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©1990 Richard Cartwright Austin
Affirming the covenant requires commitments in three areas: ecological
responsibility, economic discipline, and sabbath observance. Members must promise
to respect the integrity of the land and the living community upon it including
both wild and domesticated animals, and the natural systems that support life.
They affirm that the well-being of the Covenant Community depends upon a healthy
environment, and they pledge efforts to improve the quality of their land. This
commitment to ecological welfare is institutionalized in landholding partnerships
with the Covenant Community Trust, which acts as a trustee for natural life.
Economic discipline takes three specific forms. First, members pledge to use the
technologies approved by their neighborhood covenant council in return for
neighborly assistance. This is the heart of the matter. Homesteading and
subsistence living require a great deal of neighborly cooperation, yet neighbors
can help each other efficiently only if their productive endeavors complement
each other and, more particularly, if their technologies are compatable. The
amazing efficiency of Amish neighborly assistance, for example, depends upon
rigorous technological discipline so that one farmer may substitute his equipment
for another and practice common skills with confidence. Forty men can erect a
barn in a day because the design and building techniques do not vary from one
barn to another or one year to the next. In these covenant neighborhoods,
however, the intention is not to build a traditionalist society like the Amish
but rather innovative communities, so the efficiency of neighborly assistance is
somewhat less. Nevertheless, neighbors must harmonize their technologies if they
are to be useful to each other.
Of the four original neighborhood communities, one decided to farm with horses
rather than tractors although, unlike the Amish, they use electric power for many
chores, and some farmers own a car or pickup truck. Farmers can support each
other with compatible equipment, while the community includes a mechanic, an
electrician, and a blacksmith. Over the years another neighborhood group has
collectively acquired a fine tractor and a full range of tillage and harvesting
equipment that are housed in an old garage in their village. One member works
full time to maintain this equipment, while another operates it on the community
farms. In one community, nearly half the families needed new homes and agreed
upon a standard design so that materials could be prepared or purchased at lower
cost and cooperative work could proceed more efficiently.
Neighborhood covenant groups meet every Sunday evening to plan cooprative
activities for the week. While members are free to undertake novel projects on
their own, the covenant standard is that where neighbors expect help from one
another they shall agree on common technologies and procedures so that the
assistance may be given efficiently, even in emergency situations.
The second element of economic discipline is a common wage-scale. Barter and
neighborly helpfulness are encouraged to reduce the need for cash income to pay
wages, and this contributes to the stability of each homestead. Nevertheless
there are occasions when wages must be paid, and there are services for which
salaries are required. The Covenant Community recognizes that a variety of
vocations are needed in a healthy society - whether farming, medicine, teaching,
carpentry, art, or preaching - and that those who practice any useful vocation are
entitled to comparable dignity. Therefore it determined to make all professional
wages the same. When one covenant member provides a skilled service to another in
return for a wage, that wage is $15 an hour. Unskilled and apprentice labor is
paid at the rate of $5 an hour. People are free to work outside the community
without wage restrictions. However, now that Mercy and Central colleges are fully
within the covenant community, professors, secretaries, and maintenance personnel
all receive $15 an hour. Doctors and nurses at the new Covenant Clinic are paid
the same. There has been no shortage of applicants for these positions up to now,
for many people feel that the quality of life here provides an added reward.
The third aspect of economic discipline is scrip, a nominal paper currency that
circulates among community members. A member must accept this paper currency,
printed by the community, for one-fourth of the value of financial transactions
with another member, and may accept it for more. This discipline is designed to
stimulate trade within the community and reduce the temptation to purchase
bargains from outside suppliers. If a quarter of my college teaching salary comes
in scrip, I am sure to spend that portion within the community. If my neighbor
who farms with horses and takes care of his land can sell me corn for $4 a
bushel, $3 in cash and $1 in scrip, I will not be tempted to buy agribusiness
corn at $3.50, in cash. As the community grows, the scrip system provides an
incentive for the development of new crops, services, products, and businesses in
the area.
Established merchants in Redemption County were irate when the covenant community
introduced the scrip system, for they were sure it would deprive them of a share
in the promised growth local trade. When a few tried accepting the scrip,
however, they found they could use it in partial payment for products and
services from covenant members who were willing to take scrip even though not
obligated to do so in this instance. Merchants became more resourceful in buying
from the local community as well as marketing to it. As the Covenant Community
has expanded, most county merchants have come to accept scrip for some portion of
payment because it brings them trade. Business is growing.
The third covenant commitment, sabbath observance, is not designed to compel
religious worship but rather to limit power and greed. Most participants in the
covenant are religious, but it is not a specifically Christian community and
there are no religious requirements for membership. The sabbath pledge is a
promise to rest and allow others rest, to refrain from long-term debt, and to
forgive one¥s debtors. Homesteaders pledge not to turn their difficult work into
perpetual drudgery nor to impose drudgery upon family members, draft animals, or
the land itself. They will rest every seventh day and allow others that rest.
This pledge builds community, for neighbors need confidence that on one day each
week they will not be needed for production assistance, and societies need
collective rhythms of relaxation so that cultural and recreational events may be
scheduled. Since the Covenant Community defines its sabbath from sundown on
Saturday to sundown on Sunday, hardly a Saturday evening passes without a
community supper, dance, musicale, play, or some other social activity, while
sandlot baseball thrives on Sunday afternoons. Even if you are poor and
tired - indeed, especially then! - you need recreation.
This pledge embraces "sabbatical" disciplines as well, including the biblical
ethics that inhibit long-term debt. Indeed, the most important part of the whole
scheme may be placing people on the land without debt and then giving them
incentives not to borrow. Debt ties families to the money economy and forces
farmers to specialize in those crops that will satisfy their creditors rather
than meet their own needs and the needs of their neighbors. Debt erodes personal
freedom and damages the social fabric of a face-to-face community. Therefore
Covenant Community members must promise not to mortgage their land or otherwise
borrow money - even from institutions outside the community - for terms longer than
six years, and that every seventh year they will remain debt free. The community
acknowledges that brief borrowings may be necessary, but long-term debt forces
people into drudgery and threatens the homestead. Likewise, all covenanters must
forgive debts to other members that run to the seventh year, for a community
cannot flourish where some people hold others to perpetual debt.
The biblical injunction to let the land lie fallow every seventh year is given a
more imaginative, less literal application. The Covenant Community Trust tries to
insure that the biotic life and fertility of agricultural land are sustained and,
if possible, improved. In addition the trust insists that one seventh of every
farm be permanently maintained in a predominantly wild condition with good
habitat for birds and other wildlife. This acreage can include forests from which
wood is harvested occasionally, stream banks and bogs where native plants are
allowed to flourish, and even wild fencerows.
Sabbatical also embraces the covenant members themselves. While nobody is forced
to leave their farm or their job every seventh year, and no funds are available
for subsidized sabbaticals, the community nevertheless encourages people to take
a break from vocational routines every seventh year. If some have the means to
travel, their neighbors will watch the homestead, care for their livestock, or
temporarily rent their fields. Other people trade jobs on sabbatical, so farmers
and craftspeople may help teach at one of the colleges while faculty get
practical exprience in the field. Some spend the year working outside the
community, while a growing number spend part of their sabbatical on tour
interpeting the Redemption County experience to people in other parts of the
country. The Covenant Community encourages sabbatical because those who work hard
need both rest and new experiences if they are to continue growing as healthy and
productive persons.
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