Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Justice, applied equally
Justice, applied equally
Sep 12, 2025 7:16 AM

Oftentimes during prayer I reflect on my good fortune. I grew up in a loving Italian-American family during an amazing era of progress both economically and technologically. My Italian roots were planted so strong.

However, as they say, the Lord works in mysterious ways. Instead of leading a life in quiet near-obscurity, I pursued the public life of a free-market proponent. This entailed employing the Word and other theological and divinely inspired tools to support the small-“w” words of renowned economic thinkers.

Amazingly, the task wasn’t all that difficult. At first blush, it would seem we founders of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty were attempting to pound square pegs into round circles.

My public life has granted me innumerable opportunities to travel throughout the United States and abroad. My point isn’t to boast, but only to make a point that my travels have provided me with tremendous lessons in what constitutes humanity as our culture traditionally understands it.

Far from being homogenous, our world consists of many perspectives, attitudes and values. However, these myriad views aren’t inherently irreconcilable. In my adopted hometown, for example, religious diversity abounds and there exists dozens of different political views.

Such is the enormity of some of these differences of opinion, readers may recall an attempt by the local government to levy a tax burden on our headquarters. Had this effort succeeded, the Acton Institute no doubt would have survived, at the very least, financially wounded. Fortunately, the case eventually was resolved in our favor, but not before wreaking havoc in the personal and business lives of everyone affiliated with our nonprofit, tax-exempt enterprise.

However large this threat loomed over Acton specifically, we fought not just for our own survival, because a victory for Acton would represent a victory for our munity as well as our movement. Winning for us meant that the rule of law for everyone also won.

For the most part, somehow, our many tribes have managed to coalesce into a munity. People thrive when justice is applied equally. Justice is but one of the lynchpins of a free and virtuous society.

By justice, I don’t mean the sense of fairness we practiced on playgrounds as kids. I mean such practices as applying laws fairly for everyone, protecting private-property rights and religious freedoms as well as ensuring that government follows the laws it enforces on the rest of us. We do this better than many other countries, but we can also do so much better. This, in part, is why the Acton Institute will continue its mission indefinitely.

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
Who Will Defend the Legend of Wyatt Earp?
  “The true history of the West will never be told until Wyatt Earp talks. And Wyatt Earp ain’t talking.”   – Bat Masterson to Stuart Lake   It can be a tragedy when modern filmmakers try to romanticize history. Nevertheless, Wyatt Earp’s story demands romance. While fiction may portray truths about the human condition that history cannot, Earp’s story is an instance...
Preserving Constitutional Monarchy
  She is the Princess of Asturias, Princess of Girona, Princess of Viana, Duchess of Montblanc, Countess of Cervera, and Lady of Balaguer—but you can call her Leonor—and she may be the Spanish constitutional monarchy’s best hope. She is an encouragement to the other major European constitutional monarchies, several of which are transitioning to a new generation of monarchs. At some...
Give Us This Day
  Give Us This Day   By Lynette Kittle   Bible Reading   “Give us today our daily bread.” - Matthew 6:11   Y2K, COVID 2020, and end-of-the-world forecasts all invoke fearful, self-preservation, survivor thoughts, and feelings of needing to store up supplies in preparation of a coming, looming disaster.   During the great toilet paper shortage of 2020, when store shelves, warehouses, and online shops...
Religious Liberty and the Golden Rule
  In his 2003 book How the Idea of Religious Toleration Came to the West, Perez Zagorin observed that most citizens of Europe and America prize freedom of religion more highly than any other values and practices of Western liberal democracies. This comment may seem rather quaint today. Antiliberalisms have risen, in both religious and nonreligious varieties, which feature a suspicion,...
When the Lord Calls, He Equips (Exodus 4:10
  BIBLE VERSE OF THE DAY:Then Moses said to the Lord,“O my Lord, I am not eloquent, neither before nor since You have spoken to Your servant; but I am slow of speech and slow of tongue.” So the Lord said to him,“Who has made man’s mouth? Or who makes the mute, the deaf, the seeing, or the blind? Have not...
Avoiding the Dangerous Trap of Prejudice
  Avoiding the dangerous trap of prejudice   September 19   Here there is no Gentile or Jew, circumcised or uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave or free, but Christ is all, and is in all. -Colossians 3:11   Catherine Booth was known as the “Mother of The Salvation Army.” Wherever she would go, large cross sections of society—princes and paupers alike—would gather to hear her...
Making It through Sickness and Health
  Making It through Sickness and Health as A Couple   By Lynette Kittle   “In this same way, husbands ought to love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself” -Ephesians 5:28   So many marriage vows these days leave out staying together “in sickness and in health.” In my estimation, it’s a huge mistake. Sometimes people are...
The Crusading Reagan
  A full-length film on Ronald Reagan has been needed for some time. Reagan’s presidency changed the direction of this country in a way that progressives have never fully reconciled themselves with. The new film Reagan, directed by Sean McNamara and starring Dennis Quaid as the man himself, recently opened to decidedly negative reviews from major film critics. Even conservative film...
In Our Own Image
  Weekend, September 21, 2024   In Our Own Image   Yes, they knew God, but they wouldn’t worship him as God or even give him thanks. And they began to think up foolish ideas of what God was like. As a result, their minds became dark and confused. (Romans 1:21 NLT)   There is something wrong in our lives when we need an...
Two Forms of American Liberalism
  For almost a decade, many thoughtful people have agreed that something called “liberalism” is under assault in America without ever concretely explaining what liberalism is. Two weeks ago, John McGinnis brought unusual clarity to the discussion in these pages with a two-sentence summary of liberalism that was comprehensive and specific. Liberalism, he said, “has historically been marked by independent courts,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved