The Houston-based Prison Entrepreneurship Program (PEP) treats convicted criminals as if they were “raw metal in the hands of a blacksmith— crude, formless, and totally moldable.” PEP puts prisoners through a rigorous character training and business skills regimen to prepare them for a productive, even flourishing, reentry to life after incarceration. Ray Nothstine took part in PEP’s “pitch day” presentations where prisoners present their start-up dreams before a panel of business people and investors. In the main feature of this Spring 2015 issue of Religion & Liberty, Nothstine describes his day at the Cleveland Correctional Center near Houston and interviews Bert Smith, PEP chief executive.
Also in this issue, Rev. Gregory Jensen reviews Free Market Environmentalism for the Next Generation, a new book by Terry Anderson and Donald Leal. Rev. Jensen reminds us to pay attention to policy decisions that can help or hinder “our pursuit of the ethical goals that so many of our religious leaders recommend.”
In the Liberal Tradition profiles Isabel Paterson (1886-1961) a journalist, philosopher, and literary critic who is credited with being “one of the three women (along with Rose Wilder Lane and Ayn Rand) who launched the libertarian movement in America.” Not many people remember her today even though her 1943 book The God of the Machine was highly influential on its publication. You’ll want to read this profile and learn why Paterson had a major falling out with Rand.
In this issue, we excerpt Christ and Crisis, the 1962 book by the Lebanese diplomat, philosopher, and theologian Charles Malik. Writing for Acton Commentary in March 2015, Dylan Pahman said that “despite its Cold War context, Christ and Crisis (in just 101 pages) offers a nuanced approach to Christian social thought and action, acknowledging the unique tasks of practitioners and theorists in their own competence in each realm of life, while never losing sight of the Cross of JesusChrist.”
In the Acton FAQ, Acton executive director Kris Mauren offers some help on getting more deeply engaged with Acton’s work— even if you’re not able to attend the institute’s many events and lectures in Grand Rapids. For those who can travel to West Michigan, Acton president Rev. Robert A. Sirico offers some thoughts on what to expect at Acton University in June.
– John Couretas