Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Hauling Hay ...and Grace

My wife's grandfather, Jess, is in very poor health these days, and I find myself thinking about him quite a lot. He has told me many stories of his life. Here is one I would like to share with you.

Not long after Jess had return from the European theater of World War II, he and his brother, Earl, decided to try their hand at farming. I don't think they ever made much money in this venture, but it did provide them with many stories to share with their kids and grandkids. 

Jess tells of one summer day when he and Earl were putting up hay. It had been cut, raked and baled. All that was left was to put it in the barn. Unfortunately, it was about to start raining later that day. Jess had tried to find someone to help with the hauling but had been unsuccessful. So, he and his brother were struggling to put it up by themselves. 

Now, if you have ever hauled square baled hay, you know it is not a two man job. You need at least one man driving, one man on the ground loading, and one man on the truck or trailer to do the stacking. If only two men are doing the hauling it is a very slow process, to be sure.

Jess and Earl were in the field exhausted and struggling to do a three (or four) man job as the clouds began to darken the horizon. If the bales got soaked they would be ruined and worthless. Not only the hay, but also  all of the time and expense of the baling would be lost.

Just then, one of their neighbors drove past the field and saw these two young men struggling to save their hay crop. Sitting behind the wheel was an older gentleman many years their senior. He could have justifiably been called an "old man". If he had simply driven on by no one would have thought the worse of him. But this old man still had considerable strength and he knew it.  He pulled his truck to the side of the road and crossed through the fence, sliding his broad shoulders between the strands of barbed wire.

As dark clouds continued to boil higher into the sky, he strode across the field toward Jess and Earl's truck. He grabbed a bale of hay in each hand and tossed them onto the truck. Wordlessly he continued to toss bales of hay onto their truck two at a time until the field was clean. Jess, Earl, and this kind old neighbor drove the last load of hay in to the barn just as the rain began to fall. 


With the hay crop saved, Jess and Earl turned to the old neighbor and thanked him for coming to their aid, then Jess tried to pay him for his help. "Son," the old man replied, "you can't pay me enough to haul hay!"

"Son, you can't pay me enough to haul hay!" 

Of course I am going to draw a moral from this story...


Grace is illustrated here. The hay crop is like your eternal soul. It is valuable but it is under a cloud of judgment. You can't work hard enough to save it, and you can't buy your way out of a fix. You are about to lose the crop.

God sees your plight. Motivated by love for your everlasting soul, he crosses the "fence" that separates man from God and becomes "God with us" in the person of Jesus Christ. He offers you the gift of salvation. He provides an escape for your from the storms of sin and judgment.

Should you be grateful? Absolutely.
Can you pay him back? Never.

I'm sure that the old man who help Jess and Earl has been gone a long time now, but the story of his kind deed as been told for many years and still lives on. 

So here is the question: 
If you had been in Jess and Earl's situation would you have accepted the old man's help? I'm guessing you would have. 

Jesus is offering far greater salvation than that of a hay crop. He offers salvation for you soul. Will you accept his help today?




Friday, August 17, 2012

Is Ethanol Ethical?


When talking about any supply and demand issue, it is easy for all of the numbers and statistics to turn into numerical fog. 

The simple fact is that the grand push to “save the earth” has resulted in increased hardship for most of the people on it.


Here is the story of Sam and Tom. 
Sam is a farmer who grows lots of corn. Every year, Tom and his neighbors buys Sam’s corn so they can feed their families.

This year Sam decided he isn’t going to sell his corn for food. Instead he is going to burn it for fuel. Sam doesn’t need to burn it for fuel. He has a large reserve of fuel oil he can use to heat his home, but he has decided that he prefers the smell of burning corn.

This means Tom and his neighbors will have to find his corn somewhere else, only there isn’t anywhere else. This means that the little bit of corn that is available for food is getting very expensive.

Does Sam have a “right” to burn his own corn, even though it is less efficient than burning his oil? Sure. But Sam is being a very bad neighbor by withholding his corn crop from his neighbors.  They are hungry and he is burning the food that they are willing to buy and eat.


Sam’s neighbors start to hate him for making their lives difficult.

As you have probably figured out, Sam is the United States and Tom is everyone else.

Here are a few of those inevitable statistics:
  • In the last ten years corn prices have tripled* while corn supply has only increased by about one third.**
  • Because there is only so much farm land, other crops, such as wheat and soybeans,  have come under pressure and have similar trends to corn.**
  • Over the same period of time world bio-fuel (primarily ethanol) production has also tripled.^
  • Price of cereal food grains has tripled.^^ This has an effect of raising meat and dairy prices as well.
  • Overall, food prices worldwide have more than doubled in the last ten years.^^

This increase in world food prices is driven primarily by U.S. laws that mandate the use of ethanol. We are burning the world’s food supply in our gas tanks, and frankly, it make us bad neighbors.

pecad.fas.usda.gov

Many times in the Bible we see God’s displeasure with those who would oppress the poor, the hungry, and the helpless.  In my estimation, that kind of oppression is being  placed on the world via these unethical economic policies.

I think this would be a good time for our nation to pause and read Matthew 25:31-46 and examine our behavior. I think some national repentance is in order.


________
footnotes
* http://www.agmanager.info/livestock/marketing/graphs/Crops/Corn/U.S.AvgCornPr.htm
**http://www.agmanager.info/livestock/marketing/graphs/Crops/Corn/USTotCornSupply.htm
^ http://www.dupontelastomers.com/autofocus/a8/af8.asp?article=biofuel
^^ http://www.fao.org/worldfoodsituation/wfs-home/foodpricesindex/en/