There’s A
Sabbath In the Land
Rev. John Pitney
An
Introduction
In February
of 2001, the Rev. John Pitney served as our teacher
and spiritual guide during the Local Foods Local
Farms Advocacy Week that took place in and
around the Mid Atlantic region. The Rev. John Pitney
describes himself as a farm kid, songwriter,
storyteller, land theologian, and United Methodist
minister currently residing in Eugene, Oregon.
He
was raised on land belonging to the Kalapooyan
people of Oregon's Willamette Valley and settled by
his Oregon Trail family in 1853. John served as
adjunct staff of the Western Small Church--Rural
Life Center. There he coordinated (1986-1997) the
Center's Forum on Church and Land--an annual
gathering bringing discernment of Jewish and
Christian faith traditions to the relationship
between humanity and God's Creation.
Since 1986 John
has been advocating for more just, sustainable, and
democratic ways of producing and consuming food and
fiber. Most recently his passion is alerting
citizens about the impacts of a food system owned
and patented "from seed to consumer-mouth"
by a few vertically integrated transnational
corporations (TNCs). John uses his unique gift of
guitar chords, lyrics and theology to communicate a
message of justice and action on behalf of all God’s
children, creatures, flora, and non-sentient earth
matter. John says he cares most about the kind of
Creation we pass on to all of God’s human and
creature children and who gets a share in its daily
bread.
There’s A
Sabbath In the Land:
Reflections
from the "Local Foods - Local Farms Advocacy
Week"
By the Rev.
John Pitney
Thom’s
Story
We were
assembled at the front of the Allison United
Methodist sanctuary in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Thom
Marti, a local orchardist and market manager of the
"Old Pomfret Street Farmer’s Market" in
Carlisle, PA was speaking with quiet resolve. Most
of our crowd was made up of students from Dickinson
College. We all sat on the edge of our pews. Thom’s
story helped us remember why our work in food system
justice must keep on keeping on. This was the fourth
of the eight events of "Local Foods---Local
Farms Advocacy Week."
The week was sponsored by
Just Community Food Systems of South Central PA (JCFS),
a joint partnership of South Central Community
Action Programs (SCCAP) and St. James Lutheran
Church, Gettysburg, PA. The event was funded by a
grant from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America. A team of us, led by Jon and Suse
Greenstone of JCFS and me, Rev. John Pitney, the
guest facilitator from First United Methodist Church
in Eugene, Oregon had already led similar gatherings
in Gettysburg and Harrisburg. We would do the same
in Winchester VA, Washington D.C., and Hinkletown,
PA before we were done.
In each and every event
something new and extraordinary came to germination.
Tonight it began with Thom. He supposed most of us
didn’t know the Carlisle market was one of the
oldest continuously operating markets in the
country; it started way before the Civil War. We
didn’t. It is. Thom didn’t tell us how hugely
successful the market is, in fact he expressed his
frustration by the low number of farmers who
participate. But he did want us to know that change
is coming. The farmers are beginning to become more
a part of the social fabric of the community. How
so?
Believe it
or not, last September (2000) the Ku Klux Klan
announced it was holding a rally. It would happen on
market day downtown where the farmer’s market
assembles. When a union of churches, civil rights
and commerce groups formed to stage an alternative
rally at the other end of town, the farmers joined
in. No media covered the KKK event, only the
alternative "positive coalition" got
coverage. Thom said the farmers have never felt so
much a part of their community, embraced, included,
and committed to their place. He has great hope
that, from this new beginning will grow broader
alliances among the food growers and the food-eating
public in Carlisle, PA. Thom said, "The market
has become part of the social conscience of the
community."
The Big
News: Dominion from Gene to Table
Now this
small story is not especially big news in the world
of how we set our global communion table and
distribute the Creator’s daily bread and, after
all, Thom’s story envisions a new community still
hoped for and mostly yet unseen. "More small
farmers connecting with their local community and
more local families eating local food" –sounds
like small potatoes.
We spent a lot of time at our
Advocacy Week events pondering the big news: Five or
six transnational companies, mostly processors,
merchandisers, and supermarket chains who now own
our daily bread and control access to the bounteous
table. It’s big. Names like Cargill, ConAgra, IBP,
and Tyson dominate every food category. Phillip
Morris gets a dime of every dollar Americans pay for
food and they bought Nabisco last summer (2000).
While traveling Pennsylvania we got word Tyson had
just bought IBP (later it was discovered that the
buy-out did not take place, this just portrays the
volatility of these food giants). Because of their
immense holdings, these corporations are capable of
controlling the world's food system. They also work
in concert with each other and are vertically
integrated, meaning they own everything from the
patents on the genes of the plants and animals we
eat to the most-sought-after space on the big chain
supermarket shelves and all the inputs,
transportation and processing in between.
For
instance, Monsanto owns the patent on "Round-up
Ready" soybeans. In alliance with them, Cargill
is the only company who will buy the beans from the
growers. The beans go to fatten Cargill’s beef at
Cargill’s own feed lots. The beef are slaughtered
and packed by Excel (Cargill’s beef processing
company) in packages ready to go right into the meat
case at Kroger, the biggest supermarket chain in the
US. Kroger has a long-term contract with Cargill to
sell only Excel meat. The big news is the seamless
"gene to table" dominion vertical
integration allows. Increasingly farmers don’t
ever own the crops or livestock they raise.
They
serve the empire. The newest big news is that,
whereas as late as 1997 the transnational (TNC)
processors controlled our food system, now the
retailers are calling the shots. Since 1997, when
the top 5 supermarket chains in the country
controlled 24% of the retail food market, there have
been massive buyouts. In 2001, the top 5 do almost
half the sales. Kroger, Wal-Mart, Albertson’s,
Safeway and Ahold USA (Ahold USA owns Giant foods
stores) are soon to be the only supermarket games in
town.
They now make more money selling their shelf
space (slotting fees) than they do selling food.
They control the TNC processors by these fees and
the reduced competition for their store shelves.
What’s more, all across this country, while we
have more families hungry, these top 5 retailers
close down their stores in low-income neighborhoods
in order to build more profitable ones in the
suburbs. In Gettysburg, where our advocacy week
began, a Giant supermarket (of Ahold USA) recently
closed its downtown store to build on the outskirts
of town. From there to Washington, D.C. we heard
stories of this "supermarket flight"
stranding the poor to the higher priced and lower
quality fast and convenience store food.
Relationships
of Common Wealth
Why is this
big news? The prophet Isaiah said it: "How sad
it is when you add house to house and field to field
until there is no room and you dwell all alone in
the midst of the land." And the prophet
Nehemiah said it for the small landowners of his
time: "We have mortgaged our fields, our
vineyards, ourselves...and it is not in our power to
help it for others own our land."
The
conglomerization of ownership and concentration of
power has shifted the focus of our food economy from
the value of community to the value of stockholder
shares. Relationships that once provided for the
common wealth have been broken. No longer does local
grain milling, baking and cheese making, canning and
meat processing add value to local produce and keep
food dollars circulating to bless our communities.
We export our value. No longer is local agriculture
enhanced by feeding people in local institutions, in
our nursing homes, schools, prisons, or hospitals.
No longer do locally-owned grocery stores foster
loyalty to local produce and local brands and feed
the most hungry. No longer do farmers and those who
eat have any conscientious knowledge of one another.
No longer do our communities know how to feed the
wealthiest among us, let alone the poor. While
preparing for our event in Washington, D.C., a food
system study was released showing that 90% of the
fresh produce consumed in the Mid-Atlantic states is
grown outside the region.
There is
great loneliness. It is communally sad around the
Lord’s Table. It isn’t only the farmer who has
mortgaged his or her means of production and
conscience. It devalues us all.
The Sabbath
Comes
But we see
the Sabbath coming. A quiet Jubilee has arrived.
That’s what makes small stories like Thom’s so
essential. They preserve a remnant of hope just when
it seems we have no power to help this business as
usual. After Thom sat down we split the crowd into
several smaller working groups.
Each was simply to
brainstorm the possibilities for bridging one of
these breaches in relationship: reconnecting local
farmers to local processors, farmers to
institutional food services, farmers to emergency
food providers, farmers to locally-owned restaurants
and groceries, farmer’s markets and community
supported agriculture. One group emerged with a list
of local restaurants that might be open to using
local produce.
A second included 3 members of a
local dairy family who were just 5 days away from
making their very first batch of "All
Jersey" cheese to market locally. They infused
their group with the dream of opening a store in
Carlisle or Shippensburg, PA, run by a cooperative
of local farmers who would sell together. A third
group, made up of our orchardist Thom, an
environmental studies professor at Dickinson College
and a handful of students, left that evening
resolved to devote class time and research projects
to strategies for persuading the College dining hall
and food service to use more locally grown and
processed foods.
But Why In
the Church?
Most of
those who hear of our work will quickly agree there
is a need for somebody to do it. But many,
especially among the churches, will continue to
puzzle as to why the churches are involved. Let me
respond to them. I have never been around farmers
who so consistently articulated their faith as
integral to their way of life as during our advocacy
week.
I think they are glad for the faith community
to catch up to them. I said the Sabbath is coming
and the Jubilee is here. I know what that means by
my own biblical scholarship, but I say it because it
was proclaimed by Mary Ann Nolt, a Mennonite, as we
stood in her farm field on a field trip to her
family dairy. In antiquity, the faith of the
community expressed (Leviticus 25) that the land
would "keep a Sabbath to the Lord."
Fields, orchards and vineyards were to be worked and
harvested 6 years then take a Sabbath for all of the
seventh. The Sabbath was a time of rest for the
land, rejuvenation for a tired out economy, for
humans to stop and remember whose name was on the
deed.
The Jubilee was a cancellation of debt,
allowing redistribution of the ownership of land and
economy---concentration in the hands of a powerful
few reformed into broad ownership of the many. In
Jubilee the local connections that sustain a
community would be repaired. Mary Ann said their
farm (Nature’s Sunlight Farm, Newville, PA) needed
a Sabbath when she and her husband Mark moved on to
it 19 years ago. She used words of faith to describe
needs of economy. She said they tried doing it like
the neighbors do, like their family had been doing
for generations, like even the Old Order Amish do.
Milk cows are kept in confinement.
The dairy family
maintains barns and silos, sustains the
debt-leveraging technology of tractors, cultivators,
choppers, blowers and synthetic fertilizers to grow
corn year after year on the same ground, to harvest,
haul, and fill silos to bring the feed to the herd.
They must invest in loaders, lagoons, spreaders,
pesticides, and antibiotics to deal with the waste
and disease of confinement.
They tried it for one
year and, she said, "It didn’t fit." The
soil, the animals, their family was leveraged, weary
and out of rhythm. Now the silos and confinement
barns stand empty. Most of the big technologies are
gone and so is the debt! They planted the corn
ground to pasture. Now they rotate the herd across
the land with movable fencing. The cows graze one
small paddock for a day and then they’re moved.
They eat the grass down just enough to invigorate
its growth. The cows save the farmer the cost of
transporting the feed to them and they spread their
own fertility back over the land. The Nolt’s have
added chickens to their farm economy.
e chickens
are turned into each grass paddock 4 or 5 days after
the cows leave--just enough time for the larvae to
hatch out of the fly eggs in the manure so the
chickens can feed on them. They consume 30% less
manufactured feed in this rotation. What’s more,
where we tend to "dwell all alone" in our
globalized food system these folks are reshaping the
neighborhood. They cooperate with Wilmer and Arlene
Newswanger who own a farm down the road.
Both market
"pasture-raised" chickens but they share
the plucking and processing equipment located at
Wilmer and Arlene’s farm. Mark and Mary Ann market
raw milk--Wilmer and Arlene market cheese. Wilmer
and Arlene have re-linked local agriculture with a
local institution. Last year they sold cheese, 500
pounds of beets and carrots and 1,000 pounds of
potatoes to a local school for mentally and
physically challenged kids. The kids also visit the
farm as a part of their education. So you see there
is a Sabbath settling there.
Discerning
the Body in Our Eating and Drinking
In I
Corinthians, the apostle Paul writes: "When we
eat and drink without discerning the Body, we eat
and drink judgment on ourselves." I am so
grateful to live in a time when people are paying
more and more attention to the impact of our eating
and drinking on the Body of humanity and the Body of
Creation.
All around us we can see the destructive
judgment of the globalizing system, yet, smack dab
in the midst, a different way of structuring our
eating and drinking promises to bless the world. We
are moving from agriculture pandered by corporate
power to agriculture supported by community.
In many
ways the emerging movement called Community
Supported Agriculture (CSA) is the model of our
faith and source of our hope. In recent years a few
thousand CSA farms have appeared in our country.
Typically these CSAs are groups of citizens
organizing to buy fresh produce directly from a
local farm.
They pay the total cost at the beginning
of the season and, in return, receive a box (or
share) of produce weekly for 20-30 weeks and there
is the "value-added" addition of
relationship to a farm family and their land. The
customers share the risk of the season with the
farmers and provide the early cash flow that often
keeps the farm from going into debt to stay in
business. It is the Jubilee in our time.
Our
"Local Foods--Local Farms" week began and
ended with Community Supported Agriculture. Our
first event was held at St. James Lutheran Church (ELCA)
in Gettysburg where more than a dozen church
families have joined a CSA. It is a ministry the
church calls "Congregation Supported
Agriculture" (CSA). Our last event was held in
Hinkletown, PA (just outside of Lancaster) at the
Mennonite Fellowship where several members of
another church witnessed to the CSA they support. It
was exciting to hear how that CSA, whose lands are
completely surrounded now by new housing
developments, can survive because the community is
invested in its future. It takes all of us.
ut it
always takes a few who stick out their necks.
I want to
honor my good friends Jon and Suse Greenstone of St.
James Lutheran Church and Just Community Food
Systems in this regard. Husband and wife and very
different from each other, they both are persons of
persevering faith and organizers extraordinaire. You
would not be hearing this story without them.
I was
a guest in their network. They made me spend a day
with them at the Capitol in Harrisburg, PA lobbying
for the State to budget more money for a program
that allows low-income families and seniors to use
their food coupons at farmer’s markets and CSAs.
They and their colleagues have organized gardens in
baby swimming pools on the apartment roofs of the
poor in Washington, D.C., community gardens in the
ghettos of Harrisburg, and a prison garden near
Gettysburg. In Chambersburg they support an evolving
Farmer’s Market with access to low-income families
who lost yet another grocery store in their
community.
The Greenstone’s are the ones who
pioneered the involvement of church families in the
CSA at their own St. James Lutheran Church. In
solidarity with those they serve, they survive on
next to nothing and the graciousness of their
community. If you still have questions about this
work as prerogative of the churches, follow them
around for a week as I have.
To them these matters
are moral ones. I suspect if you asked them why they
do this they’d tell you they believe in God and
follow Jesus’ teachings, so what else would they
do? Simply. As we traveled place to place in a
little old pickup filled to the top of the canopy
with all kinds of local produce, projection
equipment, hand-outs and my guitar, Jon was always
quoting scripture. His favorite verse is another
from Isaiah: "You shall be called the repairer
of the breach, the restorer of streets to dwell
in." If you’ve been paying attention, all of
this work is about that. One of Jon’s favorite
stories is one he passes on from Alfred Smith, the
manager of a farmer’s market that assembles weekly
in an impoverished neighborhood in DC.
This market
manager says one of the most amazing things about
the market is the dozens and dozens of canes that
people "accidentally" leave there. Jon
wondered for a long time about this strange
phenomena, until he realized the canes were a sign
of "breaches repaired and streets restored in
the inner city." The truth is revealed when you
hear Al Smith’s explanation, "The market has
become such an important gathering place for the
community. Many elders come to it --walking with
their canes.
As they meet old friends they get so
engrossed in the conversation and communion of the
moment that their canes are forgotten and, it seems,
become obsolete!" In a fragmented world farmers
and sacred food can restore the integrity of our
vast communion table and make every supper to be
again the Lord’s Supper . . . discerning justice
and goodness with every bite. Can you hear this and
not be involved?
The Rev.
John Pitney lives and works with his wife, The Rev.
Debbie Pitney (who is the lead minister at First
United Methodist Church, Eugene, Oregon). Their son
Joel is an Environmental Studies major at Dickinson
College, Carlisle, PA, and daughter Erin is studying
to be a math teacher at Linfield College. You can
write to the Rev. John Pitney at:
1243 Melvina
Way, Eugene, OR 97404 or email at: compost@cyberis.net
* John has
two albums of creation restoring and inspiring music
along with accompanying study materials on earth
stewardship and the theology of land, food, and
community building. His two albums are entitled: A
Home Like This and Walk Lightly
On the Earth.
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