In this episode, Father Roger J. Landry, a priest of the Diocese of Fall River, Massachusetts, and Catholic Chaplain to Columbia University in New York City sits down with Sarah Negri, Research Project Coordinator at the Acton Institute, to discuss the social teaching of Pope John Paul II and especially his emphasis on the vocation of the Christian entrepreneur. Father Landry shares some history on John Paul II’s three most famous social encyclicals and elucidates their importance for the ordinary Christian worker. The discussion centers around the Christian vocation to work as a divine injunction, the subjective and objective elements of work, and how the Christian worker imitates both God as creator and Christ as the perfect human model of holy labor. It also touches on the challenges faced by the human worker, including the possibility of alienation, workaholisim, and the toil that accompanies hard labor, as well as solutions to these challenges.
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The Entrepreneurial Vocation (recorded lecture) – Acton University 2023
The Social Teaching of John Paul II (recorded lecture) – Acton University 2023
Laborem Exercens by Pope John Paul II
Sollicitudo Rei Socialis by Pope John Paul II
Centesimus Annus by Pope John Paul II
The Entrepreneurial Vocation by Fr. Robert Sirico
Jimmy Lai’s Extraordinary Struggle for Freedom
The Wounds of Beauty
Who Is To Blame For Poverty?
Mary Kissel at Acton Institute’s 2022 Annual Dinner
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The Next American Economy
Conservatism and Its Current Discontents
Blockchain Technology with Alexander Romanowski
The Psychology of Conspiracy Theories
Free Trade and Globalization
Judaism and the Market Economy
The Rise of the New Puritans
How History Frees and Forms Christians
Economic Inequality and Envy
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7 Deadly Economic Sins
Emerging Leaders at the Acton Institute
Taking rites seriously with Francis Beckwith
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