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John Andrew Hostetler - Amish Life

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title Amish Life author Hostetler John Andrew publisher - photo 1

title:Amish Life
author:Hostetler, John Andrew.
publisher:Herald Press
isbn10 | asin:0836133269
print isbn13:9780836133264
ebook isbn13:9780585181943
language:English
subjectAmish--United States--Social life and customs, Amish--Canada--Social life and customs.
publication date:1983
lcc:E184.M45H6 1983eb
ddc:305.6/87/073
subject:Amish--United States--Social life and customs, Amish--Canada--Social life and customs.
Page 1
Amish Life
John A. Hostetler
Herald Press SCOTTDALE PENNSYLVANIA WATERLOO ONTARIO Page 2 - photo 2
Herald Press
SCOTTDALE, PENNSYLVANIA / WATERLOO, ONTARIO
Page 2
Location of Old Order Amish communities United States and Canada - photo 3
Location of Old Order Amish communities, United States and Canada.
Picture 4Picture 5
The paper used in this publication is recycled and meets the minimum requirements of
American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence
of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39. 48-1984.
AMISH LIFE, Copyright 1983 by Herald Press, Scottdale, Pa. 15683
Published simultaneously in Canada by Herald Press, Waterloo, Ont. N2L 6H7. All rights reserved
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 82-83964
International Standard Book Number: 0-8361-3326-9
Printed in the United States of America
Design by Sue Bishop
99 98 10 9 8
68,500 of this edition in print
Page 3
A Little Commonwealth
The Amish people are neither relics of a bygone era nor a people misplaced in time. They have reached conclusions different from most moderns about how to live in today's world. Their past is alive in their present. They are living examples of a different form of modernity.
Industrialized societies have not absorbed the Amish people in the same way that many subcultures have been assimilated. The experts predicted that the Amish would be assimilated into the dominant society once the vitality of their European customs was exhausted. But the experts were wrong. The Amish population has doubled in the past twenty-five years. Their communities are distinctive and viable.
Although the Amish are often featured in newspapers and magazines, research journals, books, and pamphlets, many misconceptions still persist. On the one hand, the Amish are viewed as a rare species, a people who live "naturally" and who approximate the requirements of sainthood. On the other extreme are those who pity the Amish for not accepting the most modern conveniences and for not asserting their individual rights as taken for granted by most Americans.
The Amish people did not originate in a corporate board meeting but in the suffering and martyrdom of the sixteenth century. The Amish are a church-community, a community whose members practice simple and austere living, a conservative branch of Christianity, a family-oriented labor-intensive economic system. Their present life is still shaped by the faith and struggle of their European past. In some respects the Amish are a little commonwealth, for their members are ruled by the law of love and redemption. They are highly sensitive to each other's needs. They will move to other lands rather than take up arms or defend themselves.
Page 4
A Redemptive Community
The Amish view themselves as a Gemeinde, a corporate community, where the ethical teachings of Jesus are practiced. The love of God requires an appropriate response. The Amish do not believe that doing good deeds will get them to heaven, yet without such attributes they believe ultimate meaning is impossible.
The Amish were among the early Germanic settlers in William Penn's woods, or Pennsylvania. They originated in the Anabaptist movement (15251536) which gave rise to several Christian communities that survive to this day: the Mennonites of the Netherlands, the Hutterites of Austria, and the Swiss Brethren. The Amish are a branch of the Swiss group, taking their name from Elder Jacob Ammann (in 1697), who stood for conserving traditions and separation from the world to a greater extent than other Anabaptist groups.
All Anabaptist groups suffered martyrdom for their deviation from the established Catholic, Lutheran, or Reformed churches. From a renewed study of the Bible, they held that membership in the Christian church should be voluntary (adult instead of infant baptism), that church and state should be separate, that believers are required to practice the teaching and example of Christ in a disciplined community. Their reforms were greeted with deportation and death. They suffered as heretics at the hand of church and state, being burned at the stake and tied to wagon wheels. Many were placed in sacks and thrown into the river or tortured in other cruel ways as described in their book of martyrs.
The Amish are a "community people." Their understanding of the Bible requires them to live in a redemptive community. Like most Christians, the Amish believe in the authority of the Bible. They do not, however, emphasize individualistic conversion to the exclusion of community. Today's Swiss Mennonites come from the same seventeenth-century stock as the Amish, but they differ in the degree of modernization. The Amish have incorporated more of the past into
Page 5
Replenishing the lanterns with kerosene is one of the weekly cleaning duties - photo 6
Replenishing the lanterns with kerosene is one of the weekly cleaning duties.
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