My husband and I were driving to town when we passed a white clapboard house nestled under big shade trees. Standing tall and sturdy next to the house, just the right amount of space to the left was a big, old barn. It reminded me of a knight standing ready to protect his lady.
A For Sale sign was in the yard.
“Your house is for sale,” my husband said. He knows how much I love old houses. This one was a red tin-roofed, two-story with a balcony above the front porch. A house with a porch – a real porch, wide enough for a swing and chairs. It had lots of windows, too. A house with lots of windows looks like a house where its inhabitants chose happiness. It seems like it would be filled with stories of people who loved life fully, both inside and out.
A house with a barn, or a barn with a house, would know of barn owls, chipmunks, barn cats and sparrows, goats, chickens, dogs, and cows. Maybe lambs, too. Wheel barrows, water troughs, muck rakes, forks, hammers and crowbars wouldn’t gather dust or get lost from lack of use. A weather vane, too – on top of the barn, along with a barometer. I wonder if that would be more reliable than television weather forecasters and radar.
Words and phrases like seed-time, reaping a harvest and storehouse would be common place. Plowing, gathering, threshing and winnowing, knowing how to collect wood for and how to build a fire – well, those would be every day living things, every day working out the physical examples of God’s spiritual principles. I think that would help his spiritual message plant somewhere deep in our souls.
About four weeks ago, they tore down that white clapboard farmhouse that had stood beside its barn for longer than a lifetime – to make way for a new neighborhood. Bulldozers and gravel trucks bellowed freely now between where the house had been and the barn stood, its life companion gone. I pulled in and took a photo of the barn before they tore it down, too. What good is an empty barn in a field replaced with yards and houses? A few days later, it was bulldozed down. They didn’t take it apart to rebuild somewhere else. A heap of brokenness, someone burned it up a few days ago. It saddens me.
It saddens me, just like it saddens me that my great-grandmother and grandfather’s farmhouse burned down after my Uncle Jim died. The milk barn is overgrown with weeds and viney things that wouldn’t have been allowed to grow near either the house or the barn. The barn roof is falling in. Sometimes, I want to go back, to feel the stories, to sit on the porch steps worn with the footprints of those whose story set up mine, whose faith stories have become a storehouse of blessing, a rich spiritual inheritance that point to relationship with God. But the porch, along with the house, are no longer there for sitting and remembering.
The stories are being forgotten – and the buildings aren’t there to retell them. These stories, they’re the love and faith stories, these farmhouses and barns. If the walls could talk, they would tell over-coming stories, forgiveness stories, being born and born again stories, funny stories, loss and crying stories, cat and mouse stories, laughing stories, every day ordinary stories, growing up stories, feast and famine stories.
The farmhouse remembers the children’s bedtimes and where the jam, apples, butter and potatoes were stored. It knows what Christmas smelled like and what the cooling breeze in summer hotness felt like. It knows the sound of big and little feet on the floorboards and which steps creak in the stairwell. It knows the goodnight stories and songs, and the sound of little ones breathing in sleep and the bigger ones sawing in sleep. It knows the challenges that spilled over, disrupting its peace, shaking its hope and faith. It knows how the hard was softened, and that love which never gives up lasts a lifetime. The farmhouse, while a hive of activity, is where the place of refreshing lives, where the broken can be made whole. It is where God’s word is read and then walked out to the barn, to the neighbors, and into town.
The farmhouse and the barn,
a boy and his girl,
a mom and a dad,
a grandmother and grandfather,
a barn and his farmhouse,
a farmhouse and her barn,
It’s a love story of give and take, provision and comfort,
of small town entrepreneurs in charge of their own destiny
where a full barn allows a house to become a home full of heart.
the barn is like the spirit of a man, the farmhouse the spirit of the woman
a symbiotic kind-of-love
He braves the harsh elements to fill the barn with the stuff comfort and security are made from. From the storehouses of barn he brings – and from the heart of the house, she gives. . . .
He gives her the grain – and she gives back bread.
He gives her the wool – and she gives back scarves, hats, sweaters and socks.
He gives her the cotton – and she stitches together crazy quilts for the bitter cold times.
He tears and she mends.
He gives honor and love; and she gives it right back.
He gives her trust to be who she is, and she gives him respect to be who he is.
He invites God into every dusty corner of the barn of himself,
and she invites God into every corner of the farmhouse of herself.
He gives her children, and she gives him a legacy,
but together they give their children an inheritance of blessing.
Each gives the other purpose; one without the other are incomplete.
Side by side,
storm after storm,
quiet after quiet,
year after year
the farmhouse and her barn
the barn and his farmhouse
They just might fade from memory, may even be exchanged for a different kind of living. The inheritance, though, it runs deep into the very fiber of a God-designed DNA. While the barn might be torn down, along with the farmhouse, and the faith and love stories forgotten, God redeems the faith, hope and love in story – he has the floor plan to rebuild what was forgotten, to redeem those who belong to the story.
The farmhouse and the barn,
a boy and his girl,
a mom and a dad,
a grandmother and grandfather
who built something more
than a barn and a farmhouse
“Listen, dear friends, to God’s truth,
bend your ears to what I tell you.
I’m chewing on the morsel of a proverb;
I’ll let you in on the sweet old truths,
Stories we heard from our fathers,
counsel we learned at our mother’s knee.
We’re not keeping this to ourselves,
we’re passing it along to the next generation—
God’s fame and fortune,
the marvelous things he has done” ~ Psalm 78: 1-6
**None of the farmhouses pictured belong to the barns in the photographs. The first barn above is the one I discuss. The first house is one that was torn down a few years ago.
“A good man leaves an inheritance to his children’s children,” ~ Proverbs 13:22a
Thank you. This took me down an old comfortable country road; dusty, bumpy…but it leads to a place called home; where love and family grow. I’m on the road, working on a Sunday, this was a quiet rest, much needed. Thank you.
Thanks for stopping by. So glad you found a quiet rest. Homes that grow old and love through the challenges always seem to offer that!
This was an amazing post and also brought a tear to my eye, too. I understand progress but I don’t always like it. I believe we are losing a lot when we lost history. Some people will never know the benefits of sitting on a front porch in the early morning light!
I know that “we” keep better records of the past, but when we tear down things that remind us of the stories, it is more difficult to remember.
I love old houses, too, and hate to see them torn down. I can still remember how sad my mother was when my grandmother’s house fell into disrepair, the victim of a relative’s neglect. But I understand that after it was sold, the new owners repaired and restored it. I hope to see it in person one day! Thanks for sharing.
Restoration is hope renewed, isn’t it?! Restorers are keepers of the story – and that is a beautiful thing! Thank you for stopping by, Donna!
I know this tearing down of the old to make way for the new has been going strong since the 50’s, but it still hurts my heart to see it. For all the reasons you so eloquently mention in this post. Nicely written, friend.
Maybe we are designed to be a people who like broken things made whole, so tearing down and starting from scratch is like one soul giving up one another. Thank you for coming by, June!
Beautiful! I love old barns and make my husband stop so I can take pictures of them when we visit his family in NY State. I wish we could save them all.
My husband is getting quite used to whip-lash stopping requests! LOL However, we’ve discovered that when we do stop for me to capture a photo – something inside is gained! Maybe our generation is not a “stop and smell the flowers generation” but a “stop and take a photo” of the flowers generation – which is my book is the same thing! Thanks for coming by Cheryl!
This post speaks to my heart. I so a farmer’s daughter, granddaughter and niece. I love hearing the stories about the farm and our family. What a pure gift! I’m blessed to be your neighbor over at Kelly’s today.
We live in a rural country setting and the homes and barns that we watch collapse through the years is enough to break ones heart. I see an abandoned house and I think how a homeless family could turn it into a home with flower boxes and curtains and yet families allow them to cave in and rot. IT TEARS ME UP. Love this post and you have confirmed something for me this morning for the second time by quoting Eccl 3. God is talking to me today. Woo Hoo. Neighbors at Kristin’s.
Hi Susan, I don’t understand people letting homes and barns just fall into disrepair. It doesn’t seem like very good stewardship. Maybe they have forgotten the old stories. So glad you found some encouragement here! Wishing you Shalom in your week! ~ Maryleigh
Beautiful post. Thank you.
Thanks for coming by Kelly! Wishing you God’s shalom in your week! ~ Maryleigh
What a beautiful story and metaphor you’ve woven for us with tender affection and care, Maryleigh! I love old barns and old farmhouses too and am brought to tears when someone bulldozes them down. But have never thought about their significance in the way you’ve painted it here today. Our stories as husband and wife are just as beautiful and lasting, even if we die and are gone one day. I’m reading in Hebrews 9:15-18 today about the inheritance we receive because of Christ’s sacrifice for our sins. This story reminds me of that precious and never-fading gift–that no one can bulldoze down! Hugs to you, sweet friend! Your stories are a beautiful treasure!
Thank you for your kind encouragement, Beth! I’m so glad no one can bulldoze his gifts to us, too! Wishing you Shalom in your week! ~ Maryleigh
Beautiful. I loved journeying with you. As a city girl, this filled me with peace.
So glad you journeyed along with me!
Waht beautiful thoughts on the relationship between barns and houses. I love driving around areas of the country that have a profusion of house/barn combos. We did that one afternoon in Vermont back in January when we visited for my daughter’s graduation.
They’re like books, just wanting to be read! Thanks for stopping by, Anita!
Beautiful to read this morning. I love old homes and barns. When I see them, I always imagine what life was like down through the years. This post is lovely in both words and photos.
Thank you, Joanne – for both stopping by and leaving such kind words! We seek the story in everything – don’t we!