Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
J. Howard Pew
J. Howard Pew
Jun 29, 2026 8:22 PM

Born in Pennsylvania to a devout Presbyterian family, J. Howard Pew was taught at an early age the value of freedom. His father, Joseph Newton Pew, with Edward O. Emerson, established in 1876 what eventually became known as Sun Oil Company. After graduating from Grove City College, young Howard went to work for his father at Sun Oil and later became its President. Once retired, he continued to influence pany as member of the board, and later Chairman. Under his leadership, Sun Oil grew nearly 40 times over.

Howard became one of the most vocal and articulate defenders of freedom in America. “If you believe in freedom for the individual,” he once wrote, “you must be opposed to any encroachment of government on the rights of the individual.” If you believe that everyone should have an opportunity to receive an education, you cannot support government controlled education; if you support the free market, you cannot support government price controls. Pew was very critical of President Lyndon Johnson's “War on Poverty” because federal welfare programs could only breed more poverty by undermining the work ethic and making more people dependent on the state for their existence.

He believed that for liberty to be destroyed, the church must first be suppressed. He told the National Council of Churches in 1950, “We must strive constantly for honesty in government, in politics, in business, and in our private lives. We must rededicate ourselves to the service of God, and be ready at all times to give a 'reason for the faith that is in us.'”

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
Biblical Theology and the Non-Abundant Life
In this book, as the title suggests, New Testament scholar Craig L. Blomberg states his purpose as giving prehensive survey, in roughly historical sequence, of the major biblical witnesses to a theology of wealth for people in the church age–that is, from Pentecost onward” (30). Christian scholars of the more orthodox type will look hopefully to the notable aims of the volume, as to those of the entire series of studies in biblical theology of which it is a...
'We Were Wrong!' Yes: Hook Then, Slice Now
My love for the game of golf is, alas, not matched by an equivalent level of skill. Like many duffers, I tend to overcorrect. If I hook a shot, I am just as likely to slice the next, and my journey up the fairway reminds any spectator brave enough to watch of a drunken sailor tacking. Or I may push my putt past the hole only to follow by leaving the next one short. A good golfer learns from...
Bobos in Paradise
Graying hippies with ponytails hold forth on the minutiae of capitalism. Sixties psychedelic music is used mercials for retirement planning. Your broker has a tattoo. Is not this strange? All around us, the square and the hip have morphed into an odd new thing. Bohemians and bourgeoisie, batants, are now convivial, enjoying venti cappuccinos in each pany in coffee houses all across upscale American neighborhoods. At least that is the contention of David Brooks, senior editor of the Weekly...
Environmental Piety No Substitute for Technique
In 1994, a group of evangelical Christian scholars, members of the Evangelical Environmental Network, circulated a document titled “An Evangelical Declaration on the Care of Creation.“ The document’s aim was to spur concern for environmental action on the part of evangelical Christians. Care of Creation renews the call for the greening of evangelicalism and presents a series mentaries on that document by such notable theologians as Richard Bauckham, Calvin DeWitt, John Guillebaud, Jürgen Moltmann, Oliver O'Donovan, Ronald Sider, John...
Fraternal Societies and Social Concern
The first Christmas after my wife and I were married, we received an interesting gift from her grandparents - a year's worth of dues for membership at their Moose lodge. We had visited the lodge with them and other family members, using the expansive dance floor in a conservative setting to two-step our way to an enjoyable evening, but we had never seriously considered ing members. Exercising the gift meant joining the lodge and going through its applications and...
Making the American Self
What does it mean to be an American in the new millennium? Do we believe, as the Founding Fathers did, that there is a direct connection between the manner in which we cultivate personal identity and the formation of our identity as citizens? How do modern Americans define identity as individuals and as citizens in a society that emphasizes entitlement over individual responsibility? By extension, do Americans appreciate that the rights of citizenship are panied by corresponding duties to...
Setting the Record Straight
In recent years, the press has latched onto the work of the Evangelical Environmental Network, an organization formed under the auspices of Evangelicals for Social Action. Because many newspaper reporters and editors view evangelicals as part of the conservative “religious right,” the arrival of evangelicals who sound just like mainstream environmentalists is a news event--sort of a “man bites dog” story. This attention has given the Evangelical Environmental Network and its associates more prominence than they would otherwise have--and,...
Adam Smith and the Virtues of Enlightenment
Adam Smith (1723—1790) is best remembered today as the celebrated author of The Wealth of Nations (1776), who defined the workings of market economies and defended principles of liberty. To his contemporaries, particularly his fellow thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment, Smith was recognized first for his profoundly original contributions to moral philosophy and natural jurisprudence. In an important new book, Adam Smith and the Virtues of Enlightenment, Charles Griswold, professor of philosophy at Boston University, challenges readers to look...
The Evolution of Ronald J. Sider
In 1991, Eerdmans published a revision of Craig Gay’s Ph.D. thesis. Entitled With Liberty and Justice for Whom?, the book’s subtitle conveyed its scope: The Recent Evangelical Debate Over Capitalism. Gay’s book was marked mon social science preoccupations–the assumption that “interests” determine convictions, for example–and did not always explicate the ideas of those it described in terms that satisfied their authors, but there is no other source available prehensively describes the debates then current. The usual suspects filled the...
Enviro-Capitalists
Aldo Leopold, one of the fathers of the modern American conservation movement and author of A Sand County Almanac, in his essay “The Farmer as Conservationist” described conservation as “harmony between men and land.” Leopold envisioned the practice of conservation as “not merely a negative exercise of abstinence or caution” but “a positive exercise of skill and insight” whereby the “pure fire of intellect” is made manifest. In defining conservation in such terms, he consciously placed the burden of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved