Civic Life

Can Churches be Protectors of Public Health?

March 3, 2022

(The Conversation) — Over the past two years of living with COVID-19, many churches have had to think in new ways. Congregations across the country are experimenting with practices such as virtual worship and Bible study or masking and social distancing – even as others go “back to normal.”

While scholars have studied the relationship between religion and health for decades, the pandemic has put a spotlight on it. Often, this attention emphasizes examples of churches opposing safety recommendations, such as vaccines or lockdowns, but this misses the complexity and variety of religious responses to public health problems.

As a scholar of Christianity in the United States, I believe understanding how churches have navigated health crises in the past can help us better understand our present. Over the past two years, I have worked with an interdisciplinary team of researchers based at the Hartford Institute for Religion Research to understand how churches are confronting the realities of COVID-19. U.S. history, coupled with our survey of congregations, suggests that a commitment to public health has long been a part of ministry, but there is room to make it stronger.

Christian leaders have been advocating for public health in the United States since the Colonial period. Historian Philippa Koch has argued that the religious worldview of American Protestants in the 18th century helped them “accept the new promises and insights of modern medicine.” According to Koch, this unwavering faith in God’s plan for creation helped spur individuals like the Puritan minister Cotton Mather to promote inoculation for smallpox as a gift from God.

Cotton Mather, an influential minister in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, supported smallpox vaccines. Bettmann/Bettmann via Getty Image

Cotton Mather, an influential minister in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, supported smallpox vaccines. Bettmann/Bettmann via Getty Image

Health care workers greet people at a drive-thru vaccination site at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church in Mount Dora, Fla. Paul Hennessy/NurPhoto via Getty Image

Health care workers greet people at a drive-thru vaccination site at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church in Mount Dora, Fla. Paul Hennessy/NurPhoto via Getty Image

Interfaith America Magazine seeks contributions that present a wide range of experiences and perspectives from a diverse set of worldviews on the opportunities and challenges of American pluralism. The opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of Interfaith America, its board of directors, or its employees.

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