Amish Culture In America

Words: 1734
Pages: 7

Introduction

The Amish people are very religious Christians, chiefly in Canada, Indiana, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. They are a very exclusive group, as their top priorities are their families, farms, and God. These people live and work much as their forefathers did. Hundreds of years have past and yet, despite all the time that has passed and the changes that have taken place in society, they still haven't made a hefty change in their lifestyles.

Amish people practice Amishism differently in different places, so not all Amish people are as religious as others. There are some Amish people who are extreme and ban colors, while others have the new type of technology.

The Culture of the Amish

The Amish culture is driven
…show more content…
They made up the largest non-English speaking community in North America.

Because of the wars that occured Germany, A lot of Germans started to move not only because of the wars but also because they were looking for religious freedom (they were known as Mennonites). The first Mennonite was Jan Lensen, he arrived in October 1683. He came with 12 other German families to the village of Germantown, north of Philadelphia. Afterwards, at least 20 other Mennonite families settled in Germantown, they were from northern Germany and the Netherlands. There first minister was a papermaker William Rittenhouse (in 1698). The Amish people were a smaller body of Swiss Brethren, they settled in Pennsylvania. They were the followers of Jacob Ammann (a Swiss Brethren bishop from the Alsace).

In 1708, there were four kolb brothers from the Palatinate (arrived in Germantown). These men were Swiss Brethren. The Swiss Brethren's nickname is Anabaptists by their enemies because they insisted that only believers should be baptized.
…show more content…
They strive at all times to live by the beatitudes, they are eight blessings recounted in the Sermon on the Mount in the Gospel of Matthew. This was taught by Jesus in Matthew chapter five. The amish educate their children but not beyond the eighth grade. They do not believe in accepting outside help from the U.S. government. They do not receive social security benefits or food stamps but neither do they have to pay into social security taxes (as agreed to by the U.S. supreme court in 1961). But they do pay state and local taxes however. The Amish people are a very peaceful society in fact only a few fights among their own people have ever been recorded in their entire history.

The Amish people's values are their families. Most of the Amish children are raised in a traditional family settings and in the christian faith... The Amish people do not participate in any military services, and they rarely accept new converts. They value tradition very much, they do not like to use new technologies, and other things such as air conditioning, automobiles, and farm