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Introducing…

Serena B. Miller, a talented Christian author hailing from the small town of Minford, Ohio. With 18 books already published in the romance and suspense genre, and more in the pipeline, Serena has made a name for herself in the literary world. But her journey to becoming a bestselling author wasn’t always easy.

Growing up, Serena spent her days in the pews of the Sunshine church of Christ, surrounded by family and using her imagination to create stories in her head.

As she grew older, her husband graduated from David Lipscomb University and became a minister, leading the couple to serve in churches across Tennessee, Kentucky, Michigan, and Ohio.

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INSIDE AN AMISH SCHOOL Originally Published 2017

A few weeks ago, an Amish friend called from her family’s telephone shanty to invite me to the annual Christmas program that would be performed at their church’s one-room school house. Some of her own children would have speaking parts. She thought I might be interested in coming and had already checked with the two teachers before she called. After some discussion, they had given their permission for me to come.

Few invitations have ever pleased me more.

I’ve always longed to visit an Amish school house. As someone who writes about the Amish, I try to be as accurate in my portrayal of their culture as possible. I’ve been invited to their worship services, two weddings, several cookouts, and I often stay with Old Order Amish friends when I’m in the Holmes County area, which is the largest Amish settlement in the world.

But I’ve never been invited inside an Amish school. Nor have I ever asked. Amish children are, as much as possible, sheltered from Englisch influences. An Amish person would be welcome to drop into a one-room schoolhouse and they often do. I am not Amish and therefore I do not belong there. At least not without a direct invitation.

Although I live a little over three hours from the large Holmes County, Ohio settlement, our own area has been blessed in recent years with a rapidly growing Amish settlement a few miles from my home. When I first became acquainted with these industrious people, I thought all Amish churches were alike.

I was wrong. There are over forty different Amish sects. The most well-known are the Old Order Amish, but the church settlement nearest us are from what they call the Andy Weaver sect. This branch is much more conservative than the Old Order Amish but slightly more liberal than the Swartzentrubers.

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