Family

Amish Survived COVID Better Than Most by Never Locking Down, Shuttering Churches

1 Mins read
stairs in sky

The Amish community in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, fared better than most at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, even though they never locked down or shuttered their churches.

In the latest episode of her show, “Full Measure,” investigative reporter Sharyl Attkison, who described the Amish as a “Christian group that emphasizes the virtuous over the superficial,” explained that, while cities around the U.S. implemented draconian measures amid the pandemic — forcing businesses to close, telling residents to stay home, and banning church gatherings — those in the Amish community never forsook their work or gathering for worship services.

Calvin Lapp, an Amish Mennonite in Lancaster, told Attkison there “are three things the Amish don’t like: and that’s government; they won’t get involved in government. They don’t like the public education system; they won’t send their children to education. And … they also don’t like the health system.”

“Those three things are all of what COVID is,” he said. Lapp went on to explain the unconventional way his community responded to the burgeoning health crisis last spring. While most were isolating, avoiding any contact with others, the Amish in Lancaster held a worship service in May 2020, when they all took communion.The Amish share a goblet of wine and all take turns drinking from it.

“Everybody,” Lapp said, contracted the virus.

“It’s a worse thing to quit working than dying,” he said, defending the community’s approach to COVID-19. “But to shut down and say that we can’t go to church, we can’t get together with family, we can’t see our old people in the hospital, we got to quit working … it’s going completely against everything that we believe.”

In March of this year — about one year after the pandemic began in earnest — the Associated Press reported that the Amish and Mennonite community in Lancaster reached herd immunity, with 90% of families having at least one member infected with COVID-19.

Steve Nolt, an expert on Amish culture and scholar at Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania, told Attkison there is “no evidence” to suggest there were any more deaths in the conservative religious community — whose members eschewed masking, physical distancing, and major lifestyle changes — “than in places that shut down

Related posts
Family

5 Biblical New Years Resolutions

3 Mins read
It is almost 2025, a whole new year. This is the time when we make resolutions, pledging what we will or won’t…
Family

6 Things To Do Before 2024 Is Over

2 Mins read
The end of a year. For those who journeyed through a difficult 2024, the possibility of a new slate is a welcomed…
Family

Saint Nicholas and the origins of Santa Claus

3 Mins read
It might surprise many today to find out that Saint Nicholas is a real person after all. Is he the white-bearded man…
Join our mailing list

NEVER MISS A STORY FROM THE GOOD NEWS JOURNAL