Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Rev. Robert Sirico on Ayn Rand’s search for God
Rev. Robert Sirico on Ayn Rand’s search for God
Dec 21, 2025 10:02 AM

“Who is John Galt?” That line, which motivated millions of readers to slog their way through Ayn Rand’s tome Atlas Shrugged, is more than a plea to establish someone’s identity; it embodies Rand’s longing for the transcendent One, according to Rev. Robert A. Sirico.

The Acton Institute’s co-founder fleshed out his case when he sat down with David L. Bahnsen for the podcast Capital Record. Episode 9 is aptly titled, “Ayn Rand meets religion.”

Who was Rand searching for when she developed the champion of capitalism? pletely mistaken about her epistemology, her metaphysics, her anthropology, and all the rest of it. But I think what she was looking for was the ideal man to worship,” said Rev. Sirico.

“I happen to think that she knows the answer to that question now,” Rev. Sirico added. “John Galt is Jesus Christ.”

Rev. Sirico noted the parallels between John Galt and the Second Person of the Trinity as presented in the four Gospels:

[S]he was looking for the one who animates the world, the one who is hated by the world, and in fact in the novel has five wounds inflicted upon his body in the end – and the people who are inflicting it couldn’t even do it without his help. And he … flies away with his bride, to go to that place where his own apostles are … and as they see the collapse of the world, there’s this image of John Galt with a cigarette tracing the sign, not of the cross, but of the dollar.

“This is iconography borrowed from Russia, the icons of Russia,” Rev. Sirico said. “She borrowed these things and distorted them.”

He added that Rand’s “anger” made her “an evangelical atheist” and “one of the most intolerant people” of her time.

William F. Buckley Jr., whom both men remember fondly, once recounted that Rand’s first words upon meeting him were: “Mr. Buckley, you are too intelligent to believe in Gott!”

Rev. Sirico summarized, “She was asking the right questions and getting the wrong answers.”

In the 41-minute interview, the two men also discuss:

“The three really popular and very predominant errors” threatening a free and virtuous society – and the one mistake they share mon;The misguided spirituality of greed – particularly why “we always desire more, because we’re desiring God – but we settle for baubles”;Whether supply-side economists like Arthur Laffer and Jack Kemp “hurt themselves by not ‘Actonizing’ their message 30 years ago”;The genesis of modern economics among the Scholastics, particularly the School of Salamanca;Why everyone should know the name and work of the late Edmund Opitz of FEE;The fact that Friedrich von Hayek, “at the end of his life, called for a priest”; andWhy the Acton Institute “quite intentionally” chose to be ecumenical.

Many of these e down to the respect of the human person and the question that follows any rich Christian anthropology: “Are we going to coerce people, or are we going to inspire people?”

You can listen to the interview here.

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 Number One Failure of Modern Economics
In a recent Reuters opinion column, Mark Thoma faults academic economists for their failure to predict the housing crash. He says their failure can be attributed to the disconnect between academia and economic forecasters. I don’t agree with Thoma, but I do think he gets it right when he says the failure of modern day economics, May have something to do with the desire among economists to e more of a science – a heavy focus on theory and math...
The Privilege of Responsibility
This past weekend in Chicago a luncheon was held for the kickoff of college football’s Big 10 Conference. Michigan State University quarterback, Kirk Cousins, was featured at the conference, giving an honorary talk on his journey through four years in college football, and the important lessons he took away from his experience. Cousin’s stresses the opportunity given to him at MSU was one of privilege. Unlike most haughty star athletes, Kirk Cousins seem to understand what it truly means to...
Evaluating Our Values: A Christian Response to the Debt Crisis
Over at ThinkChristian, I take the opportunity to sketch “what prehensive Christian response to the crisis of public and private debt might look like.” I focus “on five main areas: the individual, familial, ecclesial, economic, and political.” This is a brief and preliminary set of questions and observations. But even so, I think even just provisional attempts to evaluate our values shows us that “the problems we face are far more than political – and far deeper than merely political...
Crossing Jordan for the Welfare State
Mark Tooley has an excellent write up over at FrontPage about religious left figures staging martyr like arrests in defense of tax increases, unsustainable deficit spending, and the welfare state. Here are some details provided by Tooley: Religious Left officials on July 28 successfully sought arrest for “faithful civil disobedience” in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda to protest any consideration of limits on the Welfare and Entitlement State. They were also demanding tax increases. Unlike more courageous and spiritually insightful fellow...
What the Common Good Isn’t
It looks like Congress will vote later today or this evening to raise the debt ceiling and avert a possible default by the United States Treasury. How the debt promise will fair when measured against Acton’s Principles for Budget Reform it is too early to know, but one thing is certain: if the deal contains a single budget cut for even the most ineffective of social programs, we’ll hear screams of protest from Jim Wallis and his Circle of Protection....
What Ireland Has Lost, and How It Can Be Regained
George Weigel writes on National Review Online, “something quite remarkable has e unmistakably clear across the Atlantic: Ireland—where the constitution begins, ‘In the name of the Most Holy Trinity’—has e the most stridently anti-Catholic country in the Western world.” While he calls the Irish prime minister’s recent anti-Catholic tirade what it is—calumnious—Weigel also acknowledges that the Church in Irelandis in a bad way. He goes so far as to say Apostolic visitations of the principal Irish dioceses and seminaries have...
Is Making Money Evil, Harry Reid?
I was listening to news radio and heard an update in which the senate majority leader Harry Reid gave his interpretation of events on the debt ceiling negotiation. The part that really got my attention was where he insisted that mittee work would go after those “millionaires and billionaires.” I wondered, “What is he really saying?” Let’s begin with millionaires and billionaires. Is Reid charging them with mitted some evil? If a person had made a lot of money by...
Immigration, the Free Market, and the Importance of Human Dignity
Immigration is never a light topic to discuss, and even the proposition of a solution to the effects caused by immigration might well be considered radical. The idea of a harmonious multicultural society is idealistic, but in reality, is very difficult to achieve. When looking at the advantages and disadvantages of immigration, relative to the nation receiving immigrants, the economy is a concern that es up. In a recent IEA (Institute of Economic Affairs) paper, Nobel Prize winner Professor Gary...
Audio: Kishore Jayabalan on Debt and Austerity
Over the past few weeks, Kishore Jayabalan – Director of Acton’s Rome office – has been called upon a couple of times ment on Italian and American budget negotiations for Vatican Radio. On Saturday, Jayabalan discussed the then-ongoing US budget negotiations: [audio: Kishore also made an appearance on Vatican Radio to discuss Italy’s debt issues back on the 13th of July, making the point that while austerity would be required, economic growth would be a necessity as well for Italy...
Call of the Entrepreneur Continues to Air on BIZ TV
Acton Institute would like to invite you to tune into BIZ TV for showings of The Call of the Entrepreneur, the first documentary released by ActonMedia. BIZ TV will be presenting the film today (July 29) at 5:00 pm EST, tomorrow (July 30) at 8:00 am EST, and Sunday, July 31 at 7:00 pm EST. BIZ TV is a network focused on airing inspirational true stories and informative talk shows that educate and motivate America’s entrepreneurs and small business owners,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved