THE LEAVEN COMMUNITY & THE
AGRARIAN IDEAL: DEBUNKING
AGRARIANISM
If there is one
idea I want you to take home today, it is this:
community is essential to agrarianism. To take up an
agrarian life style, we must build communities, and these
communities must leaven the rest of our society, because the
modern world has gone so far wrong that it cannot be
corrected; it must be rebuilt.
THE HYPE AND THE
HOPE To
begin with, it’s a good idea to separate the hype from the
hope in agrarianism. There’s nothing actually “evil”
about hype. Think of it as the icing on the cake.
Without icing, it would be much harder for the cake to attract
kids – or flies. But the hype is only the promise to
call us in. Once we get beyond the allure, what remains
to hold us? After the hype of agrarianism has excited
us, what hope will strengthen us to persevere?
THE HYPE Although I am poking fun at
it now, the romanticism of Agrarianism is really
indispensable. Whose heart has been so thoroughly
asphalted over that it does not leap at the thought of owning
a little place in the country? Add to that the
very real joys of agrarian living – clean air, serenity, good
neighbours, plenty of exercise, and good wholesome food
and drink -- farm fresh eggs, milk still warm from the
cow, steaming hot biscuits, home-made ham and sausage, and a
dipper full of crystal clear cool water from the
well – Whew! It sounds like a combination
health camp and vacation home. Then add in the siren call of
self-sufficiency, self-reliance, and independence. To be
free, really free. To be your own boss, standing on your
own two feet like some time-warped transplant from colonial
times. Heady . . . The picture Andrew Lytle
paints in his essay, “Hind Tit” in I’ll Take My Stand
offers an unforgettable picture of that
self-sufficiency. From waking in the morning until the
day’s end, the man of the house is master of all that he
surveys. And
think of the ideal rural community. The little village
with all the picturesque if sometimes cantankerous
farmfolk. Why, they’re practically wearing their
regional peasant outfits from the old country, complete with
smocked shirts and embroidery. Man, pull out the
accordion and let’s start the polka! Or at least pull
out the banjo and let’s have a bluegrass festival. I
can’t keep my feet from clogging. And really, it’s not all hype. In
fact, it’s all true, every bit of it. The farm
fresh food is there. The fresh air. The
exercise. The neighbours. The escape from the
frenzied friction of city life. The fishhook is, those
things don’t come alone, and they don’t come without
effort.
A TYPICAL DAY ON THE
FARM Your
typical day on the farm might start this way. You pull
up at your barn to find two sections of wooden fence
completely obliterated, as though a small but very accurate
tornado had passed in the night. Further investigation
reveals that your big bull has demolished the fence to
get into the pasture with all the cows and your little
bull, who you’ve been keeping separate from the big bull so
the big bull wouldn’t use him for goring practice. A
quick glance over the pasture shows that the little bull is
still alive, but all your breeding plans have now been ruined
for another year, thanks to the big RED bull hopping the fence
into the pasture with the little WHITE bull and all the cows
that were only supposed to socialise with the little WHITE
bull. And
look over there on the other side of the barn. Are those
pigs? Yes, and they’re not where they’re supposed
to be. They’ve escaped again. And they are headed
for your neighbour’s pasture, where the nine of them will do
more damage to his turf in one hour than eighty-eight men
armed with shovels, picks, and a destructive
attitude. Now follow me to the barn to feed
animals. When you try to take the lid off the barrel,
you quickly learn where the chickens have been roosting.
Don’t forget the other smells of agrarianism, manure being the
chief one. Some of it simply won’t wash off. Pigs,
for instance, produce about four times as much manure as
humans. Every day. And pigs have a smell,
well, peculiar to pigs. You can scrub it off with
Clorox or sulphuric acid or mildly radioactive nuclear waste,
but that’s about all that will wash it off. Anybody ready to milk the
cow? First, get a cow. Whoops, first find the
cow. Then get the cow into the stall. Then get the
cow to hold still. Then sit on your stool and put your
bucket under her udder and your head in her flank. Wash
off her udder. Now, what are those pointy things hanging
down there? Where’s the tap? FLAP! The cow smacks
you in the face with her tail. You persevere.
FLAP! She smacks you again. You’re pinching
her. FLAP! You grab a piece of baling twine off
the floor to tie her tail to her leg, reach her around behind
her to grab the tail, and that’s the time she picks to . .
. well, you get the picture. How about some farm fresh
eggs? You’ll have plenty, if your dogs have left you any
chickens. Whoops! No time for
breakfast now, you’re out of feed. Have to drive in town
for corn and sweet feed and scratch feed.
Whoa! Look at the price on that stuff. I’m
going to have to put my animals on a diet. Now imagine all this in the
rain. And let’s stretch that rain out for a week.
Let plenty of cold rain trickle down the back of your neck,
and let your feet step into mud a foot deep. Walk out
into the barn. Look at the milch cow. Isn’t there
something unusual about her? What’s this? She can
hardly stand, and she’s swollen twice her size. O,
no! It’s bloat! Who left the cover off the feed
barrel? The cow ate half a barrel! Call the
vet! No, never mind the vet, hand me that water
hose.
Quickly you cut off the brass fitting and begin stuffing hose
down the cow’s throat, hoping that your hose enters her
esophagus and not her windpipe. If you are really
devoted, you will suck and blow on the free end of the
hose.
WHOA! Cow! Don’t lie down! If she
lies down it will kill her. Got to keep her moving, got
to keep feeding that hose down her gullet until it hits the
gas pocket and deflates her. And sometimes it works and sometimes it
doesn’t. Sometimes you may find your horse down with
colic, and call every friend you have, and pour Wesson oil
down him by the gallon and walk him and walk him and walk him
from here to New York, and leave him at 1:30 in the morning
thinking he’s okay, only to find him on his back dead as a
hammer in the morning. And you think back and remember
that yesterday morning he was just fine, but this morning he’s
dead, and even in death the burden doesn’t leave because you
have to call the rendering plant to haul him off. And
all this happened because some child -- or maybe even
you yourself – left a top off a feed barrel. When you drag yourself to
bed at night wincing in every joint and muscle, you realise
that agrarian life is as far from city life as the Moon is
from green cheese. The responsibility and initiative,
the risk, and the unforgiving vigilance that farm life demands
tower orders of magnitude above city life, not to mention the
physical labour.
THE HOPE So does that mean we ought
to tuck tail and run back to the city before we all die of
muscle cramps and lockjaw? Absolutely not. In the
first place, the romantic visions of agrarianism are not mere
hype. They are the cream of agrarian life, even though
the way to that cream leads through a trail of tears,
mud, and manure. Above all there is the hope --the
great hope -- that even in an insane and inhuman modern
world agrarian living can restore sanity and humanity for our
children and ourselves. Speaking as one who for years
has butted his head against the granite fortress of modernism,
I am more convinced than ever that our only way out is
cultural secession. What is cultural secession? To
build, in effect, a new world parallel to the existing
world. I am not talking about monastic communities where
we just retreat into our cells and let the world go to hell as
it may. I am talking about building a new world right in
the middle of the old world, rebuilding society along
lines more fitly proportioned to the nature of man, a world
that moves at man’s pace for man’s ends, and not a machine’s
pace for a machine’s end. (And let me make myself clear,
I mean nothing coerced. Agrarianism must be voluntary or
it will be stillborn.) To build that new world we will have to
build not only new communities but also new
institutions. We have to examine the values of our
modern world – money, power, success, Big Brother government,
frenzied consumption, the ever-bigger-ever-better notion of
progress – and we have to ask which ones really fit into the
Christian civilisation we want to leave our children, and
which do not. We have to reject all the prizes and
rewards of modernism, in other words, we have to re-align our
own values. Then we have to build the institutions that
will support those values and credential our own leaders –
families, communities, schools, universities, professional and
trade and business organisations. We have to transfer
our loyalties to these new institutions, honour their
credentials, and we have to abandon and boycott the old
institutions. We have to build a new world parallel to
our old, dying world. Nor is this a new idea. It is
exactly how the primitive church grew to change the entire
Western world. In the parable of the leaven Christ
explains to us how it is done. (Luke 13:21) A woman, he says, took a
lump of leaven and hid it in a three pecks of meal until the
all the meal was leavened.. Quoting this parable may make you squirm
a bit, because you will remember that the parable refers to
the Kingdom of God. And you may be asking yourself,
isn’t he going too far identifying agrarianism with the
Kingdom of God? No, for this reason. I am a
Christian, and whatever I do, whatever goal I set for myself
and for society, must first serve the Kingdom of Christ.
But there is another forceful reason. Modernism – all that
comprises the secular, materialist worldview -- is dying
exactly because it has abandoned the God of the
Scriptures. As it becomes more consistent with its own
false presuppositions, it chokes on its own falsehoods. I do
not say that Christianity is the answer merely because I have
no other answer, but because that is the correct
answer.
THE ONE OR THE
MANY? One of
the modern errors that agrarianism must overthrow is extreme
individualism. Every good lie – and every good heresy –
contains a little bit of truth. So individualism
contains some truth, but not the whole
truth. In our day men have abandoned practical
Trinitarianism, so they cannot help but fall into one of the
twin errors of extreme individualism (egoism) or socialism
(communism). Whoa! What is
practical Trinitarianism? I thought there was
only theological Trinitarianism. Wrong --
the Trinity is not only the greatest mystery in the cosmos,
the greatest riddle of theology, it is also the only
practical pattern for living, for the Great Trinitarian
God has made the cosmos in his own image, both many and
one. The
Trinity reconciles the question, Which is ultimate, the many
or the one? Is the individual supreme, or the
community? In modern life that question is viewed as an
irreconcilable opposition. Either the many rule, or the
one: socialism or the ruthless free market. They
cannot be reconciled. In many places our modern world
(primarily in our private lives alone) has answered in favour
of the one, but without lasting satisfaction – as Mick Jagger
of the Rolling Stones lamented in their great hit
song.
Extreme individualism isolates the individual from that web of
normal human relations that defines us all. Atomised
into individuals without roots, place, or community, even the
tender bonds of family between husband and wife and parents
and children are dissolving. Wealth increases, while
love and trust disappear. One by one rugged individualism has
shut them out, painting itself into a very lonely
corner. Of
course, the opposite – the supremacy of the many – doesn’t
solve the problem, either. The Soviet Union and
socialism around the world have proved that with miserable
failure. Nevertheless, in our public lives, modernism
has subjected us to the ultimate rule of the many. The
collective supreme in our public lives, the individual supreme
in our private lives, and what is the result? Slaves
distracted by the bread of consumerism and the games of
immorality.
What is the Trinitarian answer to the problem of the one and
the many? Equal ultimacy. Subordination
in love. Reconciliation into the ordained
harmony. We learn that answer first of
all in the family, with its hierarchy and chain of command
upwards and downwards, ruled, restrained, and motivated by
love. The
next level of Trinitarian harmony lies in the community, and
this is the focus of my remarks today. As you no doubt
suspected when I recounted the perils of farming, you simply
can’t go it alone. I have a big family (seven children,
three of them married, six living with or near us) and we
still need outside help. If we are to build viable
agrarian communities, we have to help each other. We
can’t do it by ourselves. We have to work through
communities.
PERSONAL
PRECAUTIONS
For those of you who want to try agrarian living, I have a
baker’s dozen worth of tips. Some of these come from my
own experience in the last three years, some from a recent
conversations with Allan Nation, editor of the Stockman
Grass Farmer, Lynn Miller, Editor of the Small Farm
Journal, and Charlie Walters, editor of Acres,
USA. Don’t quit your day job.
Even the best farm will take three or more years to reach
profitability, so you will have to subsidise your farming
activity with outside income. Don’t leave
yourself high and dry without money. It takes a lot to
build up a place and keep it up. Don’t spend money yet. Once
you have a place, observe it for a year before you do
anything. Jim Kibler told me that you have to live in a
place a year before you even begin to know it, and I have
found that true, but incomplete. He should have said a
dozen years. Observing means looking at what grows at
what time of year. That will tell you a lot about your
soil and what you need to do. Successful farmers walk
their land. Walk yours. Listen to it. Don’t
even put down lime before a year of observation has
passed.
You cannot compete with commodity farming. Don’t
even try.
Study out how to farm. Farming is not
instinctive. Read books and periodicals.
Watch. Ask questions of those who are already doing it
well. Approach it with humility. Most farms fail from what
Allan Nation calls “heavy metal poisoning.” They are
overcapitalised, i.e., they have more capital invested in
tractors, trucks, trailers, and equipment, than they can use,
on land overvalued by real estate development. On land
that overpriced you can’t make an adequate return
farming. Tie up money in assets gaining
value, not losing value. Assets losing value
are land, tractors, buildings, etc. Assets gaining
value: cows, calves, ewes, lambs, improving
pastures.
Rent before you buy so that you can perfect your
skills. You have to be able to make the land
pay.
Never take government money. What the government
pays for, the government controls, including
you.
Never borrow money. Doing so seals your doom and
forfeits all independence. Pragmatism doesn’t work. You
may think that it is pragmatic to follow the so-called
“proven” methods of commodity farming, but in fact their
pragmatism doesn’t work. It requires huge capital and
labour inputs that will break you and destroy your
soil.
Grow grass & let the animals do the work. Not
marijuana-type grass but green grass. Concentrate on
growing fine grass and let the animals do the
harvesting. You’ll build your soil and develop a crop at
the same time. Ultimately, you have to develop your
own market. If you’re not willing to do your own
marketing, you shouldn’t do your own farming. You cannot
compete with commodity farms. Raise food for yourself and your
family. If you have to maintain your off-farm job so
that you can stay in the country but you’ll never be able to
earn a living off your farm, so be it. Better half a
loaf than a mouth full of gravel.
PRACTICAL COMMUNITY
CONSIDERATIONS We must have communities to
survive. Through communities we can enjoy and establish
for our children and ourselves a lifestyle independent of the
present world. Call it modernism or techno-fascism or
simply insanity, I don’t want to live there anymore, and I
want to leave something better to my children. This is
what I call “cultural secession.” I advocate that people who share
traditional Christian culture form communities -- not as a
method of retreat, but of rebuilding. Our job is to
create parallel institutions and a parallel worldview that by
its excellence and beauty will supplant the current culture
and economy. Now, I am not numb to the dangers.
The opportunities for stupendous pharisaical legalism
abound here, so we must take great care not to end up worse
off than we started. Here are a few practical
considerations, another baker’s dozen.
- ** Communities ought to
be in rural areas or small towns, it seems. You can
certainly try one in an urban setting. Let me know how
that works.
- ** As much as possible,
communities ought to grow organically, rather than centrally
planned from the top down, adding one family at a time
rather than a mass migration.
- ** The community must be open
and not closed, must look and reach outward and not
inward. Think of it as an advancing beachhead, not a
besieged enclave.
- ** Individuals must be able
to support themselves. Many will have to keep one foot
in two worlds, to earn a living outside the community.
(Long live the Internet and modern
telecommunications!) That will enable them to get
started and live within the new community. (I don’t
see how anybody could move to a small farm and get it paying
in less than three years, unless it was exceptional to start
with.)
- ** Starry eyes ought to be
de-starred. Rural life is physically
challenging. Its monotony can deaden. You have
to work at providing intellectual and artistic
stimulation. Count the cost before laying the first
brick.
- ** Individuals settling in
new communities ought to want a lifestyle change. Move
from the city to the country expecting to live as a mall-rat
and you’ll just disappoint yourself and annoy the folks at
Wal-Mart.
- ** Individuals in the
community must be self-supporting, and communities
economically viable. At the beginning, members
probably ought not depend on the new community alone for
sustenance.
- ** The community must work
like leaven in the local area and culture where it finds
itself. Unless the members of the community cultivate
social intercourse with their neighbours, they won’t
transfer anything, and certainly not ideas. You can’t
sit there like a scab on the land. You have to put
down roots and mingle with your neighbours.
- ** Humility, humility,
always humility. You’ll never make it in a rural
locale if you show your neighbours that you’re a smart aleck
know-it-all. You probably have more to learn from them
than they do from you anyway.
- ** Physical does
matter. A community is physical. People ought to
work and live conveniently close together. (Think of
urban churches, where members might drive an hour or two
just to get to church. Under those circumstances physical
fellowship is practically impossible.)
- ** A community must
have a transcendental center. It must self-consciously
know what it is and what it stands for.
- ** A community must
have continuity. There is no covenant without a
covenant people. The culture must self-consciously
pass itself on to the next generation.
- ** But a community that
is all rules and rigor without compromise or compassion will
shatter shortly on its own tyranny. God is gracious,
and has decreed freedom for us. In fact, he insists on
it. I think Robert E. Lee’s single rule as president
of Washington College sums it up best: “Make no
unnecessary rules.”
WILL IT WORK? Do I think such communities would live
and thrive? Could people living together, building
communities, really regain and reform anything? Well, if
not they could sure have a good time trying. (I know I
am, along with my whole family.) The alternative is the
counsel of despair: give up and let the barbarians
take over. -- F.
Sanders
I originally
wrote this piece as a speech for the Virginia League of the
South Agrarian Hedge School on Dec. 8, 2001. If you are
serious about agrarianism or living on a farm or even thinking
about it, you ought to subscribe to these three
publications:
Small Farmers
Journal P.O. Box
1627 Sisters,
Oregon 97759 www.smallfarmersjournal.com Quarterly, $30/year, 125 folio
pages
The Stockman Grass
Farmer P.O. Box
2300 Ridgeland,
Mississippi 39158-2300 (800) 748-9808 www.stockmangrassfarmer.com Monthly, tabloid, $28/yr.
Acres,
USA P.O. Box
91299 Austin, Texas
78709 (800)
355-5313 www.acresusa.com Monthly, Tabloid, $27.00
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