Confronted with a Covid-19 epidemic all the more frightening for its rapid spread while its
origins remained mysterious scholars responded to the general need for meaning by placing
world disasters in historical perspective. It led to a renewed interest in the relationship
between religion and disease while religious orders as specific actors victims or voices
during epidemics remained overlooked. This is precisely what this book explores. It discusses
how religious orders positioned themselves between collective salvation and individual
survival. It considers the contribution of religious orders to a spiritual awakening in the
face of epidemics both as intercessors responding to appeals from lay people and civil
authorities and as religious ready to offer their lives for the victims. It compares male and
female religious orders in the modern era which was more globalized medicalized and
secularized than medieval societies. Facing disease both consecrated men and women took
original paths and even invented new and provocative theologies of illness. A comparative
approach from the Black Death in the fourteenth century to AIDS in the twentieth century and
wide geographical coverage on a global scale from transnational congregations to specific care
establishments enable comparisons to be make but also clearly distinguish different historical
configurations. Building on a renewed scholarship into Catholic religious orders this book is
a major contribution to the history of societies shaped by religion and disease.