Sunday, April 30, 2023

One of the Best Sights and Sounds of the Year

Photo of Ground Near Hay Storage Last Fall (2022)

The sight and sound of the rain this week brought a gift to all, especially those in agriculture-related professions. Only the God of heaven provided such an essential resource.

In Job, the earliest written book in the Old Testament, Eliphaz, one of Job’s friends, who spoke first of his observations of God – since he spoke first he likely was the eldest. In Job 5:10, Eliphaz stated: He gives rain on the earth and sends waters on the fields.  Glory to God, haven’t we experienced that this week!

Then later in the book of Job, a younger man emerged; Chapter 32 stated, “Now because they (the three older men) were years older than he, Elihu had waited to speak to Job.” As Elihu eloquently spoke of God’s power, goodness, and majesty, Job 37:6 recorded these words of his, For He says to the snow, “Fall on the earth”; Likewise to the gentle rain and the heavy rain of His strength.” Both the sounds of gentle and heavy rain these last few days rendered the beautiful resonance of a skillful orchestral performance to the ears of drought-parched Oklahomans.

Photo taken during the rain on April 25, 2023 
The first puddle seen on the farm in a while.

Occurrences in nature always speak of God, His character, His work in our world and in our lives. The ancient prophet, Hosea, received this command from the Lord God who created heaven and earth. Here is a reading of Hosea 10:12:

Sow for yourselves righteousness;
Reap in mercy;
Break up your fallow ground,
For it is time to seek the Lord,
Till He comes and rains righteousness on you.

        Just as God has graciously sent rain for pastures, crops, lakes, and ponds, He desires to send righteousness on our communities, state, and nation. May we who have committed our lives to live for Him, following our repentance and accepting His gift of salvation, seek the Lord and His righteousness as recorded in His Word. It sounds simplistic, but requires moment by moment dedication to Trust the Lord with all one’s heart and Obey His Word. The result of  sowing these godly actions will be His showers of righteousness which yield the transformation of individuals, families, and communities.

Sunday, April 23, 2023

500 Weeks Later

         In the summer of 2013, I visited with some cousins at the Gates Family reunion. I discovered some family stories that Dad enjoyed telling were unknown to several younger family members. I promised I would try to share some of those family stories online.

        I had no idea how to share this time-honored family lore. I had heard the term blog bantered around but had no concept of what it really was. Through searching on the internet, I found myself on various informational sites that became a crash course on creating a blog post. 

        Discussions with my sister and Mother, as we cared for Dad following his first stroke, helped me develop my purpose for blog postings. I prioritized them as my faith, my family, and finally, the farm. I wanted people to be strengthened in their faith in Jesus. Of course, the original impetus for the whole blog idea was sharing family stories. As I stepped into the day-to-day care of the cattle in 2012, I realized how many life lessons farm work taught even an adult.

        On the first Sunday of September 2013, I posted the first blog post on September 1. With today's blog posting, I mark the 500th blog post from Faith_Family_Farm. The graphic below depicts a few nonscientific gleanings from the last three years and seven months of blog postings. 

         

Interestingly, C.S. Lewis's entire series, The Chronicles of Narnia have
345, 535 words. Little blog posts add up. 

             Many readers have given positive comments after reading a blog post or two. Some have been committed to reading each blog post published. I have appreciated each posted or verbal comment made. 
              
              My responsibilities have increased since I began writing weekly blog posts in the fall of 2013. I enjoy writing and crafting the blog posts. I hope to continue publishing it weekly; however, remember at anytime you can go to the site, search with a keyword for favorite blog posts, and read the choice stories as frequently as you wish.

               I hope one result might come from reading family stories, lessons learned from daily experiences, and ways God has worked. That result would be readers choosing to write their own family stories, jot down lessons learned, and above all, at least telling younger family members of how God has worked in your individual life and that of your family,

This will be written for the generation to come, that a people yet to be created may praise the Lord. Psalm 102:18

Thanks to each of you who have read the Faith_Family_Farm blog posts over the last 500 weeks!

Sunday, April 16, 2023

Thorns

Most things I have no control over – getting needed precipitation, pasture condition due to the prolonged drought, and increasing the pond levels.  I discovered multiple shoots from an old Black Locust tree east of the Big Pond near the fence on Thursday. I thought At last – something I can do something about! 

One of the thorn-ladened branches I cut.
It measured a little under 40 inches.

I began using the Tiger Jaw, recommended by our neighbors, Lisa and Chuck Crabtree, who picked one up for me at a farm show they attended several years ago. As I cut the shoots and loaded them on the truck bed, I thought of the first mention of thorns in the Bible. God spoke these words, recorded in Genesis 4:17-18, to Adam after he disobeyed God’s singular rule for living in the perfectly beautiful Garden of Eden - do not eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Cursed is the ground for your sake; In toil you shall eat of it all the days of your life. Both thorns and thistles it shall bring forth for you, and you shall eat the herb of the field. Adam had eaten of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Consequences always follow disobedience. 

It was hard for me to imagine the despair Adam must have felt when the enjoyable tending of the lush vegetation of the Garden suddenly became an all-day task when combating the thorns and thistles. Perspiration pouring off of him as he toiled in the heat must have driven home to Adam the impact of the curse and the consequence of his disobedience.

Getting the thorny residue caught on my clothing as I unloaded the remains from my clearing caused my mind to recall another passage in the New Testament of the Bible. Matthew, one of the original twelve disciples called by Jesus, recorded this painfully, somber verse in chapter 27, verse 29. When they had twisted a crown of thorns, they put it on His head, and a reed in His right hand. And they bowed the knee before Him and mocked Him saying, “Hail, King of the Jews!” 

Measuring one of the longer thorns I  cut.
However, I understand the thorns of Israel were
 much more capable of inflicting far more pain
 than this Osage County variety.

How unimaginable that the One of whom is said, All things were made through Him and without Him nothing was made that was made, would endure such treatment. This tongue-twisting Bible verse from John 1:3 for which I knew the words far earlier than I knew the deep meaning of Jesus, revealed God the Son, as an agent of creation. He created the thorns that would pierce His brow as He was falsely accused, submitting to the humiliation of ineffective government officials. The highly-regarded religious leaders would operate at the height of hypocrisy and stir up a fickle mob who turned on Jesus less than a week after extoling Him as The King of Israel.

Gazing at one of the thorny stems I had retained to show Mother what I was removing from her land, I remembered another passage. Isaiah prophesied around 800 years prior to the crucifixion of Jesus, in chapter 53 of the Suffering Servant, the Lord Jesus. Verse 5 came to mind, But He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; The chastisement for our peace was upon Him, and by His stripes we are healed. 

Transgression usually referred to a sin committed without premeditation but still considered sin. Iniquity often implied wickedness, perverseness, or sin resulting from premeditation. Jesus took the punishment for our sins on Himself - no matter the type. That elusive peace that our hearts long for was obtained by the chastisement He took on our behalf.

            May we realize if we have repented of our sins, receiving His forgiveness, and have given our life to Him, we are free from the curse. The Apostle Paul wrote to the Galatian church in chapter 3, verse 13: Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us (for it is written, “Cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree”)…

            We still battle the curse of the thorns and thistles, despair and physical death, and sorrow and sickness; but through Jesus, we have overcome the second death. Through Him, we have been given life, beginning right now; then He will usher us through physical death into life eternal, free from the curses of sin. Hallelujah what a Savior!

Sunday, April 9, 2023

So Grateful After All These Years

        Anyone who knows me knows I wear the brightest orange and sing Oklahoma State’s Alma Mater with fervor as an OSU alum. I received a good education, but I could put in a sewing thimble the strategies and skills learned there to make me a truly successful teacher. If I gained mastery in teaching third graders, I owed that to Ruby Rice, my first colleague when I began teaching that grade.

The earliest staff photo that I have of Marlin Crowder Elementary. It was my second year of teaching.
Front - Jan Weston, Sharon Stewart, Nadine Hathcoat, Nelda Shafer, Debbie Stejskal,
Middle - Rosemary Durkee, Nadine Elsberry, Norma Wulf, Carolyn Long, Ruby Rice, Woogie Adams,
Gary Klopp, Burley Hathcoat, Top - Carlene Wilson, Bernadean Gates, Carolyn Hicks, Stefanie Parker,
and Marilyn Hadlock. Just looking at these faces bring so many wonderful memories of laughter and learning!

              I do not remember not knowing Ruby. She had gone to high school at Burbank with my father, Edmund Gates, Jr., and most of the other eligible secondary students in the Big Bend in the 1930s. She recounted how my father delighted in teasing her during the long bus ride. While at Burbank High School, she was not only a good student, but a great basketball player, playing on a winning girls’ team.

                Ruby began her coursework at Oklahoma State University to become a teacher the same year Dawn, Ruby’s youngest daughter, and I entered first grade. I enjoyed the few times when no one was going to be home after school at my house, and I got to ride the bus to the Rice home with Dawn. Marion and Vickie, Ruby’s older daughters were in charge. I do not recall either of the “big girls” having to correct Dawn and me.
(Marian's school photo, Vickie's eighth grade group picture, and Dawn's first grade school picture - these are from RHS yearbook of the 1962 - 1963 school term, the year Dawn and I started to Ralston School.)                      
                Ruby used Angie, my sister, and her kittens as props for one of her photography projects. Angie, as a preschooler, thoroughly enjoyed her role as photographer’s model when she got to help Ruby set up a tea party in the yard. Plus Ruby received a good grade from the assignment. 
Photography by Ruby of Angie and the doll 
having a tea party.
                Occasionally, Ruby would drop by the farm to visit with Grandma, Gladys Rainey Smith, and Mother, Bernyce Gates. One day Ruby stopped, only to discover that my grandma, always the adventurer in her cooking, had prepared a carp brought to her by her nephew, Leo Rainey. Leo had caught the carp in the Arkansas River. He knew if anyone would use the less desirable catch, it would be his Aunt Lyde, the name he always called Grandma.
                Sure enough, she cleaned the fish, flavored it with onions and tomatoes, sprinkling in some other seasonings, and then cooked it in the pressure cooker. My mother couldn’t get it passed her mind, but Ruby raved about it when she sampled it. Maybe she was just famished after a full day of classes at OSU, followed by the drive home to the Bend. Grandma fixed a jar of the tasty carp and sent it home with Ruby since she liked it so much.
                 Dawn got to stay with Angie, my sister, and me quite frequently. We delighted in playing dolls and whatever else our imaginations could dream up. Dawn got to visit overnight during the summers. Ruby always seemed to enjoy visiting with Grandma and Mother when she picked Dawn up. Most of the time, they ended up talking about the Bible.
                After earning her degree, Ruby began teaching third grade at Fairfax. In her early years of teaching, she, Elmer, her husband, and Dawn were still living on their farm near the Arkansas River in the Bend.
                One wintry late afternoon, Ruby and Dawn were maneuvering the icy roads to the Bend. They were nearing the hill just west of the driveway where the Koger family now lives. The hill that can be treacherous is located in Pawnee County about one mile east of the Arkansas River bridge, dubbed the Belford Bridge.
                Ruby had been unable to reach the crest of the hill. She was stalled midway up on the east side of the hill. She saw Dad coming in his green work truck that he had bought used from Otis “Babe” Goad. Dad never valued the appearance of his vehicle. The primary goal was two-fold – get him from Point A to Point B and transport his carpenter tools.
Otis "Babe" Goad

                Ruby told me that she could not believe he zipped around her stuck car. How could he do this to her? Then she said she watched as he stopped on top the hill. He began walking down the slick hill to where her car was immobilized. He instructed her  how to steer and then began pushing. Soon she and Dawn were moving up the hill and headed home.
                Ruby and I taught together at Marlin Crowder Elementary School in Fairfax, from 1979 until her retirement. She had classic understated sophistication in her demeanor. Ruby disciplined much like my own mother. I don’t recall her raising her voice. In simplistic terms, she wasn't a talker, but she said what she meant and meant what she said.
                Mrs. Rice was known for reading the entire Little House series of books by Laura Ingalls Wilder to her third graders. Since I taught primary music, Ruby read daily to all the third graders. I recall what a kick she got from John Holloway’s disdain of the character, Nellie Olsen. John would express sheer delight when haughty, snooty Nellie received her “comeuppance.” John probably never realized how he made Mrs. Rice’s day as he interacted with her shared reading time.
                Most of her students probably didn’t realize that she played the piano. Playing an hour after school on her beautiful grand piano, given to her by her husband, was her way to unwind. She had me swear to never ask her to play. She played by ear and quite well  but only for her own enjoyment.
                After Ruby’s retirement, I continued reading the Little House to third graders each year. Some have told me the shared reading of those books was one of their most memorable experiences in that school grade. I also followed her pattern for relaxing after a hectic day of teaching. Even though I might have several sets of papers awaiting my correction, I usually sat down at my piano to play the stress away, plus get in some good practice minutes.
                Even though we were relatives – her husband was my Mother’s cousin, and we shared a calling to the field of elementary education - the main point of connectedness was our love of the Lord. Ruby delighted in telling me how she and my grandmother argued about whether a person could know she was saved forever and assured of going to heaven. Her favorite part to relate to me was when she was vigorously rocking at her home reflecting on her conversation with Grandma and suddenly realized it was true that she had everlasting life that could not be lost. She loved the words of Jesus when He said in John 10:28-29:
And I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; neither shall anyone snatch them out of My hand. My Father, who has given them to Me, is greater than all; and no one is able to snatch them out of My Father's hand.
                One of my personal favorite interactions with Ruby followed her retirement. We would see each other weekly at church. One beautiful Sunday in spring, as people exited the front door of the church, no one had bolted the church door back for easier departure. Ruby proceeded to bolt the door open when someone teased her about being the door keeper. With the typical lilting of Ruby’s voice and her enormous brown eyes looking sideways, she responded with the quoting of Psalm 84:10:
For a day in thy courts is better than a thousand. 
I had rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God,
than to dwell in the tents of wickedness.
               Her quotation of this particular passage illustrated the humility in the heart of this godly woman. Her commitment to obedience of the principles of the Bible showed her desire to live a life of godliness and avoid any wicked ways in her walk while on this earth.
On the 102nd  remembrance of Ruby’s birth on April 12th, may those of us who have been so impacted by this woman of class, intellect, and grace, recall with hearts of thankfulness all she built into our lives, purposing to walk in the principles she lived by, thus carrying on her legacy.

Sunday, April 2, 2023

DNA - From the 18th to the 21st Century

 Joni Gates Murphy and I recently discussed how we have been influenced by the high standard of custom building set by our fathers. Offhandedly, I mentioned the discovery of an ancestor that shared our fathers’ same building giftedness. She encouraged me to write about it. Thankfully, the research for it was not extremely labor-intensive so I was able to craft it this week. Joni, thanks for fostering my willingness to tackle the research for it. May Great-great-great-great grandfather, Heinrich Schor inspire each of us.

Three of the four sons of Edmund and Mamie Gates who grew to adulthood became carpenters. All four of Grandma Gates’s boys became farmers - my father, Edmund Gates, Jr. and Jess, his younger brother, farmed most of their lives. The two younger brothers, Herbert and Jim reentered the agriculture profession after having on-the-job training in their youngest years while growing up in the Bend.

The four Gates Boys
Herbert, Jim, Jess, and Edmund, Jr.

A few years ago, as I researched, I stumbled onto some Moravian Records of North Carolina. These records included the Schors who are ancestors through my Grandpa Gates’s paternal grandmother, Passingfair Shore (Americanized spelling) Gates. Moravian documentation records the names of Passingfair’s grandfather, Heinrich Schor, and her great-grandfather, Friedrich Schor, the German-Swiss  immigrant who brought his family across the Atlantic Ocean in 1750.

Johan Heinrich Henry Schor, the son of Friedrich Schor, was born in Muttenz, Switzerland in 1835 (both John Adams and Paul Revere were born the same year). He left Europe with his parents, Friedrich and Margaretha Schneider Schor, and three siblings. Unfortunately, only Heinrich, his father, and three siblings arrived at Philadelphia in the colonies of America in 1850. His mother died shortly after the birth and death of her last son during the voyage. Both were buried at sea. (Here is a link to a blog post about Margaretha Schor - https://bernadeanjgates.blogspot.com/2020/05/remembering-margaretha-schneider-schorr.html ).

Heinrich lived with his father and siblings for about eight months. When his father was unable to keep the family together, Heinrich moved in with a family in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He went into servitude with a Mennonite man. Finally, a turning point came for Heinrich at around 17 years old when he entered into an eight-month apprenticeship with a carpenter and discovered “this trade his future livelihood” according to the Moravian Records of 1768.

The book, Artisans in the North Carolina Backcountry, listed Johann Heinrich Schor as a carpenter beginning in 1759. He was described as a Moravian artisan in the Wachovia, the name of the tract of land where the Moravians developed their community. The book defines a carpenter as one who does the heavier and stronger work in wood, as the framework of houses, ships, etc. (This type of work with wood was my father’s favorite). 

My father, Edmund Gates, Jr. and his brother, 
Herbert Gates working in 1976 on the
custom-built home  of Ruth Ann and Bob
 Hightower located in the Bend. 
Photo was in Mother's collection. Ruth 
Ann gave it to her.

            Heinrich found a lifelong home in Bethania in the royal colony of North Carolina. A quote from the Moravian records states However needy and poor he may have started in his household here, he never suffered from hunger because he earned so much through his trade.

On Sunday, July 1, 1759, eight families requested permission to operate under the care of the Moravian Church and live in the new village of Bethania in the colony of North Carolina. What irony or perhaps a testimonial to the power of DNA in a family to read next to Heinrich Schor’s signature, the description of the skills he could offer the new community – farmer and carpenter. My father and two of his brothers, Herbert and Jim, found their primary livelihood in carpentry, with Herbert sought out for his cabinet making. All four brothers, including Jess, farmed a large portion of their lives. It’s hard to run from the DNA even when almost 100-120 years separated the births of my father and his brothers from the death of their great-great-great grandfather, Heinrich Schor.

Another photo of Dad and Uncle Herb on the 
Hightower building site in 1976. Photo given
by Ruth Ann Hightower to my parents.
         Joni, who inspired me to publish this family history at this very time, had been impacted by the perfectionism of her own father, a great-great-great-great grandson of Heinrich Schor. Steve Gates, her dad, learned the skill of carpentry from his father, Herbert. He perfected and honed the God-given talent for working in wood, along with his brother, Mark.

This Moravian community was a Christian community that sought to live with their family and their neighbors according to God’s Word. Heinrich was characterized in the records as a brother who loved the Lord with all his heart. May each of us who read of Heinrich Schor’s life story seek to emulate this last declaration about him. Whether we descend from him or not, may we want the same proclamation to be made about us at our passing, They loved the Lord with all their heart. That’s not a bad epitaph if one lived a life that backed it up!

 A Historical Home in Bethania, North Carolina bears the names of  Shore/Lehman House. Its historical significance rests in it being "one of the oldest structures remaining in Bethania." It was constructed in 1805. Below is a link to view a photograph of the 217-year-old home built for Johann Jacob Shore, one of Heinrich's son. It was then sold to his sister, Elisabeth Shore Hauser Lehman and her husband, Johann Christian Lehman. Elisabeth was a daughter of Heinrich Schor. Notice his children had taken the Americanization of Heinrich's last name and had begun using Shore.  

https://www.cityofws.org/DocumentCenter/View/3887/101---Shore-Lehman-House-PDF?bidId=