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Robert Sirico - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert Sirico

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rev. Robert A. Sirico
Rev. Robert A. Sirico

Robert A. Sirico (born 23 June 1951) is a Roman Catholic priest and founder of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty. He is also the younger brother of actor Tony Sirico.[1]

Contents

[edit] Education

After earning an A.A. in Humanities and Speech Communications from Los Angeles City College in 1978, Sirico studied English and Speech Communications at the University of Southern California. He traveled to England to study literature in Twickenham at St. Mary's College of the University of London for a year before returning to California in 1980. He completed his B.A. at USC in 1981. He then enrolled in The Catholic University of America, earning his Master of Divinity degree in 1987. He was ordained as a priest in 1989.

[edit] Public policy work

In 1990, Sirico founded the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting "a free and virtuous society characterized by individual liberty and sustained by religious principles."[2] That same year, Sirico was inducted into the Mont Pelerin Society. He served on the Michigan Civil Rights Commission from 1994 to 1998. The Franciscan University of Steubenville awarded Sirico an honorary doctoral degree in Christian Ethics in 1999. The Universidad Francisco Marroquín in 2001 granted him an honorary doctorate in social sciences. [3][4] He is a member of the American Academy of Religion and of the board of advisors for the Civic Institute in Prague.[5]

Sirico's writings have appeared in First Things, Crisis, Journal of Markets and Morality, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Forbes, London Financial Times, Washington Times, National Catholic Reporter, and National Review. In his writing, he addresses such topics as the ethics of political/social freedom, business ethics, the history of the civil rights movement, and bio-ethics.

According to Joseph Bast, president of the Heartland Institute,

One often hears priests, preachers, and rabbis endorse an activist government able to solve social, economic, and perhaps even moral problems. Fr. Sirico offers a powerful challenge to this conventional wisdom. Religious principles, he says, require that men and women be free to practice virtue or vice, and freedom in turn requires a limited government and vibrant free-market economy.[6]

In an interview with FrontPageMag's Bill Steigerwald, Sirico was asked whether capitalism and Christianity were natural enemies. Sirico responded that,

I don’t think capitalism is a natural enemy of Christianity. Capitalism is really an inadequate word; it only describes one dimension of what is really human freedom and choice in the economic sphere. Choice is morally neutral. It’s the chooser who can be moral or immoral, not the ability to make the choice.[7]

[edit] Clerical efforts

He is the pastor at St. Mary’s Church in Kalamazoo, Michigan. He founded the St. Philip Neri House in 1998 which also now includes the Catholic Information Center.[8][9]

[edit] Books

[edit] As author:

[edit] As editor:

  • The Social Agenda: A Collection of Magisterial Texts (Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, 2000; ISBN 8820929201)

[edit] References

  1. ^ "'Paulie Walnuts' to introduce Rev. Robert Sirico at N.Y. Rotary." acton.org. 17 December 2004. [1]
  2. ^ "About the Acton Institute." Acton Institute. [2]
  3. ^ "Staff Member: Rev. Robert A. Sirico." Acton Institute. [3]
  4. ^ "Doctorados Honoríficos otorgados por la Universidad Francisco Marroquín." Universidad Francisco Marroquín. [4]
  5. ^ "Board of Advisors." Civic Institute. [5]
  6. ^ Bast, Joseph. "Religion and Freedom." Heartlander. Heartland Institute. 1 January 2007. [6]
  7. ^ Steigerwald, Bill. "Christ, Christmas, and Capitalism." FrontPageMagazine.com. 26 December 2006. [7]
  8. ^ "What is St. Philip Neri House?" St. Philip Neri House [8]
  9. ^ Meehan, Chris. "Store, monthly forum become part of new Catholic Information Center." Kalamazoo Gazette. 10 February 2007. [9]

[edit] External links


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