Thursday, November 14, 2024

Brow Sweat, Part 3: Worth It

 

Hey, Cobblestone,

     It all made sense once the man explained it to me. Before I read Harry Caudill’s book, Night Comes to the Cumberlands, I thought work was divided into two distinct categories: “Worth It” and “Not Worth It.” And as far back as I could remember, “my people” – parents, aunts and uncles, grandparents for generations – had always worked in that second, dismal category. We traded our time for someone else’s money, but found ourselves short of both. Not worth it – ugh. But Mr. Caudill’s insights were a big help.

     In the 1700’s, there were basically two methods by which a person got from Europe to the “new world,” America. In the old countries of Europe, the first-born sons inherited the estate and typically stayed there, carrying on as the generation before them had. Younger sons would inherit wealth, and needed a place to invest it. These often came to the Colonies, and most often landed in the Northeast, or New England, as it was coming to be known.

     Meanwhile, other Europeans were coming across the pond. With no wealth to speak of, these paid for their passage by way of indentured servitude, paying back their sponsors with years of labor. Mostly, they were from families with no old money. Some were the overflow from debtors’ prison; still others from plain old prison. For all, the status quo had not worked for a very long time. All things must surely be better beyond the western horizon. Their boats usually landed in southern Virginia and the Carolinas – the Tobacco Coast – and they debarked to begin a period of prepaid labor.

     My forbears came from that second bunch. Strong backs and plenty of ambition. More adventurous, perhaps, than those who had stayed on their continent of origin. But no capital to invest, other than themselves.  

     In the Northeast, the investors were enjoying a bountiful return, and moved west across the Alleghenies to the rapidly developing frontier territory of Ohio. At the same time, those who had come ashore on the Tobacco Coast were finishing their contracts, and with essentially no chance of acquiring land where they were, moved west across the Appalachians, passing through the Cumberland Gap to homestead in Tennessee and Kentucky.

     Along the northern route, a strong connection was maintained with the East, including a commitment to establishing accessible education. On the southern route, a strong emphasis was placed on resourcefulness – making the most of what was naturally at hand. The two routes converged right here where many of us at Cobblestone live now. Industry in our area, and Miami University itself, were direct results of the convergence. (Did you know that, in the year 1900, Hamilton, Ohio was the fifth-largest industrial producer in the whole United States? It's a fact.) Both institutions needed money and labor – capital and resourcefulness – to thrive. Hello, Butler County!    

     It would have been a match made in heaven, except for one pivotal (and tragic) event. The Southerners caught on quickly to the trading-life-for-money arrangement. There was a cultural memory of indentured servitude – not a pleasant memory at all. The Northerners realized that the very people who were providing them a handsome return on investment were increasingly dissatisfied. There was – just maybe – a sweet spot in which the two groups could have come together: Labor could have taken greater responsibility for profitable outcomes; Capital could have shared further in the profits. Instead, the two groups separated. Those with capital built their New World estates apart from the smoke and noise and sweat that made the estates possible. Those with great pools of resourcefulness retreated into their enclaves of like-gifted people. Both groups blamed the other for the divide.

     If there’s any truth in the old adage “You have to spend money to make money” (and I believe there is), it’s truest for those who have a large margin between what money it takes to survive and what is left to invest. It doesn’t really work the other way around. Other than the occasional recession and one Depression, the more money an investor spent, the greater the return. Meanwhile, those who had little or no margin were left without a way to participate. For investors, the gains were often meteoric; for laborers, the gains were incremental. And on this foundation, dear Church, the Worth-It/Not-Worth-It dividing wall was built.

     Harry Caudill took a lot of criticism because of Night Comes to the Cumberlands, mostly from other Appalachians. He pulled no punches in describing how, time after time, Kentuckians of the Cumberland Plateau found themselves on the muddy end of exploitation. Being told that the people you’ve loved and admired all your life were, basically, rubes – that’s a tough one. His son, in the Foreword to one of the more recent editions, even tells of death threats his dad received. But to a very high degree, based on what I’ve seen in the sixty years since the book was originally published, I believe Cousin Harry was shooting us straight. He taught me where the division came from.

     What he didn’t teach me was what to do about it. True, his book carried a resounding “Don’t let this happen again” message, and I’m all for that. My family is from Kentucky too, and I groan when I see the exploitation still going on. (My nephew in Jackson County, upon graduating welding school, was offered $9.50 an hour to start – about a third of what he could make north of the Mason-Dixon line.) But there’s a uniquely Christian understanding – what should Christians do about the Woth-It/Not-Worth-It wall – that was left out of publication.

     Enough history – let’s get to the crucial point: “Hey, Christian, you don’t work for The Man, you work for The King.”

     Regardless of socioeconomic status or nature of employment, all who have the mind of Christ (see 1Corinthians 2:16) and the indwelling Holy Spirit (see 1Corinthians 12:13) are engaged in work that is Worth It. Do all of us know that? Not even close. Let’s go to Scripture, and begin to be convinced:

    Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward. You are serving the Lord Christ (Colossians 3:23-24). 

     See? What I told you is Bible-true: you work for The King. The work you do, done in service to the King, brings his kingdom.

     In the two letters I’ve written to you so far on the nature of work, we’ve seen that 1) work is meant to be satisfying; Adam had a job before he sinned, and the Garden of Eden flourished under his care, and 2) work is not a curse; indeed, there was no curse pronounced, only the natural consequences of being separated from God by sin. In this letter, the idea is to understand where our work is headed.

     Jesus knows exactly what he wants his kingdom to look like when he completes it here on earth. In his first appearing, he dropped some large clues, and intends that we would pick them up and implement them to the best of our Holy Spirit-empowered ability. But life happens, right, and it looks for all the world that the un-Jesus side has all the worldly advantages.

     Close your eyes. Go ahead, close ‘em. Now say, “On earth as it is in heaven…” Say it again. I don’t ask you to do stuff like this very often, Church, but I’m asking now. Say it a third time: “On earth as it is in heaven…”

     This planet of ours constitutes a very precise volume. Mankind has estimated, but only God knows how many cc’s that is. Earth weighs a certain amount, and though man has made his best guess, God knows it down to the fraction of a gram. But mankind can know – oops, to be more specific, Christians can know – this unassailable fact: Every particle of Jesus’ kingdom we call onto earth, displaces the same amount of un-Jesus kingdom. It’s a gon-er. Outta here. We will have to wait for the Rightful King to tip the scales undeniably and eternally, but the work we do right here and right now loads them in his direction. Please take that idea into your next shift.

     And just for kicks, when you lay your head on your pillow after long hours of work, receive this truth from the Bible book of Zephaniah:

The Lord your God is in your midst,
    a mighty one who will save;
he will rejoice over you with gladness;
    he will quiet you by his love;
he will exult over you with loud singing (3:17).

     I can make the offer only on his promise.

 

 Grace and Peace (even “on the clock”!),

 

John