Call for Papers and Conference: Christian Realism and Public Life – Minneapolis, MN

The Terrence J. Murphy Institute for Catholic Thought, Law, and Public Policy at the University of St. Thomas will sponsor a conference titled “Christian Realism and Public Life: Catholic and Protestant Perspectives,” on November 20-21, 2009, at the University of St. Thomas School of Law in Minneapolis.

An examination of “realism” in religious and political thought is timely indeed. The term has been at the forefront of recent American foreign-policy debates over the role of moral values and the use of force. Pope Benedict XVI has spoken in several contexts of a “Christian realism” that offers a more sober and solid hope for social life than do alternative views. And President Obama has identified the Christian Realism of Reinhold Niebuhr as among his chief philosophical influences. Niebuhr’s approach was in several ways distinctively Protestant. But it is evident that the impulse for Christian public theology to be realistic—to be based in a clear-headed assessment of facts about God, human beings, and the world—cuts across Catholic and Protestant thinkers, although the themes and the definitions of realism vary.

The goal of the conference is to explore the role and meaning of “realism” in a Christian ethic of public life, with attention to topics and areas of law or public policy that are of interest to both Catholics and Protestants, and to ethicists, theologians, legal scholars, and political scientists among others. Committed plenary speakers include Jean Bethke Elshtain ( Chicago), Robin Lovin (Southern Methodist), John Carlson (Arizona State), and William Cavanaugh (St. Thomas), with other plenary invitations in process.

This call for papers is for concurrent sessions. Examples of relevant topics include:

– Theological assessments of human nature and its relevance to public policy
– Categorical approaches to moral reasoning vs. pragmatic approaches
– Loci of hope: for example, the extent to which it rests in the church or the world
– Assessments of Niebuhr or other thinkers who have emphasized realism
– The foundations or details of just-war thought
– Realism in Christian approaches to economic matters
– The place of Christianity in American public life

Abstracts of proposed papers should be one page and should include the author’s name, affiliation, mailing address, and e-mail address. The deadline for submission of proposals is Monday, June 15, 2009. Notification of acceptance will be mailed by July 1, 2009. Abstracts should be sent by e-mail to murphyinstit[at]stthomas.edu or by first-class mail to

Terrence J. Murphy Institute
for Catholic Thought, Law, and Public Policy
Re: Christian Realism Conference
University of St. Thomas
MSL 400, 1000 La Salle Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55403-2015