David Brat’s victory comes with a rise in the crossroads of religion and  
economics
Michelle Boorstein ("The Washington Post," June 13, 2014) 
David Brat’s victory over Rep. Eric Cantor was a shocker, leading to the  
lightning-fast unearthing of Brat’s writings, such as those calling for  
Christians to “rise up” in defense of capitalism. But Brat is part of a bigger  
movement in recent years of overtly religious economists, particularly of 
the  conservative Christian variety. 
The rise of the Randolph-Macon College economist, who defeated Cantor in 
the  Republican primary for the Virginia 7th Congressional District, comes as 
Pope  Francis forces questions about theology and ethics onto a field that 
has often  been hostile to the spiritual. How much the two men agree on, 
however, remains  to be seen. 
While other conservative religious economists this week scrambled to find  
publications of Brat to understand better his beliefs, they saw his moment 
as  potentially very positive. 
Jordan J. Ballor, a research fellow at the Acton Institute, a religion and  
liberty think tank, said Brat is part of a growing and more visible overlap 
 between economic and religious conservatives. 
People who are religious and write and think on economics are becoming more 
 “comfortable being explicitly religious in their identity,” Ballor said. 
In the past, he said, religious conservatives were seen as those focused on 
 social issues like abortion and sexuality, while discussions of economics 
were  left to secular conservatives. Today, he said, debates about the 
morality of  things like materialism and debt are becoming more common among 
conservative  economists. 
“I think you have — especially in the context of the global economic 
downturn  — a need to look at the foundations and ask hard questions about the 
moral  formation going on among people who are working on Wall Street,” Ballor 
said.  And conversations among economists about ethical systems — including 
religious  ones — “are becoming more and more prominent as people realize 
the models we’ve  inherited are inadequate.” 
Brat thinks the education should go both ways, that people who study 
theology  should also know more about economics. 
“Usury is not something to be studied. It it something to be condemned. I  
never saw a supply and demand curve in seminary. I should have,” he wrote in 
a  2011 paper entitled “God and Advanced Mammon” (a theological term for 
money) for  the journal Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology. “The 
church needs  to regain its voice and offer up a coherent social vision of 
justice and  rationality.” 
Just before he died in 2012, evangelical icon Chuck Colson launched a 
program  for top business schools about ethics, and other programs have popped 
up 
 including a brand new school of business and ethics at the Catholic 
University  of America (controversially led by a free-marketer). 
Ballor and others said papers on theology and religion are appearing more 
at  mainstream economic conferences where they wouldn’t have so much before. “
And  with Pope Francis you get a lot more coverage because of his charisma.”
 
It’s not clear from the few papers quickly accessible on Brat how his view 
on  Christianity and economics would translate into one policy or another. 
Generally, he is a free-market conservative but one who believes ethics 
have  been lost in the process. Those ethics can be found, he believes, not in  
man-made laws but in Christianity — specifically, Protestantism. 
“Give me a country in 1600 that had a Protestant-led contest for religious  
and political power and I will show you a country that is rich today,” Brat 
 wrote in 2011. Economists, he wrote, were “slow to acknowledge perhaps the 
most  powerful institution in Western civilization, religion.” 
Robert Nelson, a University of Maryland economist who writes about religion 
 and economics, said Brat was a trailblazer for even talking about religion 
as a  serious force. 
“The study of religion with economics didn’t get started until the 1990s,” 
 Nelson said. “It’s still somewhat outside the mainstream.” 
Brat’s 1996 economics doctoral dissertation at American University, called  
“Human Capital, Religion and Economic Growth,” looked at the role of 
religion in  three European countries in affecting the advance of science. He 
concluded that  Protestantism helped in Britain and Germany and that 
Catholicism hurt in France,  Nelson said. 
“[Brat] argues that science is best advanced in a nation where there is a  
powerful ‘bottom up’ in favor of the individual such as in Protestantism 
and  especially the Calvinist and other dissenting branches of Protestantism,” 
Nelson  said. 
This whole question of how religion and economics influence one another has 
 been a central topic in the Catholic Church since the 1990s, when Pope 
John Paul  II broke somewhat from a church focus on charity to write a major 
paper praising  aspects of capitalism. 
Nelson said Catholic conservatives in the following decade made some 
headway  influencing John Paul and Pope Benedict XVI to be more open to the 
value 
of  competitive markets and profit as a way to boost the economy. 
Historically the Catholic Church has been extremely skeptical of 
capitalism,  seeing it as being unconcerned with the common good, and Francis 
alarmed 
many  conservatives last fall when he wrote in a key paper that “
trickle-down  theories” are crude, naive and unproven. 
Brat hasn’t written enough on his policies (nor has Francis on capitalism)  
for it to be truly clear how much overlap is there. The professor is 
appearing  at a time of fierce debate between religious liberals and religious  
conservatives over what a “Christian” economic system might look like and 
what  role the government should play. 
In his 2011 essay, Brat wrote that “capitalism is here to stay, and we need 
a  church model that corresponds to that reality. . . . The church should 
rise up  higher than Nietzsche could see and prove him wrong. We should love 
our neighbor  so much that we actually believe in right and wrong and do 
something about it.  If we all did the right thing and had the guts to spread 
the word, we would not  need the government to backstop every action we take.
” 
In the 2011 paper Brat said he is “a fairly orthodox Calvinist (in theory,  
not practice)” but reportedly attends a Catholic church. 
He didn’t make explicit how being a Calvinist would affect his voting  
behavior, but typically conservative Calvinists emphasize the sinful nature of  
man.

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