Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Some very good reasons you should attend Acton University Online
Some very good reasons you should attend Acton University Online
Oct 30, 2025 2:39 PM

Acton University Online is a unique, two-day, live and interactive experience exploring the intellectual foundations of a free society, streaming live on June 23-24.

Scholarships are available for those in need.

Read More…

“Should I or shouldn’t I do AU?”

That is the question I have heard hundreds of times regarding attending Acton UniversityOnline 2021. More than 2,400 people have already made up their own minds and have registered to participate in our annual summer gathering of minds ing June 23-24 (10:00 am-5:00 pm EDT) for a conference ranked the best international academic event hosted by think tanks that consistently defend the free economy.

My answer, therefore, is always the same: “Yes, of course, you should!”

Before a pandemic forced the Acton Institute to move this massive in-person global gathering to a live-streaming platform, real financial factors and weighing the opportunity costs of spending 3-4 days away from home or work each June made the “should/shouldn’t” dilemma a real one.

However, those who traveled to Grand Rapids more often than not told me they were more than willing to return to Michigan (a.k.a. “to do Mich-again”) since the investment of time and money had paid real dividends: intellectually, socially, and spiritually speaking, their lives were deeply impacted.

To boot, this year, it is even easier for anyone to repeat the Acton University experience, now being online, and thus eliminating 90-95% of normal expenses and with zero travel.

Before I get to the top reasons to attend Acton University: IF you are still wavering about whether or not to “do AU,” then contact me and I will facilitate making you a last-minute offer you might find difficult to refuse!

Admittedly, I am an employee of the Acton Institute, running its office in Rome and other programming in Europe since 2007. This makes me a veritable “Actonite” and, thus, more than a little biased toward my love relationship with Acton University. Yet, verily, I also write this brief blog with another full disclosure: my passion for our think tank’s mission of “promoting a free and virtuous society sustained by sound economic principles” is renourished and recharged every year by Acton University. Simply put, my bottomless pit of energy and enthusiasm for all things Acton is, in very large part, drawn from the deep refreshing well-water of Acton University.

At any rate, in my humble opinion, here are the top reasons why you should attend Acton University ing Wednesday and Thursday.

Firstly, Acton University is a “humanity-focused” event, more than any other I have ever attended around the globe. Believe me, in my line of work, I have attended a lot and in multiple countries. When we gather students of life interested in liberty, faith, and economics we do so purposefully from all walks, all nations, and all religions. On average for the in-person version of Acton University, (which God-willing will resume in the summer of 2022), we e 1100 persons from over 80 countries. They range from: the unemployed, CEOs, top brass military, seminarians, university professors, pastors, nuns, construction workers, doctors, nurses, business owners, hedge funder operators, tour guides, psychologists, plumbers, bus drivers, journalists, politicians…. You name one, and you can bet your bottom dollar that the particular profession (or “life status”) is well presented at AU. One of the reasons for this variegated participation is that much conversation centers on the true vocational value of work and its determining role in God’s providential plan for a better world.

Another strong reason to attend Acton University has to with thefundamentals of dialogue that arise from everyone having taken the “core curriculum.” This is where the concept of a “university” experience begins with a few required seminars in moral anthropology (dignity, creativity, freedom), basic economics (natural laws and purpose of markets), and theological fundamentals (God and man in His ordered creation). These few seminars help mon threads for all the hundreds of other conversations that take place at AU. This year’s online edition is a pact version of what is usually offered (100+ seminars and workshops), but still, there will be a whole host of stimulating courses, panels, and plenary speeches (43 in total to choose from) that build on the content of the required seminars.

And then, of course, there is this year’s star-studded roster of 66 speakers. They will not gather under one roof at the Devos Place convention center but rather with you live on the same digital platform. As a small sample of the many impressive speakers and their classes during the two-day schedule, there is:

George Ayittey, a popular TED speaker on the “cheetah generation” of African entrepreneurs. He is also the founder and president of the Free Africa Foundation who made famous the economic maxim: “African solutions for African problems.” Ayittey will speak on “Entrepreneurship for Africa.”

Ryan T. Anderson of the Heritage Foundation and founder/editor of The Public Discourse. This year Anderson, a regular AU lecturer, will be teaching “Getting Social Justice Right”, focusing on some secular misnomers of social justice and getting to the heart of the Church’s original teachings of dignity, society, and charity.

Mustafa Akyol of the Cato Institute and a Turkish contributing editorialist for the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and Washington Post. Akyol will be leading two intriguing seminars: “Are Liberty and Islam Compatible?” and “Islam, Reason, and Freedom.”

Betsy Devos, a former U.S. Secretary of Education under the Trump Administration, is an avowed promoter of the voucher system in public schools. Devos will be discussing “Education and Entrepreneurial Disruption.”

Obianuju Ekeocha, a Nigerian biomedical expert, documentary filmmaker, and leading advocate of pro-life issues as president of Culture of Life Africa. Her much-anticipated seminar is “People: Africa’s Most Valuable Resource.”

Declan Ganley, a distinguished Irish entrepreneur, inventor, and owner of several patents. He will be leading the panel discussion: “Big, Tech, Big Government, and Privacy.”

Rev. Philip Larrey, a renowned philosopher at the Vatican’s Pontifical Lateran University. As one of the world’s top ethicists in matters related to A.I., Larrey will lecture on “Artificial Intelligence, Religion, and Anthropology.”

Jeff Sandefer, founder of the Acton School of Business, one of America’s top MBA programs inspired by Acton Institute’s mission. He is also the founder of Acton Academy, a K-12 private school system bines the Socratic method, high-tech learning, and entrepreneurial skills to form children and teens as future leaders of change. He will join Betsy Devos in discussing “Education and Entrepreneurial Disruption.”

Rev. Robert Sirico, Samuel Gregg, Michael Matheson Miller of the Acton Institute and who need no introduction. The three of them will be leading several different seminars, panels, and plenary discussions, among which are the sessions dedicated to “The Free and Virtuous Society”; “The Case Against Economic Nationalism”; and “The Tocqueville Option: Social and Technical Decentralization.”

Last, and certainly not least, is the main reason: you and the people you will meet from nearly 100 nations and all habitable continents, from Argentina to Zambia. You will have the chance to make friendships in break-out discussion groups and private chat rooms.

Fortunately, many of the returning 2021 online participants have met in person in past in-person editions of Acton University. If you are a er, they will indeed warmly e you, along with all the Acton staff, as a most valued contributor to the world of ideas that bring about true human flourishing.

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
Audio: Samuel Gregg on God, Profit, and the Common Good
Acton Institute Director of Research Samuel Gregg joined host John Harper on Relevant Radio’sMorning Air on Friday morning to discuss his latest book,For God and Profit: How Banking and Finance Can Serve the Common Good.Banking and finance are vitally important institutions in a free and prosperous society, and ordered properly contribute a great deal to mon good. The real question of the day is whether or not our banking and finance systems are properly ordered, and if they have gotten...
Sisters’ ExxonMobil Resolution More Gaia Than Catholic
Divination, bearing false witness and pantheism are three no-no’s of Christianity. You could look it up. I know from personal experience that many of my fellow pewsitters in the Catholic tradition fail in their attempts to obey the strictures of the faith by seeking out tarot cards, Ouija boards, horoscopes and the like. Many of us are guilty also of spreading deceit, bald-faced lies or even plete and unsettled facts as ontological truths. This has been a problem for some...
Video: Michael Matheson Miller Critiques Celebrity Poverty Campaigns
Acton Institute Research Fellow and Director of Poverty, Inc. Michael Matheson Miller made an appearance on Fox Business Channel last week to discuss how his documentary addresses the issue of celebrity efforts at poverty alleviation, noting that often, such campaigns can do more harm than good. You can watch the interview below. ...
The Power—and Danger—in Luther’s Concept of Work
“MartinLuther probably did more than any Protestant to establish thetheology of work many Christians embrace today,” says Dan Doriani. “Like no theologian before him, he insisted on the dignity and value of all labor.” Doriani highlights many of Luther’s positive contributions to the theology of work, but warnsthat it can lead to confusing “work” and “vocation”: There is occupation without vocation. One can earn bread as a cashier, cook, nanny, or salesperson without hearing a call to that life. A...
ICCR’s Rules for Radical Nuns
What is it with nuns crusading against corporate lobbying? This fad of recent years has grabbed headlines as orders such as the Sisters of Mercy and the Benedictine Sisters of Virginia gravitated toward political actions as members of shareholder activist group the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. Seems there’s nothing alternately cuter pelling than a nun “speaking truth” to corporate power as the ICCR nuns do each year in their campaign against lobbying and donations to nonprofit organizations such as...
Explainer: Supreme Court Punts on Little Sisters Religious Liberty Case
What just happened? The Supreme Court avoided issuing a major ruling today in bined religious liberty case, Zubik v. Burwell. In a unanimous decision, the justices wrote that the Court “expresses no view on the merits of the cases” but were instead sending the case back down to the lower courts for opposing parties to work out promise. What is this case, and what’s it about? The case, Zubik v. bines seven challenges to the Health and Human Services’ (HHS)...
Explainer: Puerto Rico’s Financial Crisis
The monwealth of Puerto Rico is struggling under a massive $72 billion debt and a decade-long economic recession. Here is what you should know about the ongoing financial crisis: How did the debt crisis happen? During the Spanish-American War in the late 1890s the U.S. military invaded the Spanish-owned island of Puerto Rico. After the war ended, the U.S. retained control, making the islands an unincorporated territory and the residents U.S. citizens. In 1917, Congress passed the Puerto Rican Federal...
4 Theories About the Business Cycle
Expansion. Contraction. Repeat. For almost 200 years, we’ve recognized this boom-and-bust pattern as the business cycle, the downward and upward movement of gross domestic product (GDP) around its long-term growth trend. But while we all know what it is, we don’t always agree on what causes the business cycle. In the following series of four videos, economist Tyler Cowen briefly explains four different theories —Austrian Theory, Keynesian Theory, Monetarist Theory, and Real Business Cycle Theory —and highlights some of the...
The Regulatory State Adds ‘Ten Thousand Commandments’ Every Year
In the Old Testament there mandments. Apparently,God deemed those to be enough to regulate almost every aspect of the lives of his people for thousands of years. You could read all of them in less than 30 minutes. The American federal government, however, is not so succinct. There are over 1 million restrictions in the federal regulations alone (i.e., not counting the statutory law). And thousands more are added every year. Each year the Competitive Enterprise Institute puts out annual...
Don’t Politicize Transgender Issue
I want to be very clear from the outset that moral concerns surrounding transgender identity are not unimportant. But in the likely event that we e to any national consensus on that question any time soon, it is important not to overlook other moral and social concerns that are far more pressing. In particular, there are legitimate concerns regarding safety and privacy, no matter which side one favors, but resorting to the force of law will leave some real victims...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved