Tuesday, March 20, 2012

You might be a start up farm if...


As my beautiful wife pulled into the yard the other day, after going to pick up more feed for the chickens, it made me laugh as I saw our little 4 cylinder car pulling in, fenders almost touching the tires, and the back almost dragging the ground as it strained to carry the 1,500 pounds of broiler feed that was in it!



I was hoping to be able to get 20 bags of feed, 50 lbs each = 1,000 lbs, but I did not expect the feed company to be able to pack 30 bags into that car. When your starting out you don't have all the equipment that would make things easier, like a truck, so you work with what you have.


I find myself so many times forgetting our Lords command, Luke 16:10 "He that is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much: and he that is unjust in the least is unjust also in much."

It is very easy for me to always want the biggest and best thing that comes out. The newest electric poultry netting, the newest brix reading refractometer, a big truck to haul things in, more land, more this, more that.....after all aren't we supposed to take dominion?

It always my tendency to say, "well if I had "that" then I could really take care of things". But the fact is, if I can't be faithful with the 5-10 acres I'm on right now, then why should God give me any more land to work with? If I can't be a good steward for the chickens he has given me now...why should he let me have the equipment to handle more? If I'm not doing my best to raise my little boy to be a warrior for Him....why should he give me more children? I must be faithful in the least of things as much as I would be in the greatest of things.

I have just read a book about Stonewall Jackson in which his character and career were described and was greatly encouraged and convicted. Jackson was a man that was faithful in the least of things and God granted him the opportunity to be faithful in monumental things. In his daily life he was scheduled, punctual, orderly, regimented, disciplined, and followed the commands of God's word. It was the fact that he had already practiced all these qualities, with God's grace, that he was able to be the great military commander that he was. It was his lifetime before the war of disciplining himself that he was able to discipline other men and have the fortitude and faith to stand at the battle of First Manassas like a "Stone Wall".
Joel Salatin and his wife lived in their parents attic above the garage for 7 years when they first started farming. They were committed to excellence in what they produced and using the methods that were God honoring in their farming. Through their faithfulness in the little things, God gave them a national platform to be a spokesperson for the natural foods movement. But it started with them being faithful with little money, little infrastructure, little equipment, and a lot of faithfulness.





If we view things that we "have" as belonging to God, as we should, it doesn't matter if we have 1 cow, or 200 cows. It doesn't matter if we have 10 chickens, or raise 5,000 per year. It all belongs to GOD. It is the property of our Lord and we have been intrusted to take care of and be a husbandman for. We will have to give an account of how we have used every resource that the Lord has given us one day, and may we be found to have been faithful with little....whether or not God ever gives us much.

3 comments:

  1. That's so funny....but also sounds very familiar. :-)

    Blessings,
    Abbi

    ReplyDelete
  2. Big brother, this is your best post yet! LOVE the message behind it. Very convicting.

    You've got to stop posting pics of my best friend and nephew. It's killing me. (Just kidding! Don't stop...Ever!)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Did you and my husband have a conversation before you wrote this post? ;)
    I enjoyed reading it.
    And I can relate on the vehicle issue. Although we do have a pick up, my husband uses it for work often and it is difficult to fit the 3 car seats (for our youngest ones) in the back anyway. So....I use the mini van to buy things like hog feed and straw. I've seen the fenders almost touching the tires first hand. Plus, I bet I'm the only mini van in the county to have straw embeded in the carpet in the back. :)

    ReplyDelete