Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Religion & Liberty: Is there a cure for America’s discontent?
Religion & Liberty: Is there a cure for America’s discontent?
May 24, 2026 12:20 PM

“2016 Presidential elections in Pittsburgh” by Gene J. Puskar, April 13, 2016. AP

The snow has finally melted in West Michigan, which means it’s time for the year’s second issue of Religion & Liberty.

Recent news cycles have been plagued with images of angry Americans, students protesting and populist discontent. The 2016 presidential election has really brought to light that the American people are angry—specifically with American leadership. Here at the Acton Institute, we’re interested in looking more deeply at these issues, particularly if there is a cure for this great discontent. To understand the issues, we’ve rounded up experts on employment, trade, millennials and other issues surrounding the 2016 race to the White House. The roundup features Justin Beene, Ismael Hernandez, Ann Marie Jakubowski, Jared Meyer and Vernon L. Smith discussing these themes.

Justice Scalia at Acton’s 7th Annual Dinner.

Earlier this year the U.S. Supreme Court suffered a great loss with the passing of Antonin Scalia. He was known primarily for his sharp wit and devotion to the U.S. Constitution, but he was a great father and a friend to those ideologically opposed to him as well. He was also an Acton supporter and gave an excellent speech for the seventh Acton Institute Annual Dinner. Because his words on the Constitution are still so significant today, a portion of the speech has been excerpted as the essay, “What is our Constitution?” He is also featured in this issue’s “In the Liberal Tradition.”

Acton’s director of research, Samuel Gregg, has written a new book titled For God and Profit: How Banking and Finance Can Serve the Common Good. Stephen Schmalhofer breaks down Gregg’s latest book in a review. If that’s not enough to whet your appetite, this issue also includes a short excerpt of the book titled “Getting justice right.”

The Double-Edged Sword looks at Psalm 139 and reflects on our relationship with God. It’s through our everyday, ordinary relationships with other people that He is revealed.

June is mere weeks away, which means that Acton University is right around the corner! For the FAQ, Kris Mauren, Acton’s executive director, explains what can be expected at our biggest conference and details the lineup of keynote speakers.

To close this issue, Rev. Robert Sirico ponders religious liberty, discussing the theme throughout history and what it means for us today, especially given the current cultural and political climate. Many brave individuals have fought for our religious freedom; we should never take it for granted.

You can view the entire issue online as a PDF 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
Explainer: What is Brexit, and Why Should You Care?
What is Brexit? British, Irish, and Commonwealth citizens will vote next month on the question “Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union?” Brexit is merely the shorthand abbreviation for “British exit,” which refers to the UK leaving the European Union. What is the European Union? After two World Wars devastated the continent, Europe realized that increasing ties between nations through trade mightincrease stability and lead to peace. In 1958, this led...
Authoritarianism ruined Venezuela
Venezuela, though filled with exotic beaches and many natural resources, has the most miserable economy in the world thanks to high inflation and unemployment. For a detailed background on the current situation in Venezuela, see Joe Carter’s recent explainer. Since Venezuela’s crisis took over the news, there has been plenty mentary about the chaos and what could have caused it. Acton’s Director of Programs, Paul Bonicelli argues that politics is to blame. “Venezuela is a dictatorship,” he writes in Foreign...
Religion & Liberty: Is there a cure for America’s discontent?
“2016 Presidential elections in Pittsburgh” by Gene J. Puskar, April 13, 2016. AP The snow has finally melted in West Michigan, which means it’s time for the year’s second issue of Religion & Liberty. Recent news cycles have been plagued with images of angry Americans, students protesting and populist discontent. The 2016 presidential election has really brought to light that the American people are angry—specifically with American leadership. Here at the Acton Institute, we’re interested in looking more deeply at...
7 Figures: What You Should Know About Global Life Expectancy in 2016
The U.N’s World Health Organization (WHO) recently released it’s latest version of World Health Statistics, a definitive source of information on the health of the world’s people. Here are seven figures from the report about life expectancy that you should know: 1. Life expectancy increased by 5 years between 2000 and 2015, the fastest increase since the 1960s. Those gains reverse declines during the 1990s, when life expectancy fell in Africa because of the AIDS epidemic and in Eastern Europe...
Religious activists a ‘dismal failure’ at ExxonMobil and Chevron meetings
It’s all over but the chanting, which seemingly will continue unabated until religious shareholder activists bring panies to heel. What the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility hyperbolically billed as “a watershed year” trickled into a puddle of disappointment yesterday for shareholder activists’ climate-change resolutions. The chanting began outside Dallas’ Morton E. Meyerson Symphony Center and the Chevron Park Auditorium in San Ramon, Calif., prior to the annual shareholder meetings conducted, respectively, by ExxonMobil Corp. and Chevron Corporation. Real chanting, dear...
Can Banks Disrupt the Payday Lending Business?
Since its inception in the 1990s, the payday lending industry has grown at an astonishing pace. Currently, there are about 22,000 payday lending locations — more than two for every Starbucks — that originate an estimated $27 billion in annual loan volume. But payday lenders may soon face some petition. A few of the largest consumer banks in America are considering goingto market with new small-dollar installment loan products, reports the American Banker. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the...
New Issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality (19.1)
Our most recent issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality, vol. 19, no. 1, has now been published online and print issues are in the mail. In addition to our regular slate of articles examining the intersections between faith, freedom, markets, and morality, this issue contains a new entry in our Scholia special feature section: “Advice to a Desolate France” by Sebastian Castellio. Writing in 1562, Castellio was one of the first early modern defenders of freedom of religion...
Social democracy will harm American dream
With the rise in popularity of social democracy (a highly regulated market economy), Samuel Gregg has some words of warning against the system. “[T]he briefest of surveys of European social democracy’s history,” he writes in a new article for the Stream, “illustrates how these policies invariably induce the type of slow-motion decline that’s turned much of today’s European Union into the sick man of the global economy.” Americans looking to Bernie Sanders for a social democratic answer to their problems...
Free eBook: ‘Not Tragically Colored’
For a limited time (May 26-28), Ismael Hernandez’ new book, Not Tragically Colored: Freedom, Personhood, and the Renewal of Black America will be free to download. Despite a seemingly endless series of programs, discussions, and analyses—and the election of the first African-American president—the problem of race continues to bedevil American society. Could it be that our programs and discussions have failed to get at the root of the problem? Ismael Hernandez strikes at the root, even when that means plunging...
Wendell Berry: Great Poet, Cranky Luddite on Ag Tech
Image credit: Guy Mendes A new documentary, The Seer: A Portrait of Wendell Berry, misses the real story on U.S. farming productivity, says Bruce Edward Walker in this week’s Acton Commentary. Perhaps it’s the fact that the bulk of the film’s running time ignores two-thirds of what, for me, makes Berry so special – his fiction and poetry – in favor of what renders him more of a curmudgeon, which is his activism against industrial agriculture. Somebody cue up the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved