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Why the Amish Are Falling in Love With AI

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20.05.2026

It’s Sunday afternoon in the heart of Ohio Amish country, and after driving their horse and buggy home from church, the Wengerd family is teasing Dad about the time Mom caught him using an AI chatbot to write her a Valentine.

We’re all sitting in their farmhouse’s living room, which contains zero TVs but lots of comfortable chairs. Valentine’s Day was weeks ago, yet Mary Ellen Wengerd is still tickled about the love note her husband, Daniel, co-authored with generative AI. “ It was so eloquently written,” she says, biting back a grin. “Reading this, I was like, This is so not my husband.”

Mary Ellen wears a white bonnetlike cap over her hair and the ankle-length dress she’d put on for church. She’s curled into an overstuffed armchair alongside the youngest of their six children, Jethro, 7, who’s parked his feet on her lap. “And I was like, ‘Did you write this?’” Mary Ellen says, looking at Daniel. “‘Or did you ask ChatGPT to put a little love letter together?’ And he was like, ‘Ummm —’”

“I actually did!” Daniel says as laughter erupts in the room. “But I made a couple changes!” We seem to be on well-trod comedic ground. Daniel’s blushing on the couch opposite Mary Ellen, stroking his wavy gray beard. Daniel points at me, the writer visiting from New York, in the corner. “Read it to him,” he says, “and then tell him what doesn’t sound like me.”

As Mary Ellen reads aloud and ribs Daniel about the fancy phrasing, she still sounds touched by the note. “I know the intent was right,” she tells me. “He’s on a tight schedule, and I imagine he got into a pinch.” The new AI wingman offering to help those in a pinch — whether writing love notes or code — is finding a toehold in Amish country. Holmes County, Ohio, has the highest concentration of Amish people of any county in the U.S. Visitors expecting to see traditional horses and buggies, bonnets and Abe Lincoln beards, won’t be disappointed. Still, they’ll find Amish entrepreneurs plugging into the digital economy and one clan of early adopters weaving generative AI into their knowledge work without much hesitation.

Of course, none of this sounds like the tech-shy Amish life in the popular imagination. However, there’s no such thing as a single Amish approach to technology. There are some 2,600 Amish churches across the country, and each makes its own, separate decisions about what sorts of new hardware and software church members can use. The Wengerd’s church is Old Order Amish. Its married members dress plainly, don’t drive cars or own TVs, and don’t connect their homes to the electrical grid. They speak a dialect of German at home and at church — which Daniel’s eldest son kindly translated for me during the service I attended.

Daniel is a minister in his church and has played a role in the congregation’s collective decisions to interdict smartphones and social media but to allow e-bikes, flip phones, solar-generated electricity, and religiously curated internet access. “I don’t want to paint a picture that we’re........

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