Year: 2023

  • EPISODE 720 — WHAT THE AMISH BELIEVE ..based upon Skeoch family visits to central Ohio in 1990s NON CONFORMITY


    EPISODE 720    — WHAT THE AMISH BELIEVE ..based upon Skeoch family visits to central Ohio in 1990s,,, NON CONFORMITY


    alan skeoch
    January 2023



    What do these Amish people believe?  Are horses part of their beliefs?  NOT IN THE LEAST.  Horses help keep them away from us…you and me
    are the problem,   We are dangerous/  As the loom of history proves.  We did terrible things to them back in the 16th century.  They have not forgotten.
    We may have been forgiven.  These Amish people just want to live their lives SEPARATE from us.






    Back in the 1990’s we spent several week ends in central Ohio near Zanesville and Norwich.
    Helen and George Richie invited us to their annual Farm Show which featured ancient machines
    and long forgotten rural skills.

    Just to get there we passed through countryside dominated by Amish people, (an Anabaptist sect.)
    Their farms were magnificent.  Each blade of grass in place.  Each animal healthy. Each Amish 
    simply dressed in dark clothing with broad straw hats.   Women in long cotton print dresses and black
    bonnets.   The Amish were friendly but at the same time distant. Mysterious to us because we did
    not know much about them…except that they seemed to want to avoid the trappings of modern society.
    They preferred to use horse rather than tractor.  





    On one farm I noticed a fairly modern hay bailing machine being pulledby horses…maybe a three 
    horse hitch of lake Clydesdles.   This machine was made to be pulled by a tractor not by horses.
    Then we began to see more and more horse drawn machines.  

    Was the horse part of Amish religion?   What was the Amish reiigion ? What did these people believe?
    Why were they so ’stand offish’?   Friendly to a point.  

    The Amish cannot be easily understood.   Their history began deep in the 16th century when Europe was
    undergoing religious reassessments triggered by Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwingli.    

    Infant baptism was one of the central issues.  Europeans , most of them, believed in infant baptism.

    What is baptism?

    A public declaration: Baptism declares that you are a follower of Jesus Christ. It is a public confession of your faith in, and commitment to, Jesus Christ.’

    So most Christians get their children baptised as soon as possible.   But not all do this infant baptizing.  In the 1520’s,, a long long time
    ago, an offshoot of the Protestant Reformation was adult baptism.  Infant baptism was questioned.  
      the issue of baptism a threat to most Europeans whether Protestant or Catholic.  

    Best to stamp out the new religious concept of adult baptism.  Right?   How could Anabatism be stopped?  By removing the Anabaptists
    seemed the right answer.   So Anabaptists were driven underground.  Secret meetings in private homes rather than big curch
    buildings.  If caught the treatment was ruthless.  More than 1500 were killed. Anabaptist males wee burned to death .  Women were drowned.

    Adult baptism seemed sensible to me.  Maybe because I was not baptised as an infant.   My brother was baptised as an infant.
    Why not me?  Why Eric and not Alan?  Simple explanation was that dad did not have time for baptism.   He had horse races to attend.
    Bets to place Wiin,Place or Show.  No time for baptism or church for that matter.  He just did not think baptism was important even if
    I should be daned to a place like Purgatory for my eternal life.

    So I eventually got baptised as an 18 year od adult.   Thought about it,  Thought about a lot of religious beliefs that did not make
    much sense.  I think the minister that baptised me would have preferred that I was an infant.

    PACIFISM


    This engraving appears often in Amish history…same engraving done many times.  Some deep meaning is here. What?   (Your turn to answer)
    Have you ever heard of Dirk Willem?  You will shortly.


    The Amish take their religion seriously.  They take Jesus seriously,.  They take the Bible seriously.  They believe we should
    “Love thy neighbour as thyself”  They believe the Golden Rule makes more sense. “Do unto others as thy would do nuto you.”
    They reject violence.  In a violent situation the Anabaptist “turns the other cheek”.   They practice brotherhood…..sisterhood.  They are
    Pacifists.   Love thine enemies .  Their pacifism was a threat!  Why?  (you answer that)

    If you want to understand the Amish there is one print that appears constantly.   It is the case of
    Dirk Willem who was burned to death early in the years of Anabapttist persecution.


    THE PRINCIPLE OF NONCONFORMITY

    Dirk Willem Burned after Rescuing Pursuer



    DIRK WILLEM SAVES HIS ENEMY….WHAT IS HIS REWARD?

    “How many Anabaptists died during the sixteenth century persecution in Europe? No one knows for sure. What is certain is that at least 1,500 were cruelly tortured and killed. For the most part these were peaceful citizens who did not believe in war and who became the forerunners of today’s Mennonitesand Amish. The main complaint of the authorities against them was that they did not believe infant baptism had any value. They chose to be re-baptized as willing adults.

    Although no other charges were proven against them, they were sentenced to death. For the men death was usually by fire; for women it was by drowning. Many Anabaptists proved to be so bold in their final testimony for Christ that authorities began to clamp their tongues before leading them out to their execution so that they could not speak up and win more converts.

    One of the Anabaptists who died in flames was Dirk Willem. His story is particularly touching, because he forfeited a real chance to escape when he turned back to help one of his pursuers.

    Dirk was captured and imprisoned in his home town of Asperen in the Netherlands. Knowing that his fate would be death if he remained in prison, Dirk made a rope of strips of cloth and slid down it over the prison wall. A guard chased him.

    Frost had covered a nearby pond with a thin layer of ice. Dirk risked a dash across it. He made it to safety, but the ice broke under his pursuer who cried for help. Dirk believed the Scripture that a man should help his enemies. He immediately turned back and pulled the floundering man from the frigid water.

    Back to prison went Dirk. He was condemned to death for being re-baptized, allowing secret church services in his home and letting others be baptized there. The record of his sentencing concludes: “all of which is contrary to our holy Christian faith, and to the decrees of his royal majesty, and ought not to be tolerated, but severely punished, for an example to others; therefore, we the aforesaid judges, having, with mature deliberation of council, examined and considered all that was to be considered in this matter, have condemned and do condemn by these presents in the name; and in the behalf, of his royal majesty, as Count of Holland, the aforesaid Dirk Willems, prisoner, persisting obstinately in his opinion, that he shall be executed with fire, until death ensues; and declare all his property confiscated, for the benefit of his royal majesty.”


    The cost of being different

    Although martyrdom had largely ceased by the end of the 16th century, descendants of the Anabaptists continued to experience other forms of persecution. Mennonites in the Netherlands, for example, could not proselytize and were forced to meet in “hidden” churches. In the territories of southwest Germany, Mennonites had to pay a special “recognition tax,” they could not enter the professions, and they generally could not own property. And the Brethren met with hostility from state church authorities from their beginnings in 1708. 

    This situation changed dramatically in the course of the 18th and 19th centuries as waves of Mennonites, Amish, and Brethren began to migrate to the United States and Canada. Lured by the promise of cheap land, economic opportunities, and religious freedoms, descendants of the Anabaptists gradually established flourishing communities. Here they were free to build their own meetinghouses and to practice their faith on the same footing as their Catholic, Lutheran, and Reformed neighbors. 

    No longer persecuted by a hostile world, Anabaptist groups in America were now challenged to define the boundaries between the church and world in a more self-conscious way. Although not all groups agreed on precisely where those boundaries should be drawn, several themes emerged. Most Mennonite, Amish, and Brethren groups, for example, emphasized the virtue of Christian humility—expressed in simple speech, reticence to self-promote, and reluctance to define Christian faith in the sharp-edged language of doctrinal orthodoxy. 

    Most groups also developed standards of dress—emphasizing simplicity, modesty, and uniformity—as a way of reinforcing the boundaries of group identity. Over time, the Amish maintained these visible markers of nonconformity more rigorously than did the Mennonites and Brethren. But all three groups struggled throughout the 19th and 20th centuries to retain a clear sense of separation from the world. 

    The principle of nonconformity has been tested most sharply during times of war. Mennonites and Amish have been especially hesitant to serve in the armed forces or to support the war effort, in the conviction that Christians are to demonstrate God’s gracious and generous love to all people.

    CONCLUSION

    NOW I can send some delightful pictures taken in central Ohio.  Now you have some understanding of the Amish.
    What did the Amish think of my camera?
    alan skeoch
    Jan. 27, 2023
  • EPISODE 722 DUSK ON FIFTH LINE BEFORE THE STORN HITS, JANUARY 24, 2023

    EPISODE 722  


    alan skeoch
    january 24, 2023

    These photos were taken just as the sun hit the horizon on the Fifth line between Limehouse
    and Burnhamthorpe Road on January 24, 2023.   On January 25 we are about to have
    our first snowstorm of 2023….a mild winter so far.  Snowboots are ready.

    The pics are a filler as my main story is incomplete.

    alan
  • EPISODE 721 LUCKY FOR ME…I HAVE A WORKSHOP…MY OWN CORNER OF THE UNIVERSE

    EPISODE 721    LUCKY FOR ME…I HAVE A WORKSHOP…MY OWN CORNER OF THE UNIVERSE


    alan skeoch
    January 23, 2023



    I count my lucky stars occasionally.   Perhaps rank those lucky stars.  First and dominant is Marjorie.  Wonder woman
    who can cook a meal in the twinkling of a star.  And then do everything else in the heavenly sky.  Except…she does not
    even try to rearrange my workshop.  Oh, yes, she does sweep up the shavings.  Once or twice in a blue
    moon but most of the time she is content that I get a corner of our universe to putter around in.  To make things…such
    as our ‘wooden quilts’.  My workshop is a blank slate waiting for big ideas or small ideas.  Filled with shapes that
    have meaning to me if no one else.
     
    So this Episode is my little corner of the universe.  Consider the objects as meteorites that have landed from
    outer space.  Objects seeking meaning.  Objects that can be shaped.  Diamonds in the rough.

    A couple of my readers wanted to see the workshop.  They will get a chance I hope and pray they are
    not minimalists looking for a reason to clean up my shop. 

    Another reader facing an eye operation wanted something cheerful to see when the bandages
    are removed.   Hopefully she will find the chaos of my workshop a kind of healing balm.

    Here we go.


    This is my next project….a barn located on main street in Arisdorf , Switzerland.  I made this time worn sketch 30 years ago
    and it’s time something should be created in honour of our daughter in law who passed away last year.  She would like
    that.  Gabriela always took us on the backroads of Switzerland.  Front passenger seat.  She liked me.  Did not care that others
    may no be as intrigued by the objects landed here and there from the darkness of space. We all miss her
    and are now ready to talk about her.



    Our lot goes on and on, like the universe…with reminders of the past here and there like lost planets.


    This snow clad spruce tree gave me the idea to create woden forests of such trees.  Where did the tree
    come from?   Marjorie planted it.  A Christmas tree that had roots.

  • EPISODE 719 PICTURE OF THE LAKEVIEW SMALL ARMS PLANT EMPLOYEES ABOUT 1945

    EPISODE  719      PICTURE OF THE LAKEVIEW SMALL ARMS PLANT EMPLOYEES ABOUT 1945


    alan skeoch
    January 2023

    These are  the employees of the Lakeview small arms plant circa 1945.  

    One reader objected to my use of the word ‘girls’ .  I was trying to underscore the fact that many
    of the operators of the various metal lathes were very young…young enough to form a Small Arms
    Workers Baseball Team.

    Scan the faces. Just take a guess at how many faces look young….i.e. around 20 or younger.  Statistics gathered 
    said that 64% of  the workers were women.  I think (just a guess) a majority were young.  What do
    you think.   No big deal.    How many look like baseball players?  Relax/  This is not scientific…not
    an M.A. thesis.

    Perhaps Cliff F. knows  better since his dad worked there and married one of the females and still lives in one of
    the company houses provided.  “Cliff, how young were the workers?”   Sure there must be a record somewhere
    but I do nor have time to research so just try the face scan.  About 25 years ago I wrote a paper about the workers
    …wish I kept it.

    What happened to all those machines.  Metal lathes.  Skilled workers required.  How is a gun barrel made?

    Along with most readers I dislike guns.  Do not own one.   If this was 1942 or 1943, would my attitude be
    different?  Suppose I was living in Ukraine today, would the horrific battle scene change my attitude?
    The attitude we have towards guns seems flexible…Guns seem to divide us all

    Will we ever reach a point where weapons “are turned into plow shares?”  The study of history does not
    help answer that question.

    Let’s not travel that path.  Let’s just count the faces of potential baseball players in the photo.

    alan