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Presidential Address ASCH 2025 Chicago
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2025
In the annual presidential address to the American Society of Church History (ASCH), Esther Chung-Kim discusses the pivotal role of pastors, physicians, and lay healers in responding to poverty and illness in early modern Europe. She offers that their involvement shaped both social welfare and medical care. Reflecting the values of biblical examples, both Catholics and Protestants established institutions to support the sick and poor. Promoting practices of care for the sick, religious leaders, pious physicians, and lay healers promoted charity through medicine, in various efforts to expand access to care. Protestant reformers sought to shift responses to illness away from saintly intercession and instead toward direct appeals to God and natural medicine, seen as a divine gift. In some cities, Reformed ordinances mandated medical support for the poor by institutionalizing care during epidemics. The convergence of religious and medical reform, aided by print culture, resulted in Christian thinkers recognizing medicine as a form of God’s providence in nature (thereby encouraging a positive view of medicine), and physicians promoting religious reform in their medical treatises. In the early modern era, Catholics and Protestants both strengthened the link between Christianity and medicine with theological and practical ways to show care and concern for the sick.
This paper was first presented as the Presidential Address at the ASCH Annual Conference in Chicago on January 5, 2025.
1 My focus has been on Protestant reform of poor relief, as other scholars such as Brian Pullen, Nicholas Terpstra, and Katherine Park have ably covered Catholic reform of poor relief.
2 Hebrews 13:2 NRSV.
3 Gary Ferngren, Medicine & Religion: A Historical Introduction (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014), 145.
4 Esther Chung-Kim, Economics of Faith: Reforming Poor Relief in Early Modern Europe (New York: Oxford University Press, 2021), 54.
5 Johannes Bugenhagen, “The Christian Order of the Honorable City of Braunschweig”, in Bugenhagen: Selected Works, ed. Kurt H. Hendel, vols. 1–2 (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2015), 1394.
6 Bugenhagen, “The Christian Order of the Honorable City of Braunschweig”, in Bugenhagen: Selected Works, 2:1394.
7 Gary Ferngren and Ekaterina Lomperis, eds., Essential Readings in Medicine and Religion (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2017), 189.
8 Alisha Rankin, Panaceia’s Daughters: Noblewomen as Healers in Early Modern Germany (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2013), 4.
9 Rankin, Panaceia’s Daughters, 108.
10 Rankin, Panaceia’s Daughters, 113–15.
11 Martin Luther, The Table Talk of Martin Luther, trans. and ed. William Hazlitt (London: Bell & Sons, 1909), 316.
12 Luther, Martin Luthers Werke: Kritische Gesamtausgabe, Tischreden, vols. 1–6 (Weimar, Hermann Böhlau, 1912; WA TR 3:578; Table Talk in Luther’s Works (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1967), LW 54:266.
13 Luther, WA TR 1:151; LW 54: 53–54.
14 Ekaterina Lomperis, The Reformations of Medicine (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2025), 111.
15 Vivian Nutton, “Wittenberg Anatomy,” in Medicine and the Reformation, eds. Ole Peter Grell and Andrew Cunningham (London: Routledge, 1993), 11–28, here at 12, 16.
16 Joachim Vadianus, Ein kurtz und trüwlich underricht/wider die sorgklich kranckeyt der Pestilētz/nach aller notturfft vnd ordnung so in söllichem fal/ betracht uñ gehaltē werden mag: neulich ußgan gen/uñ zů nutz gemeyner Lantschafft der eydegenoschafft zůsamen bracht im xv. hundert vnd xix. Jar (Basel: Adam Petri, 1519), 1–22.
17 Ulrich Zwingli, “Pestlied“, in Ulrich Zwinglis Sämtliche Werke I, Corpus Reformatorum, ed. Emil Egli, et al. (Berlin: Schwetschke, 1905), CR 88:67.
18 Zwingli, Pestlied, CR 88:68.
19 Zwingli, Pestlied, CR 88:69.
20 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation: The German Reform of Healing, 1473–1573 (London: Routledge, 2017), 81.
21 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation, 3.
22 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation, 90–91.
23 Luther, “Ob man vor dem Sterben fliehen müge,” in Predigten und Schriften 1527, WA 23:323–86, at 369; “Whether One May Flee from a Deadly Plague,” in Devotional Writings II, ed. Jaroslav J. Pelikan, Hilton C. Oswald and Helmut T. Lehmann (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1968), LW 43:119–38, at 133.
24 Luther, WA 23:353–54; LW 43:126.
25 Luther, WA 23:354; LW 43:126.
26 Luther, WA 23:354; LW 43:126.
27 Luther, WA 23:355; LW 43:127.
28 Kristen C. Howard, “A House Dedicated to God”, unpublished PhD dissertation, University of Arizona (2020).
29 John Calvin, Selected Works 2:128; Opera Calvini 6:209–10; Calvin’s Tracts, trans. Henry Beveridge, vol. 2 (Edinburgh: Calvin Translation Society, 1846), 127–28.
30 François Chappuis, Sommaire de certains et vrays remedes contre la Peste, contenant La manière de preserver les sains, contregarder les infectz, et ceux qui seruent les maladies: de guerir les frappez, et de nettoyer les lieux infectz, Book 1, Chap. 5 (Paris: Nicholas du Chemin, 1543), 8r.
31 Chappuis, Remedes contre la Peste, Book 1, Chap 10, 16v-17r.
32 Howard, “A House Dedicated to God”, 338.
33 Ferngren, Medicine & Religion, 137.
34 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation, 11.
35 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation, 12.
36 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation, 14.
37 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation, 132.
38 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation, 96.
39 Hieronymus Brunschwig, A most excellent and perfecte homish apothecarye or homely physick booke for all the grefes and diseases of the bodye, trans. John Hollybush (London: Arnold Birckman, 1561), 6v.
40 Brunschwig, A most excellent and perfecte homish apothecarye, 8r.
41 Hieronymus Brunschwig, Apoteck für den gmeynē man. Der die Ertzte zuersuchen, am gůt nict vermügens/ oder sonst in der not allwege nicht erraychen kann (Augsburg: Heinrich Stainer, 1529), Aii. The wording is drawn from the 1600 edition.
42 Heinrichs, Plague, Print, and the Reformation, 99.
43 William Eamon, Science and the Secrets of Nature: Books of Secrets in Medieval and Early Modern Culture (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994), 234.
44 Eamon, Science and the Secrets of Nature, 134.
45 Alessio Piemontese, A Collection of Seven and Fifty Receipts Good against the Plague: Taken Out of the Five Books of that Renowned Dr. Don Alexes Secrets, for the Benefit of the Poorer Sort of People of these Nations from the 1555, 1562 Italian) trans. William Ward and Richard Andrews, ed. William Johnson (London, Peter Lillicrap, 1665).
46 Eamon, Science and the Secrets of Nature, 253.
47 Eamon, Science and the Secrets of Nature, 250.
48 Levinus Lemnius, Secret Miracles of Nature: in Four Books… trans. Thomas Newton (London: J. Streater, 1658), A2v.