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Masks vs. God and Country: The Conflict between Public Health and Christian Nationalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 June 2022

Brittany Acors*
Affiliation:
University of Virginia
*
*2006 Stadium Rd #9, Charlottesville, VA 22903. E-mail: baa9cb@virginia.edu.
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Abstract

From its inception, the United States Public Health Service (USPHS) has been expressly areligious, aiming to promote the health of the American people during specific crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as responding to endemic issues such as heart disease, opioid addiction and obesity. However, some Christian nationalists perceive this areligious advocacy of science as a challenge to the moral authority of Christianity and the Bible. Protests against public health guidelines have utilized religious language to defend what participants see as their civil and God-given rights, deepening the divide between science and religion. Yet historically, public health advocates have built relationships with religious community leaders and employed educational campaigns to bridge this gap. Drawing on an analysis of USPHS history, Christian nationalist ideology and recent COVID-19 protests, this article argues that public health has historically used specific strategies to ensure a more favourable response and compliance, and makes the case that it should do so again.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Ecclesiastical History Society

From its inception, the United States Public Health Service (USPHS) has been expressly areligious. Designed to disperse ‘reliable information based on the best available public health science, not politics, religion, or personal opinion’,Footnote 1 the USPHS aims to promote the health of the American people during specific crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic and with respect to more endemic issues such as heart disease, opioid addiction and obesity. However, as sociological research on Christian nationalist responses to masking and social distancing orders has recently demonstrated, this areligious advocacy of science can be perceived as a challenge to the moral authority of Christianity and the Bible. Protests against public health guidelines in churches and on state property have utilized religious language to defend what participants regard as their civil and God-given rights, further deepening the divide between science and religion. To bridge this gap, public health advocates have in the past sought to use community engagement strategies and educational campaigns to instil public trust in bacteriology, birth control and safe sexual practices. The following analysis of the history of the USPHS, the ideology and individualism of Christian nationalism, and recent protests against public health policies demonstrates that public health agencies still need to employ such strategies to ensure a more favourable response and compliance in the present pandemic and in future crises.

The United States Public Health Service

The United States Public Health Service dates nearly to the founding of the United States of America, and it has witnessed every health crisis from smallpox and yellow fever to the opioid epidemic and COVID-19. Founded in 1798 by the Adams administration to care for sick and disabled seamen,Footnote 2 the USPHS grew exponentially after the bacteriological revolution of the late nineteenth century, which caused a shift in how disease was regarded, from a moral failing to a societal- and state-level concern.Footnote 3 More than two hundred years after its founding, the USPHS is ‘the largest public health program in the world’ and provides crucial services related to ‘healthcare delivery, research, regulation, and disaster relief’ for the American people at large.Footnote 4 In fulfilling these roles, the USPHS has historically employed a variety of educational strategies adapted to the current situation and needs of American citizens, but it also faces certain impediments which crises exacerbate, as the following analysis demonstrates.

As the chief educational agency for health issues in the United States, the USPHS has relied on the latest scientific evidence and sought to avoid political or religious influence. As the point where medicine meets government, it must tread carefully around the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, which serves to protect citizens’ rights from governmental infringement. The First Amendment right to religious freedom has two parts: the establishment clause forbids the creation of a national religion, and the free exercise clause allows people to practise religion according to their consciences. Yet perhaps the context of the Public Health Services’ development attests more to its avoidance of religion than to constitutional trepidation, as the body grew out of scientific knowledge about disease and public acceptance of prevention as a social responsibility.Footnote 5 The USPHS embrace of bacteriology reflected broader public understanding, in which ‘[s]cientific measures were seen as replacing earlier social, sanitary, moral, and religious reform measures to combat disease. Science was seen as a more effective means of achieving the same desirable social goals.’Footnote 6 In 1988, a Committee for the Study of the Future of Public Health, commissioned by the Division of Health Care Services in the Institute of Medicine, issued a 240-page report on the status of public health services in the United States. This document reflected on the history of these services, assessed their present disorder and inefficacies, and recommended future actions that would enable the public health system to better address immediate crises and enduring problems. Tellingly, the quotation above, about science replacing religion, is the only place in the report where religion is mentioned. This omission arguably made some Christians wary of the authority of public health, as will be seen below.

One of the most common accusations levelled against the USPHS is that it tends to be reactive, rather than proactive, and thus is unable to respond to crises as quickly or efficiently as the public expects. This issue, highlighted both by the 1988 report and by a 2002 Health Affairs article entitled ‘The Unfulfilled Promise of Public Health: Déjà vu all over again’, in part reflects governmental priorities, but it also reveals a disjunction between academic analysis and practical implementation. In the Health Affairs article, Elizabeth Fee, chief of the History of Medicine Division at the National Institutes of Health's Library of Medicine, and Theodore Brown, professor of community and preventive medicine at the University of Rochester's School of Medicine and Dentistry, trace how events in US history have corresponded with changes (or the lack thereof) in public health services.Footnote 7 Fee and Brown narrate the constant struggle between progressive reform and conservative reaction regarding the funding and expansion of the USPHS. The USPHS draws national attention and a funding boom during disease crises or times of renewed interest in social inequities, such as the 1930s ‘New Deal’ and the 1960s ‘War on Poverty’. However, during leaner economic times or a New Federalism mentalityFootnote 8 as seen during the Reagan administration, when attention shifts away from diseases or care for the poor, the government slashes public health funding and the system falls into disarray.Footnote 9

Fee and Brown argue that the United States government and its people should invest in public-health preparedness at all times, and other academics have joined them in advocating consistent investment in national health initiatives. They assert that the boom-and-bust cycle challenges the ability of the USPHS to protect national health from regular stressors such as drug addiction or heart health. The lack of sustained support also inhibits the response of the USPHS to the sudden appearance of new epidemic diseases. In times of relative calm, medical professionals, politicians, sociologists and historians alike call for better preventative health. However, without funding, and with the next crisis always seeming to come too soon, the USPHS has been unable to implement necessary systemic changes.

When COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus known as SARS-CoV2, reached the USA late in February 2020, the nation's public health systems were experiencing one of the ebbs in funding that occur regularly under conservative leadership. In an opinion editorial article published in the Washington Post on 13 March 2020, Beth Cameron, formerly Senior Director for Global Health Security and Biodefense in the National Security Council in the Obama administration, wrote:

When President Trump took office in 2017, the White House's National Security Council Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense survived the transition intact. Its mission was … to do everything possible within the vast powers and resources of the U.S. government to prepare for the next disease outbreak and prevent it from becoming an epidemic or pandemic.

One year later, I was mystified when the White House dissolved the office, leaving the country less prepared for pandemics like covid-19.Footnote 10

Representatives from the Trump administration explained this elimination as a streamlining of the National Security Council.Footnote 11 However, by the end of Trump's term of office, this decrease in disease prevention preparedness, combined with the rise of Christian nationalism in the Trump era as discussed below, contributed to the loss of more than 700,000 American lives.Footnote 12

Christian Nationalism and Science as an Affront to Religious Moral Authority

Christian nationalists can best be defined as a group of people who believe that the United States is a Christian nation and should base its policies on conservative Christian values and the Bible, which they perceive to be the inerrant word of God. Although Christian nationalists have promoted such views since the foundation of the USA, they have become increasingly vocal with the rise of the Religious Right and the increasing political power of the Moral Majority since the 1970s.Footnote 13 Although there is significant overlap between Christian nationalists and evangelicals, Andrew Whitehead and Samuel Perry assert in their study of Christian nationalism, Taking America Back for God (2020), that the groups are not to be regarded as one and the same. Whitehead and Perry argue that Christian nationalism must be studied on its own terms, separately from ‘Christianity’, and that ‘understanding Christian nationalism, its content and its consequences, is essential for understanding much of the polarization in American popular discourse’.Footnote 14 In subsequent studies, they examine more specifically the contest for moral authority between science and Christian nationalism, a crucial factor for understanding the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. By understanding the perspective of Christian nationalists and seeking partnerships with local leaders, public health advocates can create educational campaigns that may better appeal to an otherwise non-compliant population.

People who believe that the USA should be a Christian nation, a position which politicizes religion and theologizes politics, often regard science as a competing authority that cannot be accommodated within the Christian nationalist worldview. Examining why Christian nationalism often corresponds with a rejection of science, sociologists Joseph Baker, Stephen Perry and Andrew Whitehead find: ‘Because it provides an alternative source of moral authority beyond divine revelation and, consequently, different narratives regarding human origins, social organization, and humanity's relationship to nature, institutional science is perceived as a threat to the supremacy of Christianity as the moral authority in the public sphere.’Footnote 15 Christian nationalist concern with the source of moral authority is not common to all religious people. As Whitehead and Perry identify, liberal Protestants are much more likely to find ways to accommodate religious beliefs and scientific knowledge as dual sources for understanding the world. Many Christian nationalists, however, dispute scientific authority in ‘an effort to (re)assert the dominant moral and cultural authority of a white, native-born, straight, masculine, and Christian social order’.Footnote 16 Their political, social and religious positions combine to combat both science and scientists, whom they view as detracting from the proper ordering of the USA. It is this stance that has created a significant backlash against public health measures in the current crisis.

While the greatest amount of public opposition between science and Christian nationalism in the past century has concerned evolution and climate change, the disjunction between these two sources of information has also had major consequences for determining responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Suspicion about science has manifested in non-compliance with public health mandates requiring masking and social distancing as protective measures against COVID-19.Footnote 17 Ohio state representative Nino Vitale exemplified this position in a May 2020 Facebook post responding to masking mandates: ‘This is the greatest nation on earth founded on Judeo-Christian Principles. One of those principles is that we are all created in the image and likeness of God. That image is seen the most by our face. I will not wear a mask.’Footnote 18 In an article which focused on the behaviours of Christian nationalists during the current pandemic, Whitehead and Perry partnered with psychologist Joshua B. Grubbs to understand such responses to public health measures. Specifically, they argue that polls revealing ‘religious’ Americans as those most opposed to orders such as masking and social distancing are misleading, and that ‘Christian nationalism’ is a better predictor of distrust in scientific expertise.Footnote 19 Their study evaluates Christian nationalism as a predictor of the likelihood of undertaking incautious behaviours (attending large gatherings, shopping for non-essentials, eating inside restaurants) and ignoring precautionary recommendations (hand washing, mask wearing, decreased face touching). Their findings indicate that:

Christian nationalism was significantly and positively related to five indicators of incautious behavior, but unrelated to the frequency with which Americans went to medical appointments, attended church, or went to work outside the home … Christian nationalism was also negatively associated with each indicator of precautionary behavior except for using more hand sanitizer than normal. Religious commitment, in contrast, was mostly unrelated to incautious behaviors (though it predicted more frequent church attendance) and was positively and powerfully associated with each indicator of precautionary behavior.Footnote 20

These results define a distinction between Christian nationalists and people who can more broadly be categorized as religious. In a webinar on the same topic, Whitehead and Perry shared additional results of their study. They found that rejectors of Christian nationalism were most likely to trust medical experts, scientists and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as the most reliable sources of information about COVID-19, while strong Christian nationalists most trusted Donald Trump, religious organizations and the Republican Party.Footnote 21 These behaviours and trusted sources further indicate how Christian nationalists view science as a challenge to their moral authority and provide the context for their newsworthy actions during the pandemic.

Although they are a minority, Christian nationalists have garnered a disproportionate number of news articles focused on their lack of compliance with public health orders in 2020 and 2021. At an April 2020 protest against COVID-19 precautionary restrictions in Michigan, a young white male held a sign that read: ‘Even Pharaoh freed slaves during a plague.’Footnote 22 This sign combines a biblical narrative with then-president Donald Trump's calls for governors to rescind state restrictions on business operations. It is emblematic of Christian nationalists’ methods of depicting public health orders as restrictions of civil – and God-given – liberties. This ideology also appeared as churches across the country refused to comply with government shutdowns. Religious leaders whose churches remained open decried government-mandated cancellation of worship services as a violation of religious freedom,Footnote 23 especially as shutdowns coincided with Holy Week and Easter Sunday, and because other organizations such as casinos were permitted to remain open.Footnote 24 When Texas Governor Greg Abbott declared churches an essential service, and thus exempted from closures, Pastor Shetigho Nakpodia of Redeemer's Praise Church in San Antonio called him ‘the pastor of Texas’ and declared, ‘I believe he's a man of faith … Maybe that's what the Lord told him to do.’Footnote 25 The assertion that government officials should prioritize religion epitomizes Christian nationalism, especially as many of the same voices condemned other officials who prioritized public health and science instead. In the Christian nationalist perspective, Governor Abbott, like the Pharaoh of the Hebrew Bible, set people free during a pandemic. With this action, he earned in their eyes a position somewhere below God and certainly above medical experts who would have everyone remain ‘enslaved’, as the protest sign asserted.

Refusal to cancel religious services and charitable operations was not confined to Christian nationalist circles, but also occurred among Catholics, for whom sacraments are crucial and cannot be performed remotely. Jewish and Muslim leaders similarly struggled with the decision, knowing that many community members rely on their synagogues and mosques for food or religious rituals.Footnote 26 These concerns for the well-being of people who might go hungry without essential church services differ, however, from Christian nationalist challenges to the authority of public health authorities. Christian nationalist objections to shutdown orders seem to take two contrary paths: either Christians are God's chosen people and God will protect them from any harm, or the virus is not as bad as scientists claim and the government is just using it as an opportunity to suppress churches. Both beliefs lead to the defiance of public health orders and to the view that individual freedom of choice is more important than the societal protection of health.

This individualism may represent a shift with which public health authorities must reckon. While early knowledge of germ theory led to public health measures based on a widespread recognition that disease prevention could protect all citizens, some citizens have come to deny the authority of the underlying science and to prioritize individual liberties. Nicole Bryant, a member of Life Tabernacle Church, which remained open in defiance of Louisiana's closure orders, demonstrates this view:

There was a time in our history when I feel like we had that religious freedom – everything could have been closed, but people need to worship, religion was top-of-the-line because that was the original reason for [the Founders] coming here … The beauty of America is you can live your life based on what you prioritize as necessary, and we should be able to do the same.Footnote 27

In this mythologized version of United States history, Christian nationalists argue that religious freedom, interpreted as the right to unrestricted practice of religious beliefs, originally predominated, but that it has been eroded in recent years. The question is one of moral authority: who has the right to determine how people act in public settings? In this understanding, the medical community, urging groups to stay at home, is pitted against religious communities, who advocate God's protection and the value of gathering for worship. For Christian nationalists, if the choice is between faith in God and fear of death, they know where they stand.

In addition to the rhetoric of individual freedom, race has played an important role in the present pandemic. Throughout their research on Christian nationalists, Perry and Whitehead identify ‘Christian nationalists’ as white, native-born, culturally Christian people. However, people of colour have not only contracted COVID-19 in disproportionate numbers but have also died of it at higher rates.Footnote 28 Individual choices have communal consequences, especially for people who are more likely to occupy service-sector and essential-worker roles due to centuries of systemic racial and economic inequalities. Much like Christian nationalists, many Black communities also distrust medical information.Footnote 29 However, for Black communities, this distrust results not from a perception of contested moral authority, but from centuries of unethical experimentation on Black bodies, from the times of slaveryFootnote 30 through the USPHS-run Tuskegee and Guatemala syphilis studies.Footnote 31 Although their distrust results from different experiences and ideologies, and recognizing that Christian nationalist communities have refused to comply with public health standards at greater rates than Black communities, both groups demonstrate the need for the USPHS to intervene and to work to build greater trust in order to serve the American population more fully. The next two sections will explore historical moments when bridges were built between these communities and public health, exemplifying opportunities for future partnerships.

Bridging the Gap between Religion and Medicine

Community partnerships and educational campaigns have historically instigated a conversion in lifestyle that makes for healthier populations. The bacteriological revolution, the advent of birth control and the explosion of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) mark the beginning, middle and end of arguably the most scientifically revolutionary century in human history. Each of these shifts also required a rapid public health response to educate the population as new information became available. Although often driven by private citizens, interventions at these three moments in medical history can serve as models for how the USPHS might respond to increasing distrust in science and medicine in the twenty-first century. These models demonstrate how to build relationships with hesitant communities and ensure greater compliance with future public health measures.

The bacteriological revolution at the turn of the twentieth century was marked by the discovery of several disease-causing vectors and the realization that disease does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, social class or any of the other factors that people perceive as setting themselves apart from others. In The Gospel of Germs (1998), historian Nancy Tomes explores how the American response to the early-twentieth-century ‘germ panic’ resulted in an obsession with hygiene invading United States culture. While analysing the ‘educational crusades that brought women and men from all walks of life to believe in the existence of germs and to alter fundamental aspects of their daily lives to avoid them’, Tomes identifies that ‘reformers of many stripes promoted this code of behavior with religious fervor and made believing in germs part of the credo of modern living’.Footnote 32 The bacteriological revolution provides an example of how both individual beliefs and societal consensus on proper public health behaviours may change, offering a potential remedy for the challenges of disinformation and the assertion of moral authority that underlie public health non-compliance among Christian nationalists.

Once scientists had identified bacteria and viruses as disease-causing agents, this understanding had to reach the wider public before social behaviour could change substantially. Although originally based on the miasmic theory of disease, which posited that sickness could spread through tainted vapours in the air, many Americans believed that cleanliness was a mark of ‘gentility and politeness’ among the upper classes, which then trickled down to middle-class people living in urban hotspots of disease.Footnote 33 Once diseases began to spread even in these socially powerful circles, however, upper-class Americans quickly grasped the burgeoning bacteriological theory as an explanation, accepting it even before many in the medical community. Part of the reason germ theory caught on so easily, Tomes argues, was that Americans, as a largely religious people, ‘had been conditioned to believe in an “invisible world” dominated by unseen forces that held the power of life and death’.Footnote 34 Even once scientific researchers identified the invisible agents of disease, people still regarded them with the mix of wonder and fear often reserved for God. They approached information dissemination about germs and bacteria and associated behavioural reform as they had for centuries approached gospel missionizing and ritual activity.

Because effective treatments for diseases did not yet exist, prevention was the best method of ensuring health, and public health campaigns swept through cities. The expansion of public health from 1890 to 1930 occurred for two reasons: first, people came to believe that the government should be responsible for societal well-being through the management of sewage, water supply and food inspection; and second, people recognized that individuals and households were responsible for the policing of ‘seemingly innocuous behaviors’, like hand-washing and refraining from public expectoration.Footnote 35 One way these beliefs spread was through advertising and entrepreneurship, as new products hit the markets promising to protect families from common household germs. A second way they circulated was through union members and African American leaders who took on crucial roles in the tuberculosis crusade, because these two communities were disproportionately affected by what was then known as ‘consumption’. A third way information spread was through the education of women in ‘domestic science’ classes and missionary nursing training. As the family members typically most involved in the private sphere, wives and mothers had long run the home and taken a leading role in the religious education of the children. With the advent of germ theory, women took on the extra burden of sanitizing the home against disease vectors, but they also found new careers outside the home as nurses, physicians and home economics teachers.Footnote 36 By appealing to the American public at large through advertisements, but also to smaller subsets by addressing their specific concerns, public health crusaders in the early twentieth century enacted a sea change in American beliefs and habits.

As understanding of bacteriology grew widespread, it developed into what Tomes calls the ‘gospel of germs’, an almost religious ‘belief that microbes cause disease and can be avoided by certain protective behaviors’.Footnote 37 These behaviours included installing easily sanitized porcelain toilets in the home, preparing food more cautiously, sneezing and coughing into a handkerchief or the elbow, and campaigning against public expectoration. Advertisements in magazines such as Good Housekeeping and Harper's Bazaar, radio spots, and government mandates about food preparation in restaurants and sanitation practices in hotels combined to make Americans more sanitary and aware of disease. Many of these habits that were new in the early twentieth century – such as washing hands after using the restroom or before eating, keeping raw meat separate from cooked, and using white sheets in hotels because they are more easily washed with bleach – are now standard and unquestioned parts of modern life. Normalizing sanitary practices has not only changed American lifestyles but has also decreased the spread of infectious diseases over time.

Tomes argues that there was a lull in germ consciousness after the incidence of chronic illnesses overtook that of infectious diseases in the 1950s, following the dissemination of antibiotics and the poliovirus vaccine. However, writing in 1998, she contends that ‘the gospel of germs has taken on new relevance since 1980’.Footnote 38 When HIV-AIDS began killing otherwise healthy young men, initially to the bafflement of medical professionals, a new germ panic reached the public. Education campaigns were again used, but this time to assure the population that neither handshakes nor nearby sneezes could spread the debilitating new virus. As the fear of AIDS began to abate in the early twenty-first century, however, it seems that germ consciousness has reached a new low. With a widespread view that COVID-19 is not as bad as scientists and the government have made it seem, the United States needs to target its public health information campaign concerning social behaviours such as masking and physical distancing more effectively to hesitant populations. The ‘gospel of germs’ mindset that was new in 1920 and faded by 2000 has again become necessary in the 2020s, and the way bacteriology entered daily life a century ago provides a model for the present.

However, information campaigns alone no longer seem as effective as they were a century ago. Because most Americans have ready access to the internet, misinformation and disinformation spread more easily than information from legitimate sources such as scientific researchers and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which are bound by caution and protocols that delay the finding and publicization of research results. After a 2012 outbreak of salmonella, the CDC recognized that this delay could foster disinformation and distrust.Footnote 39 Despite this retrospective recognition of the drawbacks of working in accordance with the scientific timeline, the CDC proceeded cautiously in the first few months of 2020, and disinformation often dominated.Footnote 40 Between the information delay and the perceived challenge to religion's moral authority described above, the COVID-19 pandemic appears to have come at a challenging time for moderating social behaviours. Historically, in cases when disinformation and distrust have prevailed, partnerships between public health activists and community leaders have proved effective in combating these trends, as can be shown by the case of Margaret Sanger's birth control clinic in Harlem.

When Margaret Sanger (1879–1966) secured funding to open a birth control clinic in Harlem in 1930, she ensured that the clinic would be run under an advisory board consisting of Black community leaders. Sanger realized that working closely with Black leaders, including ministers, could help instil trust in medical and public health measures. The board at the Harlem clinic included social worker James Hubert; May Chinn, the only Black female doctor in Harlem; Baptist pastor William Lloyd Imes; and representatives from the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses, Harlem Hospital and the National Urban League.Footnote 41 W. E. B. Du Bois’ magazine The Crisis publicized the Harlem clinic, and the Revd Dr Martin Luther King Jr and Coretta Scott King later commended Sanger's work there as well.Footnote 42 Mutual relationships underpinned this initiative: while Sanger recognized Black community leaders as crucial for spreading public health initiatives among distrustful populations, Black community leaders recognized Sanger's desire to help people control their bodies and in turn their futures. Working closely with one another enabled shared goal-setting and ultimately led to a healthier population.

In recent years, Planned Parenthood has distanced itself from the legacy of its founder, largely due to Sanger's advocacy of eugenics at home and abroad.Footnote 43 Historians, medical doctors and liberal and conservative activists have rightly raised concerns about her beliefs in selective breeding and white maternalism,Footnote 44 and this article in no way wishes to defend or justify her beliefs or those policies. Rather, the lesson the USPHS may draw from Sanger's work focuses narrowly on her partnerships with community leaders as exemplified through the Harlem clinic's advisory board. Local leaders need to be involved in shaping institutions and determining policies that affect them. This is especially true in communities which preserve strict divisions between insiders and outsiders, whether due to historical wrongs or to a contest for moral authority. Public health partnerships which intentionally include leaders of religious and other organizations can help spread accurate information, instil trust and bridge divides, helping to accomplish mutual goals of health and wellness.

A third example of public health advocacy crossing the religious-scientific divide came through the response of the evangelical Surgeon General C. Everett Koop (1916–2013) to the AIDS crisis in the 1980s. Anthony Petro argues in After the Wrath of God: AIDS, Sexuality, and American Religion (2015) that AIDS was not just a social and political issue, but also a moral and religious challenge that required a novel approach to sexual morality. When the Reagan administration appointed Koop as Surgeon General in 1982, AIDS cases had only appeared in the United States within the past year, and it was still known as ‘gay-related immune deficiency’ (GRID). An evangelical Christian and a paediatric surgeon, Koop had previously published a book making a case against abortion and euthanasia, aimed specifically at Christian audiences, and contributed to a ‘Christian Manifesto, which called for greater evangelical participation in political matters like abortion’.Footnote 45 Although the media decried his lack of public health experience, Koop became the nation's guide through one of the most devastating and controversial diseases in American history. While many religious people and even physicians in the last two decades of the twentieth century viewed AIDS as a divine punishment for immoral behaviour and homosexuality, the USPHS under the guidance of Surgeon General Koop responded with an aggressive education campaign designed to encourage the public to reserve judgement, keep them updated on new developments in understanding HIV and ultimately stop the spread of the virus.

As already discussed, under a conservative administration in the 1980s, the United States government had been scaling back health care and medical research funding, leaving the country ill prepared for as sudden and horrific a virus as HIV proved to be. Although prevented from speaking publicly about AIDS until Reagan's second term, Koop took charge of the Executive Task Force on AIDS in 1985 and made it one of the administration's top priorities.Footnote 46 Recognizing that ‘I am the surgeon general of the heterosexuals and the homosexuals, of the young and the old, of the moral [and] the immoral’,Footnote 47 Koop enacted a campaign for sexual education and condom use that ‘surprised his conservative friends and liberal opponents alike, turning many of the former against him while garnering praise from the latter’.Footnote 48 Although the campaign attracted a degree of conservative backlash, Koop intended his AIDS reports and other educational publications to appeal broadly to morality.

Recognizing the need for mass public education, Koop parsed his official report on AIDS into a six-page brochure that was mailed to nearly every American household. The pamphlet both corrected misinformation that the virus could spread through casual contact and detailed safe sexual practices that would prevent the virus from spreading.Footnote 49 Koop balanced moral appeals for abstinence and monogamy with an educational campaign that went beyond his own religious views, attempting to work with both religious and secular, conservative and liberal, straight and gay people to achieve a healthier and more informed population. He followed the pamphlet with what Petro describes as ‘a lecture circuit among religious groups … that increasingly blurred the lines between the gospel of condoms and the gospel of Jesus, as the surgeon general's sphere of influence came to encompass that of the itinerant public health preacher’.Footnote 50 Throughout the AIDS crisis, Koop worked with the gay community and with religious conservatives nationwide. For each audience, he shifted his language slightly to appeal to its worldview, yet he consistently maintained the message that everyone was an important player in the common struggle against AIDS.

Like Sanger, Koop is not a perfect model for public health advocacy. Liberals have criticized the way that his Christian morality often crept into his public health rhetoric, making certain groups feel ostracized or judged. Others have argued that despite his religious perspective, Koop viewed himself as responsible for the health of the entire American population. As former Surgeon General David Satcher eulogized, ‘[Koop] did not abandon his Christian principles, but he put the principle of love of one's fellow man above his judgment of them’.Footnote 51 Koop knew how to speak to evangelicals on their own terms, and he also recognized how crucial education was to alleviate fear and prevent the spread of a deadly virus. These lessons speak to the present as Christian nationalists fear that science will overtake their moral authority and advocate for individualistic civil rights in the midst of a pandemic that has infected over forty-five million Americans. Language, morality and education matter as much in the 2020s as they did in the 1980s.

A Proposal for the Present

Historians often worry how involved they should be in the present. I am not a sociologist, a politician or a healthcare worker, but as an American historian who studies the intersection of religion and medicine and now finds herself in the middle of a pandemic, I feel a responsibility to note how the past can help shape our present. While policy implementation should be left to the experts, the final section of this article offers a historically informed model for how community partnerships and attention to language and education may enable the USPHS to ensure greater compliance with guidelines that can save lives now and as the COVID-19 vaccines are distributed.

The US Public Health Service is required to instruct the American public at large, offering guidance to a diverse population divided by region, race, education and religion. In the digital age, educational campaigns may seem moot, as nearly everyone has access to a wealth of information. However, because people tend to accept the information that supports their beliefs, rather than seeking scientific truth, there is still a need for public health advocates to increase the effectiveness of their interventions by engaging community leaders and tailoring educational campaign language to their audiences. Yet perhaps a greater issue, especially for populations where infection rates are high, such as among Christian nationalists and Black communities, is trust. Whether these populations view the scientific community as an affront to the moral authority of other sources such as the Bible, or as unreliable due to a historical record of violence and deception towards them, overcoming such breakdowns in trust requires significant work and creative engagement. Through fostering community partnerships and emphasizing shared goals and values, the USPHS could take a proactive, rather than reactive, stance on health issues. This could result in greater compliance with guidelines and vaccinations, and thus in healthier populations, as everyone plays a role in keeping their neighbours safe.

Academics regularly call for the USPHS to be more proactive in facilitating community partnerships in times of relative calm. In 2013, the biomedical scientist and religious studies scholar Jeff Levin published an article advocating for partnerships between public health agencies and religious communities. Levin argues that these partnerships could not only enable better resource sharing, but would also make sense because ‘(a) these sectors share mutual concerns, (b) the tenets of many religions favor healthy living, (c) congregations provide tangible and emotional resources for health, and (d) religious organizations are able to foster participation among people otherwise hard to reach’.Footnote 52 Recognizing that there may be limitations and barriers to this partnership, both from the public health and the religious perspectives, Levin maintains that public health and religious communities share values. A partnership that emphasizes these commonalities would enable preventative measures, social justice and healthier populations both locally and globally.

A group of evangelical doctors has taken this mission to heart during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Christian Medical & Dental Associations (CMDA), an organization whose mission ‘is to glorify God by caring for all people and advancing Biblical principles of healthcare within the Church and throughout the world’, has issued guidelines for churches to reopen safely, and a plea for Christians to love their neighbours by following public health guidelines.Footnote 53 Anchoring its ‘Plea to our Churches’ in love rather than fear, the CMDA reflects the dichotomy Christian nationalists have constructed between the love of God and the fear of death. They also echo the language Surgeon General Koop used when appealing to a similar population. Citing Romans and 2 Corinthians, the CMDA asserts: ‘Restricting meeting for a season is not about fear of contracting the virus ourselves. Rather, it is about loving one another and minimizing risk to the vulnerable around us.’Footnote 54 Less than two weeks after the article was published, the comment section had divided between those praising the CMDA and saying they would forward it to their church and those advocating conspiracy theories about masking and the government.Footnote 55 Although this article and the positive responses to it demonstrate the benefits of a partnership between religious community leaders and public health advocates, the fact that it was not published until November 2020, combined with the spread of disinformation since March 2020, highlights the need to foster these partnerships before crises strike. Establishing effective partnerships before the pandemic, which requires regular funding outside of crises, might have permitted earlier dissemination of information, and thus prevention of disinformation. Nonetheless, it is better to form these relationships now than not at all.

In addition to partnerships with religious community leaders, public health language and communication are crucial to how the pandemic will continue to be regarded, and to how the USPHS can prepare for future moments of crisis and calm. Most importantly, educational campaigns should follow the model of the bacteriological revolution and Surgeon General Koop's response to AIDS. Quick and public response to misinformation and disinformation, along with repetition of scientifically based facts, should circulate to every household, and these days also across the internet. A study of the El Paso Morning Times during the 1918 influenza pandemic reveals that although most media downplayed the virus to prevent alarm, newspapers also highlighted the lives of the dead, circulated the USPHS's preventative guidelines and recognized mutual support and altruism among the population.Footnote 56 Some media outlets have followed suit today, as exemplified by the New York Times making all articles on the pandemic open access, or by famous journalists such as Katie Couric featuring the ‘Faces of COVID-19’ and bringing life to the numbing number of dead each day.Footnote 57 What is needed is a more aggressive educational campaign by the USPHS and the Surgeon General that draws on the themes of historical public health campaigns as well as current news media. Furthermore, the USPHS, which has commissioned an increasing variety of healthcare professionals and academic scientists in the past century,Footnote 58 should consider enlisting both communications professionals and humanities academics. This expansion of the range of expertise would not only foster better informational campaigns, but also has the potential to resolve tensions and prevent further strife between the USPHS and racial and religious minorities.Footnote 59

The successful implementation of a COVID-19 vaccine programme also requires each of the above strategies. Republicans and white evangelicals on the one hand and Black Americans on the other are the two groups most hesitant about receiving a vaccine.Footnote 60 Yet they are also two of the groups most at risk of contracting the virus, the former due to engaging in risky behaviours and the latter due to an often precarious social position. Although vaccinating hesitant populations remains a challenge at the time of writing in October 2021, continued implementation is essential for stopping the spread of the virus and minimizing infection and death rates among vulnerable populations. As they have done historically, public health advocates must combine community partnerships, educational campaigns and tailored language to ensure compliance, trust and healthier populations going forward.

Over its history, the United States Public Health Service has witnessed and responded to every crisis from smallpox to coronavirus, and every endemic issue from venereal disease to heart disease. Regular challenges due to lack of funding or distrust among religious and racial minorities have hampered its efficacy. It is only recently that Christian nationalists have come to view science as an affront to the moral authority of the Bible, and they have subsequently disregarded and disobeyed public health orders designed to slow the spread of COVID-19. Historical examples of how public health advocates partnered with community leaders, implemented educational campaigns and tailored language to ensure better compliance offer important models for the USPHS to consider during the present pandemic and in those still to come. It should especially hone these skills in times of calm going forward, aiming to be more proactive rather than reactive, and thus be better prepared for the inevitable next crisis. For the current crisis, however, a change in mindset and behaviour will be crucial as the pandemic continues to show its tragic power. Rather than masks versus God and country, the USPHS should foster strategies that shift American culture to believing in masking – or being vaccinated – for neighbour, country and God.

References

1 David Satcher, ‘A Tribute to Surgeon General C. Everett Koop’, Health Affairs, 1 March 2013, online at: <https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hblog20130301.028767/full/>, accessed 18 January 2021.

2 Commissioned Corps of the US Public Health Service, ‘Our History’, online at: <https://www.usphs.gov/history>, accessed 24 November 2020.

3 Tomes, Nancy, The Gospel of Germs: Men, Women, and the Microbe in American Life (Cambridge, MA, 1998)Google Scholar.

4 Commissioned Corps, ‘Our History’.

5 Institute of Medicine, The Future of Public Health (Washington DC, 1988), 56Google Scholar.

6 Ibid. 64.

7 Elizabeth Fee and Theodore M. Brown, ‘The Unfulfilled Promise of Public Health: Déjà vu all over again’, Health Affairs 21, no. 6 (November-December 2002), 31–43.

8 The United States government operates as a federalist system, in which the federal or national governing bodies have certain reserved powers, but most other powers are left to the states. American conservatives generally seek to reduce federal powers, resulting in more responsibilities for the states and allowing for idiosyncratic differences in policies based on the opinions of the people in each state. Under the Reagan administration, this shift was called ‘New Federalism’, and federal involvement in social welfare benefits and other regulations diminished.

9 Ibid. 41.

10 Beth Cameron, ‘I ran the White House pandemic office. Trump closed it’, Washington Post, 13 March 2020, online at: <https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/nsc-pandemic-office-trump-closed/2020/03/13/a70de09c-6491-11ea-acca-80c22bbee96f_story.html>, accessed 18 January 2021.

11 Tim Morrison, ‘No, the White House didn't “dissolve” its pandemic response office. I was there’, Washington Post, 16 March 2020, online at: <https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/03/16/no-white-house-didnt-dissolve-its-pandemic-response-office/>, accessed 18 January 2021.

12 This article concerns an ongoing health crisis, and statistics are updated to 25 October 2021.

13 A comprehensive history is beyond the scope of this article, but it can be found in many recent books, including John Fea, Was America founded as a Christian Nation? A Historical Introduction (Louisville, KY, 2011); Sam Haselby, The Origins of American Religious Nationalism (New York, 2015); David Hollinger, After Cloven Tongues of Fire: Protestant Liberalism in Modern American History (Princeton, NJ, 2013); K. Healan Gaston, Imagining Judeo-Christian America: Religion, Secularism, and the Redefinition of Democracy (Chicago, IL, 2019).

14 Andrew L. Whitehead and Samuel L. Perry, Taking America Back for God: Christian Nationalism in the United States (New York, 2020), 16.

15 Joseph Baker, Samuel Perry and Andrew Whitehead, ‘Crusading for Moral Authority: Christian Nationalism and Opposition to Science’, Sociological Forum 35 (2020), 587–607, at 591.

16 Ibid. 603.

17 It is important to note here that throughout 2020 states or localities were left to determine their own approaches to preventative measures and mask mandates. Although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provided advice, it is not a law-making body. Furthermore, it was unclear whether the federal government had the power to make public health mandates, and conservatives would have seen such actions as a violation of states’ rights: Lawrence O. Gostin, I. Glenn Cohen and Jeffrey P. Koplan, ‘Universal Masking in the United States: The Role of Mandates, Health Education, and the CDC’, Journal of the American Medical Association 324 (2020), 837–8.

18 Elisha Fieldstadt, ‘Ohio Lawmaker refuses to wear Mask because he says it dishonors God’, NBC News, 6 May 2020, online at: <https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/ohio-lawmaker-refuses-wear-mask-because-he-says-it-dishonors-n1201106>, accessed 7 December 2020.

19 Samuel Perry, Andrew Whitehead and Joshua Grubbs, ‘Culture Wars and COVID-19 Conduct: Christian Nationalism, Religiosity, and Americans’ Behavior during the Coronavirus Pandemic’, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 59 (2020), 405–16, at 406.

20 Ibid. 413.

21 Andrew Whitehead and Samuel Perry, ‘The Fight to Make America Christian Again: Christian Nationalism in National and Texas Politics’, Zoom Webinar, Rice University, Baker Institute, 21 September 2020.

22 Photograph by Jeff Kowalsky, in ‘Trump and Protesters pressure Governors to start reopening the States’, CNBC, 18 April 2020, online at: <https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/18/trump-and-protesters-pressure-governors-to-start-reopening-the-states.html>, accessed 25 November 2020.

23 Tom Gjelten, ‘Some Religious Leaders defy Shutdown Orders’, NPR, 5 April 2020, online at: <https://www.npr.org/2020/04/05/827758335/some-religious-leaders-defy-shutdown-orders>, accessed 25 November 2020.

24 The unequal treatment of churches in shutdown orders has come to a fore in a recent Supreme Court case, Calvary Chapel Dayton Valley v. Steve Sisolak, Governor of Nevada, et al. 591 U.S. ___ (2020), online at: <https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/19pdf/19a1070_08l1.pdf#page=13>, last accessed 16 November 2021.

25 Vianna Davila, ‘“A Church is Hands On:” Why these Texas Churches aren't closing their Doors’, Texas Tribune, 2 April 2020, online at: <https://www.texastribune.org/2020/04/02/texas-churches-coronavirus-arent-closing-doors/>, accessed 25 November 2020.

26 Ibid.

27 Michelle Boorstein, ‘The Church that won't close its Doors over the Coronavirus’, Washington Post, 20 March 2020, online at: <https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2020/03/20/church-tony-spell-coronavirus-life-tabernacle/?arc404=true>, accessed 25 November 2020. While this article also discusses Orthodox Jewish communities that refused to follow social distancing orders, I believe that these violations of public health guidelines do not represent religious nationalist positions, and therefore they do not fit within the scope of this article, although they deserve further exploration.

28 ‘COVID-19 Hospitalization and Death by Race / Ethnicity’, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 18 August 2020, online at: <https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/covid-data/investigations-discovery/hospitalization-death-by-race-ethnicity.html>, accessed 25 November 2020.

29 Bernice Roberts Kennedy, Christopher Clomus Mathis and Angela K. Woods, ‘African Americans and their Distrust of the Health Care System: Healthcare for Diverse Populations’, Journal of Cultural Diversity 14/2 (2007), 56–60.

30 L. Lewis Wall, ‘The Medical Ethics of Dr J. Marion Sims: A Fresh Look at the Historical Record’, Journal of Medical Ethics 32 (2006), 346–50.

31 Susan Reverby, ‘Ethical Failures and History Lessons: The U.S. Public Health Service Research Studies in Tuskegee and Guatemala’, Public Health Reviews 34 (2012), 1–18.

32 Tomes, Gospel of Germs, xv.

33 Ibid. 3.

34 Ibid. 7.

35 Ibid. 6–7.

36 Ibid. 136.

37 Ibid. 2.

38 Ibid. 13.

39 Public Health Matters Blog, ‘Public Health: Are we too slow?’, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1 May 2013, online at: <https://blogs.cdc.gov/publichealthmatters/2013/05/are-we-too-slow/>, accessed 9 June 2021.

40 Binxuan Huang and Kathleen M. Carley, ‘Disinformation and Misinformation on Twitter during the Novel Coronavirus Outbreak’, Cornell University Social and Information Networks, 2020, online at: <https://arXiv:2006.04278>, last accessed 3 February 2022.

41 Carole R. McCann, Birth Control Politics in the United States, 1916–1945 (Ithaca, NY, 1994), 139.

42 Martin Luther King Jr, ‘Family Planning: A Special and Urgent Concern’, speech delivered 5 May 1966, Planned Parenthood, online at: <https://www.plannedparenthood.org/planned-parenthood-gulf-coast/mlk-acceptance-speech>, accessed 29 November 2020.

43 Nikita Steward, ‘Planned Parenthood in N.Y. disavows Margaret Sanger over Eugenics’, New York Times, 21 July 2020, online at: <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/21/nyregion/planned-parenthood-margaret-sanger-eugenics.html?auth=login-email&login=email>, accessed 25 January 2021.

44 For more resources on Margaret Sanger's life and complicated legacy, see David M. Kennedy, Birth Control in America: The Career of Margaret Sanger (New Haven, CT, 1970); ‘Newsletter #28 (Fall 2001): “Birth Control or Race Control? Sanger and the Negro Project”’, The Margaret Sanger Papers Project, online at: <https://www.nyu.edu/projects/sanger/articles/bc_or_race_control.php>, accessed 29 November 2020; R. Marie Griffith, Moral Combat: How Sex divided American Christians and fractured American Politics (New York, 2017); Amita Kelly, ‘Fact Check: Was Planned Parenthood started to “Control” the Black Population?’, NPR, 14 August 2015, online at: <https://www.npr.org/sections/itsallpolitics/2015/08/14/432080520/fact-check-was-planned-parenthood-started-to-control-the-black-population>, accessed 25 January 2021.

45 Anthony Petro, After the Wrath of God: AIDS, Sexuality, and American Religion (New York, 2015), 58.

46 Ibid. 69.

47 Ibid. 53.

48 Ibid. 55.

49 Ibid. 75.

50 Ibid. 82.

51 Satcher, ‘A Tribute to Surgeon General C. Everett Koop’.

52 Jeff Levin, ‘Engaging the Faith Community for Public Health Advocacy: An Agenda for the Surgeon General’, Journal of Religion and Health 52 (2013), 368–85, at 379.

53 ‘Courage in the Crisis: CMDA and COVID-19’, Christian Medical & Dental Associations, 16 November 2020, online at: <https://cmda.org/coronavirus/>, accessed 30 November 2020.

54 Jeffrey Barrows, ‘A Plea to our Churches’, CMDA, 19 November 2020, online at: <https://cmda.org/a-plea-to-our-churches/>, accessed 30 November 2020.

55 One example of the latter concludes: ‘[Y]ou are urging Christians to love one another by not loving one another, to isolate and die in misery instead of rejoicing with loved ones to celebrate and give thanks for the birth of Christ … Hopefully, you will take this message to heart and look into these issues I have raised if you are a real Christian and not some political agent pretending to be a Christian (wolf in sheep's clothing). Be blessed’: Gum Drops, comment on Barrows, ‘A Plea’, posted 23 November 2020.

56 Martinez-Catsam, Ana, ‘The Spanish Influenza of 1918: The Function of the El Paso Morning Times to a Community in Crisis’, Journal of the West 52 (2013), 6571Google Scholar.

57 Katie Couric, ‘Faces of COVID-19’, KCM, online at: <https://katiecouric.com/category/covid-19/faces-of-covid-19/>, accessed 30 November 2020.

58 Berry, Katherine, ‘Historical Review of the Commissioning of Health Care Disciplines in the USPHS’, Journal of Dental Hygiene 85 (2011), 2938Google ScholarPubMed.

59 See Fadiman, Anne, The Spirit catches you and you fall down (New York, 1997)Google Scholar for arguments about the necessity of increased cultural competence in medical settings.

60 Cary Lynne Thigpen and Cary Funk, ‘Most Americans expect a COVID-19 vaccine within a year; 72% say they would get vaccinated’, Pew Research Center, 21 May 2020, online at: <https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/05/21/most-americans-expect-a-covid-19-vaccine-within-a-year-72-say-they-would-get-vaccinated/>, accessed 30 November 2020; James Doubek and David Greene, ‘Black People are more hesitant about a Vaccine. A leading Nurse wants to change that’, NPR, 24 November 2020, online at: <https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/11/24/938440381/black-people-are-more-hesitant-about-a-vaccine-a-leading-nurse-wants-to-change-t>, accessed 30 November 2020.