Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Editor's Note: Winter 2020
Editor's Note: Winter 2020
Mar 30, 2026 9:20 AM

“Almighty God hath created the mind free,” wrote Thomas Jefferson. Others believe that leaves too much to chance. The desire to shape news coverage, and the proper response, frames this issue.

When “the owners of these platforms suppress or delete content they deem objectionable,” writes Acton Institute co-founder Rev. Robert Sirico, this should not properly be called censorship but “censureship.” This insight should guide all discussions on this topic.

Ed Morrow notes how search engines disadvantage right-of-center news and websites – and the laws that would rectify or formalize this behavior.

Anne Rathbone Bradley reminds us that the same decentralized information flow that establishes prices is at work in the spontaneous fact-checking of news on social media. Regulating either can grievously distort reality. The solution to the dehumanizing tendency of social media, writes Bradley J. Birzer of Hillsdale College, is the humanizing presence of munity.

First Things editor Rusty Reno engaged in two debates with Rev. Sirico over the Christian approach to state regulation. Reno expounds on his views in his latest book, Return of the Strong Gods, which is reviewed in this issue by Kai Weiss of the Austrian Economics Center in Vienna.

Education forms the leitmotif of this issue, as a U.S. Supreme Court case concerning school choice could overturn the Blaine amendment in 37 state constitutions. While entanglement of federal funds with private – especially religious – schools presents cause for alarm, Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue involves private funding streams dammed by the state. Similarly, Jovan Tripkovic – another first-time author – describes a new law in Montenegro that could allow the government to seize the property of the nation’s most historical and popular church; it also effectively forbids parents from giving their young children a parochial education.

Complete access to information lies at the heart of any free society.

This issue has been made possible in part thanks to a generous donation from Jeffrey and Cynthia Littmann. Jeffrey and CynthiaLittmann arechampions ofconservation and thegood stewardship of our natural resources as a gift from God.

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
Reading Centesimus Annus
Grasping the authentic significance of Centesimus Annus requires two approaches. First, one must read the encyclical on its own merits, independently of previous papal teaching. As objectively as possible, one can exegete its various passages to discern its thrust and priorities. Then one must read the document in the context of previous social pronouncements by the magisterium over the past one hundred years and see what new themes, developments, and directions the present encyclical initiates. When read for its...
Biography: Karol Wojtyla
“Freedom is offered to man and given to him as a task. He must not only possess it but also conquer it. He must recognize the work of his life in a good use, in an increasingly good use of his liberty. This is the truly essential, the fundamental work, on which the value and the sense of his whole life depend.” When Cardinal Karol Wojtyla pronounced these words during the Eucharistic Congress in Philadelphia in 1976, he articulated...
To Promote the Progress of Science and Useful Arts
Lord Acton, the great historian of freedom, understood that “liberty is the delicate fruit of a mature civilization.” The liberty of which he spoke embraced a broad scope of human freedom, including dimensions political, intellectual, economic, and, especially, religious. The civilization of which he spoke was the West, whose heritage of Greek philosophy, Roman law, and Christian faith indelibly marked it and inexorably pushed it toward the full panoply of liberties we enjoy today and to which the rest...
How Christianity Created Capitalism
Capitalism, it is usually assumed, flowered around the same time as the Enlightenment–the eighteenth century–and, like the Enlightenment, entailed a diminution of organized religion. In fact, the Catholic Church of the Middle Ages was the main locus for the first flowerings of capitalism. Max Weber located the origin of capitalism in modern Protestant cities, but today’s historians find capitalism much earlier than that in rural areas, where monasteries, especially those of the Cistercians, began to rationalize economic life. It...
Centesimus Annus Turns Ten
This year marks the tenth anniversary of John Paul II's most important social encyclical, Centesimus Annus. Taking its name from the first two words of the Latin text, the title means “the hundredth anniversary” and is a reference to Rerum Novarum, Pope Leo XIII's 1891 encyclical on the condition of the working classes. Rerum Novarum was the most important social encyclical of Leo's pontificate, which lasted from 1878 to 1903. Rerum Novarum's moral insight into the social, economic, and...
The Moral Dimensions of Monetary Policy
Before the turn of this century, an entire generation of preachers and ministers concluded that a moral monetary policy was an easy-money policy. “Give the people more money and credit,” was the cry of the populist ministers. “Down with gold, up with silver.” They mistakenly believed that the Treasury's printing press was the key to earthly salvation. Even as late as the 1940s, this ideology is evident in film. As much as I love the Christmas classic, It's a...
Economics and Theology: A Wondrous Exchange
Attempts to write of one's own vocation often fall flat. A priest whom I know remarked recently on the fiftieth anniversary of his priestly ordination, “The Lord could have chosen much better, he could have chosen much worse. He chose me.” That is every vocation in sum, and saying anything more often means just multiplying words. Every “vocation story” is an account of God whispering in an individual soul and, as such, it remains somehow inaccessible to others to...
Is the Acton Institute a Catholic organization?
With this issue dedicated to Pope John Paul II, it is timely to address mon misunderstanding that Acton is affiliated somehow with the Roman Catholic Church. Sometimes we are also asked whether Acton is linked to the Christian Reformed Church in North America because of the strong Dutch Calvinist presence in Grand Rapids, Mich., where the CRC and the Acton Institute are both based. In either case, the answer is no. Acton has no ties with any particular church...
The Delusion of Darwinian Natural Law
In a short, inconspicuous paragraph in the conclusion to the first edition of On the Origin of Species, Darwin speculates that “in the distant future … psychology will be based on a new foundation, that of the necessary acquirement of each mental power and capacity by gradation.“ One hundred and forty years later, Darwin's eerie prediction about the revolutionary effect of his work on human beings' self-understanding seems all too prophetic. After a century of dissemination, the once-novel theory...
Enjoying and Making Use of a Responsible Freedom
Lord Acton, the great historian of freedom, understood that “liberty is the delicate fruit of a mature civilization.” The liberty of which he spoke embraced a broad scope of human freedom, including dimensions political, intellectual, economic, and, especially, religious. The civilization of which he spoke was the West, whose heritage of Greek philosophy, Roman law, and Christian faith indelibly marked it and inexorably pushed it toward the full panoply of liberties we enjoy today and to which the rest...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved