Amish Way of Life
Amish Way of Life
Recently the Amish are noted for selling craftwork. Amish live in small rural communities where strong family
and social ties allow them their own distinctive and separate way of life. The family is the heart of Amish
community, individual identity and spiritual life.However in recent times they've diversified from farming and
in some communities more than 80% work in small businesses making things like indoor and garden furniture,
small sheds, quilts and leather goods.The Amish produce many of their needs, rearing animals to produce meat,
growing corn for food and for feeding animals, and growing vegetable both for food and for sale. Amish women
make most of the clothes. But they are not totally self-sufficient and rely on the outside community for other
requirements.
Amish values
The Amish
Introduction
Farming is an expression of stewardship of God's earth. The Amish (pronounced 'Aahmish') are an American
Protestant group with around 200,000 members descended from European Anabaptists who came to the USA
more than two centuries ago to escape persecution. They are best known for their 19th century way of life that
was portrayed in the 1985 Harrison Ford film Witness, in which violent crime clashed with their peaceful
existence. Their old-fashioned traditions are not what is now called a 'lifestyle choice'. Amish believe that their
religious faith and the way they live are inseparable and interdependent.
The Amish originated in Europe after splitting from Mennonite Swiss Brethren in 1692 over the treatment of
members who had been found guilty of breaches of doctrine.
The first Amish arrived in Pennsylvania in the 1730s to escape persecution in Europe.
Amish believe that the community is at the heart of their life and faith, and that the way to salvation is to live as
a loving community apart from the world. Individualism is avoided.
Self-help
Members of the community help each other, and the whole community will work together to help a member in
trouble. They do not accept state benefits or use insurance, but rely on community support instead.
Separate
The Amish believe that it's essential to keep themselves separate from the 'world', so they live in their own small
communities and differ from other Americans in their dress, language, work, travel and education.
Not exclusive
The Amish are not exclusive, and have many contacts with outsiders, who they call 'English'.
Amish groups
Each Amish district is fully independent and lives by its own set of unwritten rules, or Ordnung. The Old Order
is the strictest of these groups. There is no central authority.
The Amish stress simplicity and humility. They avoid anything associated with self-exaltation, pride of position
or enjoyment of power.
Amish believe that God is pleased when people work in harmony with nature, the soil, the weather, and care for
animals and plants. Amish always live in rural communities.
Technology
Some modern 'conveniences', such as cars, electricity and telephones are avoided. They only avoid technology
where it might damage the community, not because they are Luddites or think technology is inherently evil.
Non-confrontation
Amish are pacifists and conscientious objectors. They avoid all violence - including angry words or going to
law.
Discipline
The Amish community governs itself strictly. Baptised members are morally committed to church rules. Erring
members may be shunned until there is repentance, forgiveness and restoration to full fellowship.
Language
Amish use three languages, a German dialect called Pennsylvania Dutch at home, High German for worship and
English with outsiders.
Family
Amish only marry other Amish and don't divorce. They have large families averaging 7-8 children.
Education
Amish children are educated in their own schools. Schooling stops at 14 after which they learn practical skills
on the job.
Holy days
Growing up
After 16 Amish children can experience life outside the community for a few years to decide whether they wish
to become full baptized members of the community. 90% decide to do so.
The Amish worship in their houses, which are designed to allow a large group to meet. Different households
take it in turns to host worship. A 3-hour preaching service takes place every other Sunday morning and is
followed by a shared meal. On Sunday evening there may be a meeting for young people of several
communities who gather in a house to sing hymns and talk, sitting on opposite sides of a long table.
Communion services are held twice a year. John A Hostetler describes the structure of an Amish service like
this in his book Amish Society:
1. Several hymns are sung while the ministers retire upstairs to meet for prayer and to arrange who will
preach
o Hymns are led by a single voice who sings the first bar of each line alone, and is then joined by
the community
o Singing is very slow and a hymn can take 20 minutes
o The second hymn is always the Loblied
2. Introductory sermon
3. Prayer: kneeling and usually silent
4. Bible reading for which the assembly stands
5. Main sermon, which ends with a Bible reading
6. Testimonies given by other ministers as requested by the preacher
7. Closing remarks from the preacher
8. All turn and kneel for a prayer from Die Ernsthafte Christenpflicht
9. Benediction
10. Notices
11. Closing hymn
12. Dismissal - the community leaves in age order, youngest first
The Amish view of worship was summed up in the defence brief in the case of Wisconsin v Yoder: Worship, in
Amish life, whether for the old or the young, is not confined to a "prayer period" or a weekly hour of church
attendance. Worship permeates Amish life, and in a variety of forms. The Amish society is a "ceremonial
community", its religious ceremonial life being governed by the days of the week, by seasons, and by the
calendar. At the time of adolescence, the Amish young adult is growing rapidly in the life of worship of the
"ceremonial community" in which harvesting, sewing and all daily work, learning and activity are consciously
offered in praise and love of God.Wisconsin v Yoder court case
They base their daily life and religious practice on a literal interpretation of the Biblical instruction "be not
conformed to this world" (Romans 12:2). Their separateness may also have been a reaction to the persecution
they has suffered in Europe.
A way of living is more important than communicating it in words. The ultimate message is the life. An Amish
person will have no doubt about his basic convictions, his view of the meaning and purpose of life, but he
cannot explain it except through his life.
Although the Amish are sometimes painted as people who live an old-fashioned life because they are welded to
their traditions or because they fear the modern world, those are both misunderstandings. The Amish way of life
grows out of the belief that salvation comes from the redeeming strength of living a loving life in a pure
community of believers who live in separation from the world. For Amish and Mennonites the struggle to die to
self was life-long. God's power was released only when the individual did not exercise his own will...
membership in the community and participation in its rites was the means to salvation. God did not grant
salvation because of inner experience. Salvation came only by actual participation in Christ, by suffering,
yielding, dying to self as he did. They believed this was possible only in community and through the Ordnung.
Sandra Cronk, Gelassenheit: The Rites of the Redemptive Process in Old Order Amish and Old Order
Mennonite Communities, Mennonite Quarterly Review 1981 Amish are less concerned with achieving
individual salvation through a personal belief in Jesus Christ. It's said that they regard any claim by an
individual to be 'saved' as an expression of pride, and something to be avoided.
Gelassenheit
One important principle is Gelassenheit. This is the idea that a believer should surrender to God by living in a
way that pleases God and by obeying legitimate religious authority. Amish see self-denial and obedience to
church authority as important virtues. Gelassenheit is layered with many meanings--self surrender and self
denial, resignation to God's will, yielding to others, gentleness, a calm and contented spirit, and a quiet
acceptance of whatever comes. Although the word rarely is spoken, the meaning of Gelassenheit is woven into
the social fabric of Old Order life. It reflects the most fundamental difference between Old Order culture and
modern values
Farming
Amish believe that they should farm as stewards of God's creation, and that this is a spiritual activity.
Discipline
Because of the emphasis on community, members are expected to believe the same things and follow the same
code of behaviour (called the Ordnung). The purpose of the ordnung is to help the community lead a godly life.
This unanimity of belief and behaviour is maintained by strong discipline; if a person breaks the rules they may
be 'shunned', which means that no-one (including their family) will eat with them or talk to them. Shunning
(meidung) is not done to hurt the rule-breaker but to give them an experience that may redeem them and bring
them back into the community. If a person persists in rule-breaking they may be excommunicated. If a person
repents they are accepted back into the community. However, if someone brought up in the Amish community
decides that they do not wish to join the community and obey its rules they are not punished in any way. They
often remain in the area and join similar but less strict denominations, and maintain contact with their former
community.
Conversion
Amish do not seek to attract new believers. Although it is possible for an outsider to join an Amish community,
it would be difficult.
Ethics
The Amish have a traditional code of ethics that rejects sex outside of marriage, divorce, homosexuality and
public nakedness as sins forbidden by the Bible. Modesty and purity are vital virtues. The Amish are pacifists,
basing this on Jesus' instruction that one should love one's enemy. They reject all forms of violence. The Amish
admire large families and tend not to use birth control other than to control the spacing of children.
they wear distinctive clothes; straw hats, dark shirts and trousers with braces for men and plain and
modest dresses with bonnets or caps for women.
they are pacifists and don't serve in the military -- guns are used only for hunting
they don't swear oaths or hold elective office, and usually don't vote
they don't go to law because that is seen as too confrontational
they don't own modern technology
they don't accept any state benefits or use insurance
they have their own education system
they speak a German dialect among themselves
they marry among their community
Although the Amish separate themselves from the mainstream communities around them, they aren't exclusive
and do business with their neighbours. The ideal Amish occupation is to be a farmer, but Amish men also do
factory work.
Pragmatism
The Amish interpret their beliefs pragmatically. They adapt to the world in order to be able to continue to
continue their redeeming life in a pure community separate from the world. The doctrine of separation is
regarded as an ideal, but is interpreted in a practical rather than a rigid way. This permits the Amish to build
productive working relationships with the outside world, and to establish a network of contacts that they can use
for the benefit of their community. M Stephen A Marglin gives an example of how the Amish rejection of one
modern practice, insurance, is entirely in line with the preservation of the community: ...they forbid insurance
precisely because they understand that the market relationship between an individual and the insurance company
undermines the mutual dependence of the individuals that forms the basis of the community. For the Amish,
barn-raisings are not exercises in nostalgia, but the cement which holds the community together...
...An Amishman's decision to insure his barn undermines the mutual dependence of the Amish not only by
making him less dependent on the community, but also by subverting the beliefs that sustain this dependence. In
the last 50 years the Amish have become more pragmatic in their approach to technology, while perhaps
becoming more separate as a community:
In the decades since 1960 the Old Order Amish have in many ways become more sectarian than they were
before that time. In a paradoxical way this religious development has taken place simultaneously with a greater
Old Order openness to negotiating technological change. Technological and religious conservatism were de-
coupled, with religious life becoming more fixed even as mechanical innovation became more possible. Steve
Nolt, The Amish 'Mission Movement' and the Reformulation of Amish Identity in the Twentieth Century,
Mennonite Quarterly Review 2001
Limits on technology
Amish own horse-drawn buggies, not cars (but they can take a ride in someone else's car). Farm machinery is
generally horse-drawn, although some communities permit tractors with steel wheels as such tractors can't be
used on the road. They don't allow telephones or electricity in their houses, because both of these technologies
would literally connect them to the world through their wires. Electricity and petrol/diesel power are used in
barns for work purposes. Shared telephones are available outside houses in business premises or telephone
booths.
Televisions, radios and stereos are not used, which helps keep the Amish unpolluted by the values advanced by
the mass media. One Old Order Amish told the scholar Donald B Kraybill that "television is the sewer line that
connects you directly to the cesspool of Hollywood". As with other technologies there is a compromise -
listening to someone else's radio or watching the TV in a hotel might well be accepted. For similar reasons,
computers with internet access are banned, although Amish can use a computer at an outside workplace. They
don't use cameras because photos break the biblical ban on making 'graven images' (Exodus 20:4)
The Plain People are not modern day Luddites who disparage new technology.
The Amish avoid modern technology not because they want to live ascetic and uncomfortable lives but to
preserve the uniqueness of their way of life. New conveniences are assessed to see how they would affect the
social patterns and cohesiveness of the Amish community, and anything that might damage their way of life is
rejected. Less dangerous technology may be adapted to fit. They scrutinize practices, services, and products to
see whether they would generate life-style changes which would hurt community solidarity, create tension
within families or between different families, or open the community to excessive dependence on outside
institutions. Anything, for example, that might suddenly create conspicuous differences between "haves" and
"have nots" is a prime candidate for rejection.John A. Hostetler, Robert L. Kidder, Managing Ideologies:
Harmony as Ideology in Amish and Japanese Societies, Law and Society Review, 1990 Hostetler and Kidder
point out that conveniences are accepted when it is necessary to do so - electricity is barred in the home, but
accepted in farm buildings because if the Amish did not comply with regulations to refrigerate milk at the farm,
they would not be able to continue as dairy farmers and the community would suffer economic damage.
Language
Most Amish speak three languages: a German dialect called Pennsylvania Dutch at home, High German at their
worship services, and English when talking to non-Amish (whom they call 'English'). Amish man at the market
Gender roles
Amish adopt traditional gender roles in which wives are subordinate to their husbands. Men are in charge of the
spiritual life of the family and are responsible for providing sustenance. Women do domestic tasks, look after
the children and take on light farm work such as feeding chickens and milking cows.
Dress
Amish dress is a highly distinctive outward symbol of membership in the group, but through its plainness and
simplicity rather than through any eccentricities. The idea is that a person's clothes should reflect humility and
avoid individual distinctiveness. Breaches of the Amish dress code may lead to a reproof from a community
leader. Old Order Amish women wear modest dresses with long sleeves and a full skirt, a cape and an apron.
They usually wear their hair in a bun on the back of the head, often covered with a bonnet or a white organza
prayer cap. Amish women don't use makeup. Men and boys wear dark trousers, braces, straight-cut coats and
broad-brimmed straw hats. Their clothes don't have stripes or checks. Amish men grow beards only after they
marry and don't grow moustaches because 19th century generals wore beards and moustaches and anything
military is shunned. Dark blue, green, purple, brown and black are the most common clothing colours. The
Amish are very resourceful in tailoring commercially available products to their own needs, buying, for
example, black and white jogging shoes at Wal-Mart along with a can of black paint for painting the white
running strip black.
Hamilton and Hawley, in L. B. Arthur, Religion, Dress and the Body, 1999
Although the dress code is partly intended to prevent visual statements of individuality, there is scope for
individual taste, as this anecdote demonstrates: That the rules for Amish dress apply only to outwardly
observable dress was first clarified when one of the authors, while baking pies with an Amish family, was asked
to make a run to the basement for additional jars of peaches. There, along with various pieces of underwear
drying on the line, were several pair of bright, colourful men's boxer shorts with Disney characters on them,
clearly too commodious to fit anyone other than the only adult male living at home at that time. When asked
about them later in private, the wife acknowledged that her husband wore them, that after all, nobody could see
them and complain.
Jean A Hamilton and Jana M Hawley, in Linda B Arthur, Religion, Dress and the Body, 1999
Conflict
The Amish are pacifists who refuse military service and who try to live peacefully with each other and with
outsiders. They have a policy of 'non-resistance', which means that when governments instruct them to do things
that are against their faith, they refuse to do them, but accept the consequences of their refusal without
argument. They don't go to law, regarding this as confrontational, although they have used lawyers to defend
themselves if they are involved in a lawsuit started by someone else. In the famous case of Wisconsin v Yoder
the Amish got round the issue of not going to law by letting a committee of non-Amish defend the case pro
bono. Internal disagreements are usually resolved by the community as a whole. Although the Amish present a
unified face to outsiders, communities are sometimes troubled by disputes which may lead a family to join
another community or found a new one. Some have polarized over the shape or colour of a garment; the style of
a house, carriage or harness; the use of labour-saving farm machinery or the pace of singing... Beneath the
surface are extended families, frequently fraught with envy or jealousy, that take opposing sides... The Amish
tend to suppress their feelings since no one wishes to be the cause of disunity or division. Typically, dissatisfied
members migrate to a more compatible Old Order community or start a new settlement.John A. Hostetler,
Amish Society, 1993
Education
The Amish have their own private education system of around 1,200 schools which stresses the 'four Rs' of
reading, writing, arithmetic and religion. A typical school has between 25 and 35 pupils, with only one room
and one teacher to cover all ages. Teaching is in English. Teachers are usually younger women without
specialist training. Children will often do farm work before and after school. Amish children are educated in
schools until they're 14 (eighth grade). This exemption from US law which generally requires schooling until
age 16 is the result of a Supreme Court Case (Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972), see related links), in which the Amish
successfully argued that education beyond aged 14 exposed their children to modern values that clashed with
their beliefs and might put their salvation at risk. Formal high school education beyond the 8th grade is contrary
to Amish beliefs, not only because it places Amish children in an environment hostile to Amish beliefs with
increasing emphasis on competition in class work and sports and with pressure to conform to the styles,
manners, and ways of the peer group, but also because it takes them away from their community, physically and
emotionally, during the crucial and formative adolescent period of life. Amish education has some unique
strengths, described by Donald Kraybill, a senior fellow in the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies
at Elizabethtown College in Lancaster County. Amish schools exhibit a social continuity rarely found in public
education. With many families sending several children to a school, teachers may relate to as few as a dozen
parents. ... Amish schools are unquestionably provincial by modern standards. Yet in a humane fashion they
ably prepare Amish youth for meaningful lives in Amish society... They reinforce Amish values and shield
youth from contaminating ideas afloat in modern culture. After they leave school Amish boys learn work skills
such as farming and carpentry on the job, while Amish girls concentrate on practical domestic matters.
State benefits
The Amish will not accept any form of state benefit because they believe that the community should care for its
members. They don't use public or private health insurance, and join together to pay for outside medical
treatment.
Rumspringa
At the age of 16 Amish children are given a great deal of freedom which they can use to experience the outside
world. Some may even choose to 'live English', as it's known. This practice is called rumspringa, which means
'running around'. After this period, most children prefer to return to the full Amish lifestyle with both its
restrictions and rewards, and are baptised into full membership.
Moving community
Some Amish decide to move to another Amish community rather than remain in the one where they were
brought up. The main reasons for doing this are to acquire less expensive farm land or to live in a community
that is either more or less strict.
Marriage
Amish only marry other Amish, although not necessarily from their own community. They may not marry a first
cousin, and are discouraged from marrying a second cousin.