Read Plain Answers About the Amish Life Online
Authors: Mindy Starns Clark
As you read and use this book, I hope you will gain a deeper understanding of the Amish faith, life, and values, and that this will
help you to form your own opinions about why you find them so intriguing. Most of all, my prayer is that you will use this new knowledge to enhance your own faith. Thus, may we all be “iron sharpening iron”âAmish, author, and readerâhelping one another to grow through a new perspective.
Enjoy!
P
lain Answers About the Amish Life
is written in a question-and-answer format and is organized by topic into five main sections:
â¢
Foundation
explains the basis of the Amish faith, including theology, history, organization, church practices and leadership, and demographics.
â¢
Lifestyle
covers various elements of Amish life that are so different from our own, such as clothing, language, transportation, and the use of technology.
â¢
Passages
deals with the various stages of growth and transition in lifeâsuch as childhood, baptism, marriage, and deathâfrom an Amish perspective.
â¢
Outside World
presents information about interactions of the Amish with external entities such as media and tourism.
â¢
Supplemental Material
provides additional resources for further study, including biblical references, contact information for various Amish-related organizations, and a full index.
Much of the information in this book has been gleaned from a previous work of mine,
A Pocket Guide to Amish Life
, which was published in 2010. Using that guide as my starting point, I shaped the text from that book into this all-new Q & A format, expanding and enhancing the material to provide answers to every possible question you might have about the Amish.
Not only is this information even easier to access and understand, but it can be read in any order and referred to again and again. Simply start with the Contents or the Index to find your topic of interest and move around from there. (Note: To enhance this skip-around approach, I have had to include some minor repetition of information
where various subjects tend to overlap.) While you can use this book in any order you please, each section does build upon the previous material, so reading it in order may give you an even greater understanding of the Amish and their various beliefs and practices.
Finally, be sure to check out AmishReader on Facebook, which lets you join in the conversation, pose questions of your own, and discover an even wider array of resources about the Amish.
When I arrived, Christy was sitting under the oak tree, her skirt and apron perfectly arranged, a thick book open on her lap. Nearly every Amish home had a copy of the familiar, massive tome, an account of our ancestors who perished for their faith
.
I kneeled beside her. “What do you think of the
Martyrs Mirror?”
“
Bo-ring. History is stupid
.”
It was quite an unusual statement for a person of our faith to make. From the day we were born, our history was practically born with us. It was a huge part of who we were as a people. I couldn't imagine, for example, that she found boring the story of Dirk Willems, the man who rescued his pursuer who had fallen through ice, only to then be arrested. I said as much, but she merely yawned in response
.
“
You'll see,” I said to her, “history won't be boring on this trip. Not the way I'm going to teach it. It will all be very much alive
.”
âExcerpted from
The Amish Nanny
by Mindy Starns Clark and Leslie Gould
Who are the Amish?
The Amish are a Christian sect that separated from the Mennonites in seventeenth-century Europe and began emigrating to America in search of religious freedom in the eighteenth century. Now living exclusively in the United States and Canada, the Amish are known, among other things, for their plain dress and plain living, rejection of modern conveniences, and chiefly agrarian society.
Are all Amish groups the same?
No. Due to several centuries of church growth, expansion, and division, many different types of Amish affiliations are now in North America, each with different sets of rules and practices. There are, however, certain elements that most Amish groups tend to have in common, including that they:
â¢
adhere to a statement of faith known as the Eighteen Articles
â¢
wear some form of distinctive Plain clothing
â¢
worship in homes rather than in church buildings
â¢
do not connect their houses with public utilities as a way of remaining separate from the world
â¢
use horses and buggies as their primary means of transportation
â¢
limit formal education to the eighth grade
â¢
live in rural areas
â¢
emphasize an agrarian lifestyle
â¢
are pacifists
â¢
choose their religious leaders through divine appointment by drawing lots
â¢
speak a German dialect as their primary language
â¢
value the history of their people and their martyrs' heritage
In what ways are the various groups different?
While all Amish affiliations adhere to the same basic belief system, the particular ways in which they choose to live out those beliefs can vary greatly from group to group. Aspects on which they may differ include such elements as buggy styles, church discipline, clothing, lawn mowers, technology, and much more.
How many Amish people are there?
Statistics differ among researchers, but according to the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College, if we count all family membersâincluding baptized adults and not-yet-baptized infants, children, and teensâthe total number comes to almost 300,000 Amish currently living in the United States and Canada.
How are they divided into the different groups?
Though it's difficult to provide an exact number, at least two dozen different Amish affiliations are in North America. (See chapter 6, “Organization,” for more information about how the Amish church is structured.) These affiliations are further divided into more than 2000 church districts. Approximately 500 Amish settlements are located in 30 states and in Canada.
Where did the word “Amish” come from?
The word “Amish” first came from the name of Jakob Ammann, an Anabaptist leader who proposed a number of changes to the Mennonite faith in the late 1600s, eventually causing a break in the church. Those who joined him and followed his teachings became known as
the “Amish.” (See chapter 11, “History,” to learn about Ammann and his followers.)
Is that what the word “Amish” means? Someone who is a follower of Jakob Ammann?
That was its original meaning, though it has evolved over the years to indicate that and much more. In fact, the word “Amish” is listed in the dictionary as both a noun (the Amish) and an adjective (Amish farm, Amish furniture, Amish fiction, and so on). Currently, “Amish” indicates a faith culture, a way of life, a set of values, a style of clothing, a collection of technological adaptations, and much more.
The Amish and Mennonites have remained separate groups to this day, though their technology is similar in many ways.
Are the Amish a cult?
No. The Amish are Christians and do not fit the modern, generally accepted criteria for what constitutes a cult. They may be confused as one because they follow a very restrictive set of rules and face excommunication (shunning) for certain infractions of those rules. However, unlike a cult, the Amish faith is not centered on a single human authority, they do not require their members to pool their finances, and the tenets of their faith are compatible with most major Protestant denominations. Thus, they are not a cult but simply an ultraconservative Christian faith culture.
What do the Amish believe, religiously speaking?
The Amish are Christians and adhere to the following tenets of the Christian faith:
There is one God
.
God is a trinity
.
Jesus came to earth as God in the flesh, died, and rose again
.
Salvation comes through grace by faith
.
Scripture is the divinely inspired word of God
.
The church is the body of Christ
.
Note that these same beliefs are also held by the Catholic church and by most Protestant denominations as well. The difference between the Amish and other Christian groups is not so much what they believe as it is how they have chosen to live out those beliefs.
If their beliefs aren't all that different from other Christian denominations, then why do the Amish have so many odd practices, such as dressing the way they do and not using electricity?
Most of the elements of the Amish lifestyle that seem unique or confusing are not due to a complicated or controversial theology, but instead to the ways they have chosen to live out their Christian walk in their day-to-day lives. They attempt to follow the teachings of Jesus, particularly the Sermon on the Mount, by emphasizing certain biblical values, including:
â¢
surrender
of the self-will to God
â¢
submission
to authority, to the faith community, and to its rules
â¢
separation
from the world, becoming a “peculiar people” by turning to family and the faith community, by honoring history and tradition, and by turning the other cheek
â¢
simplicity
through the practice of humility, modesty, thrift, and peacefulness
Jesus embodied these values of surrender, submission, separation, and simplicity throughout His life and thus provided the perfect example of how we, too, should live. A biblical passage frequently cited by the Amish comes from the night before Jesus was crucified, when He exemplified surrender and submission as He knelt in the Garden of Gethsemane and prayed, “Remove this cup from me: nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done” (Luke 22:42
KJV
). The Amish strive to be as obedient in every area of life as Jesus was in that moment. Their many unique lifestyle regulations are based on this overriding goal of Christlikeness.
âI
N
T
HEIR
O
WN
W
ORDS
â
For the Amish, culture and religion are intertwined to the point where it is hard to separate the two. Indeed, it is a faith culture.
Is the reason they deny themselves modern comforts to earn their way into heaven?
No. The reason for their lifestyle is not to earn grace. Instead, it comes from a desire to live out a Christlike lifestyle of surrender, submission, separation, and simplicity.
Are you positive they are not trying to “earn” their salvation? Because I've heard conflicting answers to this question. Some Amish say that if they violate the ordinances, they won't get into heaven. That sounds like a works-based religion to me.
As with many denominations, there are factions that teach variations of the core beliefs. While you are correct that some Amish are taught that they must earn their way into heaven, the official Amish beliefâand the one held by the majority of Amish groupsâis that salvation comes through grace alone.
Do the Amish believe in the concept of salvation? Do they consider themselves “saved” or “born again”?
Yes, the Amish believe in salvation, and many would describe themselves as saved, born again, or as having a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.