Author: erik

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An Amish America Q-and-A with Professor Donald Kraybill

Donald Kraybill has written and edited over 20 books and dozens of professional articles on the Old Order Amish, Mennonites, and other Anabaptist peoples, and is the Senior Fellow at the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. In addition to his current projects, Professor Kraybill has spent recent months in locations from Texas to Vancouver promoting Amish…

The Amish Ministry

Unlike the typical Catholic priest or Protestant pastor, the Amish minister is unpaid and does not take up formal theological training.  Ministers are selected from among the baptized males of the church, in an often emotional process of voting and drawing lots.  They are in many ways responsible for the spiritual welfare of their church (more on Amish church districts).  Thus being a minister is…

Indiana Amish occupations

Just what do the Amish do for a living nowadays?  The Amish have long been connected with farming.  But in reality, this association has become less and less accurate over the past few decades.  Published in 1995 (second edition 2004), Donald Kraybill and Steven Nolt’s Amish Enterprise documents one of the most significant changes in Amish society, the shift from agricultural to entrepreneurial pursuits. Today,…

A survey of the Amish and sports

Here on the Euro side of the pond, the quadrennial European Football Championships are scrapping along nicely, with the continent in a frenzy for the sport that we Yanks most readily connect with Pele, Maradona and now the flamboyant Mr. David Beckham. Back home, looks like the NBA has been having a nice series.  I’m sure some Amish have had a glance in the paper…

Gas pains revisited

Just been flipping through the blog’s back pages and came across a post on the Amish and gasoline prices from May of last year.  Gas was around three-and-a-quarter then.  “Yikes, that’s high”, people were saying.  I guess we’re at four bucks now… My main point on that post was that rising gas affects the Amish in a number of ways.  The Amish are plugged into…

Amish=organic?

The environment is a hot topic these days.  Outsiders view the Amish as an environmentally-friendly people.  And since they ‘live like it’s 200 years ago’, they surely must stick with all-natural means of raising their crops, right? photo:  turkeycreeklane.com Though there is probably truth to the idea of a particular sort of ‘Amish stewardship’ of the land, this does not automatically mean that the Amish…

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Hypochondriac diseases will prevail…

I may have missed this before, but this is the first year I’ve seen the Calender printed in an English version as well as in the usual high German. The bulk of the 88-page pamphlet, produced by an Ohio Amish printer, is a more-or-less comprehensive listing of Old Order Amish church districts along with their respective ministers. The Calender/Almanac also contains a curious mixture of…

Come take a ‘drive’ through a PA Amish community

It might not be too clear in the photo, but in the New Wilmington, Pennsylvania Amish settlement, even the milk house doors get painted blue.  Photo from late September 2007. And if you’d like to get a closer look at this community, Bill shares how, thanks to some lovely Google technology: PA 208 is available in “Street View” on Google maps. The Amish settlement runs…

Five Californias-full of Amish

lithograph:  Stan Jolley An Amish friend recently pointed out that the Amish population (roughly 220,000 today), currently doubling in size every 20-odd years, will hit a million sometime in the 2050s. For what it’s worth, 200 years from now, if current trends hold (a huge ‘if’), we should expect to see…204 million Amish on the planet. That would be over five times the current population…

An Amish “Computer”?

‘Made specifically for the plain people by the plain people’. The Classic boasts ‘unequaled safety’.  It is ‘Not just a locked computer’, promising ‘No modem, no phone port or Internet connection, no outside programs, no sound, no photographs, no games or gimmicks’. The ad is found on page 3 of this year’s Lancaster County Business Directory, a collection of advertisements of hundreds of (mostly Amish…