You have probably heard the saying before: A clean house is a sign of a
wasted life. Whatever else the phrase means, it expresses some of the
frustration and the sense of futility that attends life in this world. I thought
of that saying when I spotted this proverb: “Where there are no oxen, the manger
is clean, but abundant crops come by the strength of the ox” (Proverbs 14:4). A
little bit of research shows that commentators are divided on exactly what it
means, but I think one of the explanations rises to the top.
According to this explanation, the proverb is about the messiness of a life
well-lived. Tremper Longman says the moral is that “a productive life is a
messy life.”
I love productivity. At least, I love productivity when it is properly
defined—as effectively stewarding your gifts, talents, time, energy, and
enthusiasm for the good of others and the glory of God. By this definition, each
one of us, no matter our vocation, ought to pursue productivity with all the
vigor we can muster. And if you do that, it is inevitable that along the way you
will accumulate some mess. You cannot focus your time, attention, gifts, energy,
and enthusiasm toward noble goals while still keeping every corner of life
perfectly tidy.
The pastor’s desk will at times be crammed with books and papers. The baker’s
counter will sometimes overflow with pots and pans and flour and sugar. The
mechanics’s hands will be stained with grease and his shop will need a daily
once-over with the power washer. And the home—the home will at times be messy
and cluttered and downright embarrassing.
Longman says, “One desires a neat and tidy life, just as the ideal stall
would be clean. However, a clean stall by the nature of things would mean an
empty stall since oxen do not have to be in a stall long before it is messy.
However, without oxen there is no productivity.”
We could as easily say that one desires a neat and tidy house, just as the
ideal stall would be clean. However, a clean house by the nature of things might
just mean an empty house since children and husbands and houseguests and those
neighborhood kids do not have to be in the house long before it is agonizingly
messy. However, without all of those people there is no productivity—no true,
biblical productivity—, no children to care for, no friends to counsel, no
hospitality to extend.
Like so much else in this life, you cannot have it all. You cannot have
perfect order and perfect productivity. You cannot have a home that is warm and
full and inviting, you cannot have every child fed and cared for, while also
having every dish done and every sock laundered. You just can’t. Of course this
isn’t to excuse slovenliness or laziness. But you need to understand what Derek
Kidner says, that “Orderliness can reach the point of sterility. This proverb is
[a plea for] the readiness to accept upheaval, and a mess to clear up, as the
price of growth.” Growth, or productivity, as the case may be. Is a clean house
proof of a wasted life? Not at all. But a tidy house isn’t necessarily evidence
of a well-lived life.
If you do the things God tells you to do, messes will inevitably follow. But
take heart: According to the wisest man who ever lived, these messes are not
proof of a wasted life, but of a productive one.
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