hosted its inaugural conference. The theme of the conference was “Sustaining Freedom”, which aligns well with the Council’s mission “todevelop a transatlantic public policy network of European and North American Christians and conservatives in order to promote the civic good, as understood within the Judeo-Christian tradition on which our societies are largely based.”

What I find most exciting about this Council, for which mend Todd Huizinga and Henk Jan van Schothorst on their vision and initiative in founding, is this: like the Acton Institute, the TCC is not exclusively devoted to just one aspect of life, but rather aims to provide a forum for conversation on a broad range oflife’s many important and fundamental human questions.

The starting point for these conversations is with a basic concept of human dignity. This concept is rooted in an openness to the idea of man as an image of God —endowed with the capacities for willfulness and reason,a creature and a sub-creator. And it is this understanding of the human person that serves as a point of departure for working through all sorts of interesting questions of politics, economics, liberty, government, religion, and family.

When I mentioned to a friend that I would be travelling to Belgium for this conference, he said to me: “Be sure they don’t euthanize you and harvest your organs!”

“Well,” I thought to myself, “that’s certainly a novel way to wish someone a good trip.”

Convening in Brussels for a daylong conversation on Christianity and secularism across North America and Europe provided an interesting context to discuss all sorts of current affairs in the light of the Judeo-Christian tradition.

Author and Social Critic Os Guinness

Anna Zaborska, a Member of European Parliament and John O’Sullivan, Editor-at-Large at the National Review each gave a ing address. Then, author and social criticOs Guinness delivered a keynote on “Sustainable Freedom” discussing the historical experiences and philosophical expressions of freedom throughout Western civilization.

One of the excellent things about this conference was the clear interplay between theory and practice. Participants thought reflectively about fundamental questions as they apply to every day life in the public sphere.There were three panel discussions including: “Human Rights and Human Nature,” “Religious Freedom: The Most Foundational Freedom under Threat,” and “The Moral Case for Free Markets.”

The first panel, “Human Rights and Human Nature” reminded me of Edmund Burke’s discussion of human rights as “incapable of definition, but not impossible to be discerned.” The panelists and participants grappled with the tension between individual and group rights, the challenges of defending the primacy of the right to life as the indispensable condition for all other rights, and the problems of the absence of an account of where human e from in such documents as the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Peter and Hazelmary Bull visit La Grand-Place in Brussels

The “Religious Freedom” panel was moderated by EricTeetsel, Executive Director of the Manhattan Declaration. This declaration is an effort to “take a stand” on the sanctity of life, the dignity of marriage, and religious liberty. Other topics discussed by the panel included: homeschooling, anti-discrimination laws, school prayer, human missions, multiculturalism, pluralism, healthcare, among others. The conference participants included Peter and Hazelmary Bull, a Christian couple from the United Kingdom, who just recently lost a Supreme Court case over their refusal to host a gay couple at their Bed & Breakfast. Their presence and testimony at the conference motivated us to consider the tension between matters of conscience and conventions of society by evaluating this particular case ofreligious modations clashing with literal modations.

This reminded me of Pope Emeritus Benedict’s Apostolic Exhortation in which he says that “religious freedom is the pinnacle of all other freedoms” and “includes the freedom to choose the religion which one judges to be true and to manifest one’s beliefs in public.” This is then followed by the statement: “The truth cannot unfold except in an otherness open to God, who wishes to reveal his own otherness in and through my human brothers and sisters. Hence it is not fitting to state in an exclusive way: ‘I possess the truth’. The truth is not possessed by anyone; it is always a gift which calls us to undertake a journey of ever closer assimilation to truth. Truth can only be known and experienced in freedom; for this reason we cannot impose truth on others; truth is disclosed only in an encounter of love.”

There were continual affirmations of the practical challenges peting “first” principles in everyday politics. Some topical stories discussed included “Where St. Nicholas Has His Black Pete(s), Charges of Racism Follow” and “Abstract Christmas tree sparks protests in Brussels.” Are holiday traditions preventing liberal progressive visions for society? Or, do accusations of discrimination constitute an attack on religious freedom by secularists? These questions surrounding current events provoked stimulating question and answer periods throughout the conference.

Rev. Robert A. Sirico, Bruno Roche, Jan Schippers, and Theodore Malloch

The final panel on “The Moral Case for Free Markets” was moderated by Acton Institute President Father Robert Sirico who recently wrote the book by a similar title, Defending the Free Market: The Moral Case for a Free Economy. Father Sirico began, as he usually does, asking: Who is the human person who has the right to be treated in a particular way? What is man’s distinct place in creation? How do human persons plish their nature and fulfill their very being by their actions in the world, according to the facts and conditions of existence in which they live? Continuing to think philosophically about the nature of the human person with respect to freedom, we can also ask: Who is the human person who is worthy of freedom and what sort of freedom is due to human persons according to their dignity and their nature?

Sustaining freedom seems to involve a prudential mix of liberty and restraint. This is the principle of ordered liberty, given a good defense in Samuel Gregg’s book On Ordered Liberty. As Edmund Burke says, “To make a government requires no great prudence. Settle the seat of power; teach obedience and the work is done. To give freedom is still more easy. It is not necessary to guide; it only requires to let go the rein. But to form afree government;that is, to temper together these opposite elements of liberty and restraint in one consistent work, requires much thought, deep reflection, a sagacious, powerful, bining mind.”

The Inaugural Conference of the Transatlantic Christian Council gave participants the opportunity to grapple together with all sorts of interesting and meaningful questions and controversies. Thank you to those who provided this opportunity.

To learn more about the TTC, you can visit their website and “Like” their Facebook page.

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
Coal-powered hybrids
As I said in 2006: Without too much exaggeration, you could say that today’s electric cars are really coal-powered. If you look at the sources of electricity in the US, “coal provides over half of the electricity flowing into American homes.” That means that in one ideal world of the alternative fuel crowd, when you plug your car in, you’re plugging it in to a coal plant (this is also why the idea of consumer carbon credits is catching on)....
WFB: In Memoriam
Buckley & Sirico – Acton’s 2nd Annual Dinner – May 12, 1992 Rev. Robert Sirico reflects on the life of William F. Buckley, Jr., who died in his study on Wednesday, praising him as a friend, a literary genius, and a supporter of the Acton Institute. Sirico writes, “He will be lauded by numerous pendants and scribes for the incredible number of his plishments, preeminent of which is his historic role as godfather of the modern conservative/libertarian movement in the...
Conference for clergywomen in Wesleyan tradition
UMAction, the Methodist wing of IRD that supports traditional and historic Methodism is encouraging women in the United Methodist and Wesleyan tradition in ministry to consider attending the “Come to the Water” conference in Nashville from April 10-13. John Lomperis of IRD appropriately notes, “Many evangelical clergywomen in the United Methodist Church feel sidelined or excluded in some of the denomination’s official clergy women’s networks because of a dominance of intolerant theological liberalism.” Just last night I was talking to...
Radio Free Acton – Remembering Buckley and contemplating religious consumerism
On this week’s edition of Radio Free Acton, Rev. Robert A. Sirico pays tribute to the late William F. Buckley, the RFA regulars are joined by Professor Joseph Knippenberg from Oglethorp University in Atlanta, Georgia to discuss the Pew Forum’s newly released research on the American religious landscape, and we listen in to some bonus audio from Dr. Glenn Sunshine’s Acton Lecture Series address, Wealth, Work and the Church. You can listen at this link. With regard to the discussion...
Buckley on law and Christian morality
From a CT interview in 1995 by Michael Cromartie: Certain things which the market authorizes simply in terms of law are unchristian and ought not to be done. The big issue today has to do with the fidelity of marriages. The tendency now to leave your wife because you have an infatuation with a younger woman of tenderer flesh is an enormous temptation. It’s carnal, and it’s also easy to justify with all the solipsistic reasoning that we hear today....
Some problems with Protestantism
Following up on our discussion of the Pew survey on the American religious landscape, I have a few thoughts as to what plagues American Protestantism, particularly of the evangelical variety, and it has to do precisely with the “catholicity” of Protestantism. To the extent that people are leaving Protestantism, or are searching for another denomination within the broadly Protestant camp, I think there are at least two connected precipitating causes. (A caveat: there are many, many individual and anecdotal exceptions...
Hug your favorite liberal today
Founda study on sociobiology in The Economist (of all places). This passage on the development of liberal vice conservative tendencies was worth a chuckle: Dr Wilson and Dr Storm found several unexpected differences between the groups. Liberal teenagers always felt more stress than conservatives, but were particularly stressed if they could not decide for themselves whom they spent time with. Such choice, or the lack of it, did not change conservative stress levels. Liberals were also loners, spending a quarter...
Solid economics at L’Osservatore Romano
Good news is not always so hard to find. Case in point: Free-market economics is making eback at the Vatican’s daily newspaper L’Osservatore Romano. Previously known as a dry read, L’Osservatore Romano (which means The Roman Observer in English) now contains provocative interviews and real news stories from around the world. This is attributable to the paper’s new editor, Giovanni Maria Vian, who was appointed to the post by Pope Benedict last October (see here for the interesting background on...
William F. Buckley – 1925-2008
Buckley & Sirico – Acton’s 2nd Annual Dinner – May 12, 1992 One of many remembrances at National Review Online: Bill died doing what he loved doing — he never left this movement he built, never left NR, he never stopped writing, never left home, never left thinking. And he’s as much a part of us today and forever as he was all these years. He’s left a remarkable legacy. ...
Imprisonment and government expenditures
There’s a lot of consternation, much of it justified, about the news that now 1% of the population of the United States is incarcerated. Especially noteworthy is parison of the rate of imprisonment with institutionalization in mental health facilities over the last century. But a breathless headline like this just cannot pass without ment: “Michigan is 1 of 4 states to spend more on prison than college.” Given the fact that policing, including imprisonment, is pretty clearly a legitimate function...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved