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It was
the
mid-1930s
during
the
grim
and
devastating
years
of the
Great
Depression.
Financial
tycoons
who
lost
massive
fortunes
in the
collapse
of the
stock
market
jumped
to
their
deaths
from
the
tops
of ten
story
buildings.
Weary
mothers,
tired
of
hearing
their
children
complaining
of
endless
meals
of
beans
and
bread,
offered
to
iron
three
baskets
of
clothes
for
their
neighbors
for 50
cents.
Husbands
carefully
carved
out
layers
of
thick
cardboard
to
insert
into
the
ragged
and
worn
shoes
they
wore
to
work.
Children
eagerly
consumed
pieces
of
salty
ice
left
behind
on the
streets
after
the
ice
truck
pulled
away.
Our
family
was
not
exempt.
With
seven
children
to
feed,
Mother
and
Daddy
fought
desperately
to
keep
our
heads
above
water
while
reminding
our
family
continually
that
God
had
never
failed
us
yet.
Times
were
hard.
Incredibly
hard.
The
garden
behind
our
home
in
upstate
New
York
had
always
flourished.
Daddy
was a
competent
gardener
and
every
year
mother
stocked
the
shelves
in our
cool
cellar
with a
variety
of
home-canned
vegetables.
Though
very
sickly
with
pernicious
anemia
and
consumed
with
arthritic
pain,
she
used
her
imagination
to
give
us
nutritious,
though
usually
meatless,
meals.
Before
each
meal,
we
bowed
our
heads
as
Daddy
began
the
blessing
as
usual:
“Our
gracious,
loving
heavenly
Father.”
I have
yet to
meet a
more
godly
man.
His
prayer
life
was
legendary,
his
knowledge
of the
Word
was
unparalleled
and
his
love
for
His
heavenly
father
and
all
His
children
knew
no
bounds.
Like
many
wives,
it was
my
mother’s
responsibility
to
make
sure
the
bills
were
paid
each
month.
When
my
father’s
take-home
pay
from
his
job at
the
Lehigh
Valley
Railroad
became
less
and
less
and
reached
a
critical
stage,
Mother
had a
conversation
with
Daddy
that
went
something
like
this:
“You
know,
we’ve
always
tithed
but
now
we’re
unable
to
because
our
bills
are
mounting
higher
and
higher
with
no
relief
in
sight.
We
might
even
lose
the
house
we’re
trying
to buy
because
we’re
way
behind
in our
mortgage
payments.
I
suggest
that
we
plant
half
the
garden
for
our
pastor
and
the
other
half
for
ourselves.
That
way we
could
at
least
give
something
to the
Lord’s
work.”
My
father
very
reluctantly
agreed.
Placing
the
tithe
envelope
in the
collection
plate
every
Sunday
was
something
Daddy
did
with
joy
and
thanksgiving.
It was
a time
of
worship
for
him,
of
sacrifice,
a
means
of
being
obedient
to
God.
Still,
he
knew
the
gravity
of
their
financial
situation
and
faced
the
realities
of it
with
resignation.
The
next
day,
Daddy
used
his
hoe to
draw a
line
down
the
center
of the
garden.
With
twine
and
two
sticks,
he
divided
the
garden
into
two
equal
halves.
Every
evening
after
supper,
Daddy
carefully
hoed
and
watered
every
precious
seedling
in
both
sides
of the
garden,
satisfied
that
he
would
have
an
abundant
crop.
Still,
he
bathed
the
plants
with
prayer
as
they
began
to
gain
height.
However,
as
summer
approached,
Daddy
became
anxious
and
disturbed.
The
family’s
half
of the
garden
began
withering
under
the
blistering
sun
while
the
preacher’s
half
was
thriving.
Desperately,
Daddy
worked
to
save
the
family’s
vegetables,
using
every
tried
and
true
gardening
method
he
could
think
of. As
the
preacher’s
tomatoes
grew
and
multiplied,
our
family’s
tomatoes
slowly
shriveled
and
dropped
to the
ground.
The
vines
of the
preacher’s
green
beans
grew
taller
than
the
wooden
stakes
to
which
they
were
tied,
while
our
family’s’
beans
wilted
away
and
died.
As the
time
for
harvesting
approached,
Mother
and
Daddy
had to
make a
decision.
One
relative
insisted
that
God
would
surely
understand
if our
family
claimed
the
preacher’s
half
of the
garden.
Another
relative
accused
my
parents
of
irrational
thinking,
of
jeopardizing
their
children’s
health.
After
much
prayer,
Mother
and
Daddy
decided
to
honor
their
commitment
to God
and
give
the
preacher
the
vegetables
from
his
half
of the
garden.
The
preacher,
unaware
of my
parent’s
original
commitment,
accepted
bags
of
cucumbers,
which
his
wife
skillfully
packed
into
canning
jars
for
pickles.
Bushels
of
tomatoes
and
green
beans
were
home-canned
by the
preacher’s
wife
for
use
during
the
hard
months
ahead
when
church
offerings
were
unusually
sparse.
Daddy
continued
to
leave
bags
of
beets,
corn,
carrots
and
onions
on the
front
porch
of the
parsonage,
always
grateful
that
he had
at
least
something
to
give
to
God’s
work.
But an
amazing
thing
had
occurred
all
during
this
summer
of
harvesting.
Neighbors
and
friends
began
leaving
boxes
and
bags
of
vegetables
on our
front
porch.
Some
thoughtful
relatives
had
even
canned
the
beans,
tomatoes
and
corn
for
Mother’s
cellar
shelves.
Mother
and
Daddy
were
stunned
but
thankful
for
this
unexpected
generosity
from
so
many
sources
and at
the
end of
the
summer
realized
that
the
cellar
shelves
were
considerably
more
packed
with
canned
vegetables
than
if
Mother
and
Daddy
had
reaped
the
harvest
from
both
sides
of the
garden
for
our
family.
They
confirmed
in
their
hearts
again
that
you
can’t
out-give
God
who
promised
to “do
exceedingly,
abundantly
above
all
that
we can
ask or
think.”
That
fall
and
winter,
as
Mother
and
Daddy
entertained
visiting
preachers
and
returning
missionaries,
they
carried
up
from
the
cellar
dozens
of
canned
vegetables
that
God
had
wonderfully
provided
through
caring
relatives
and
neighbors.
Their
covenant
with
God
had
the
unthinkable
results
of a
failed
family
garden,
but
provided
a
spectacular
opportunity
for
God to
reward
my
parents’
unfailing
faith
and
uncommon
trust
that
He
would
somehow
provide.
And He
did!
by
Mariane
Holbrook
http://www.marianholbrook.com
Mariane
Holbrook
is a
retired
teacher,
an
author
of two
books,
a
musician
and
artist.
She
lives
with
her
husband
on
coastal
North
Carolina.
She
maintains
a
personal
website
http://www.marianholbrook.com
and
welcomes
your
Emails
at
Mariane777@bellsouth.net.



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