I grew up in the best
neighborhood for which a little boy could wish. A creek
ran through the yard perfect for damming up and dipping in
during the hot summers. Acres of woods and cow pastures
began at the edge of our property teeming with every kind
of wildlife and concealing fresh springs, clear creeks,
muddy ponds, limestone caves, muscadine vines and
blackberry bushes. Hine’s Creek, a little cove off the
Tennessee River, was a thirty minute walk—forty-five
minutes when chasing a Labrador pup which inevitably
strayed into the underbrush in pursuit of some rodent
along the way. The best thing about growing up in Cave
Creek, Tennessee were the neighbors. And we had the best
neighbors that I boy could ever want. I didn’t know that
at the time, because all our neighbors were old. A few
times a year my sister and I had some playmates when our
neighbors’ grandkids “came to the farm” to visit.
But usually it was just us and our black Lab, Bert, and
our old neighbors, who taught us what neighboring is all
about.
Neighbors care. Across the street from us lived
Mr. Johnson. He was responsible for getting my folks
interested in religion. We went with him for a time to the
Cave Creek Primitive Baptist Church, and he was
disappointed later when my folks became “Campbellites.”
When I was twelve, I borrowed a sickle from him to mow the
creek bank. He took me out to his tool shed and found the
device along with a file. He gave me lessons on how to
sharpen the blade, how to hold and swing the implement,
and completed the tutorial by showing me the scar where
he’d once clipped his hand. He patted my head and told
me to keep the sickle and the file both. Mr. Johnson has
long since passed, but I still have the tools he gave me.
Neighbors share. The widow, Mrs. White, was Mr.
Johnson’s sister, and lived next door to us. I used to
pick green beans for her and would sit on her front porch
swing in the evening to help her string them. She had been
the President of the Cave Creek Ladies’ Club for as long
as anyone knew. She told me stories about how her father,
the original Mr. Johnson, brought them to Cave Creek in a
horse and buggy and built their farm including the big
barn just across the street where the old buggy was still
housed. When the apples began to fall in her yard, I’d
fight yellow jackets, birds, and worms to fill several
five-gallon buckets for her. The next day she’d call for
me to “fetch a poke” and come “tote” two pies back
to the house—one for me and one for my dad. I never eat
an apple pie, that I don’t smile and think about Mrs.
White.
Neighbors are nearby. Mrs. Harvey, another widow,
lived two houses up in the two story log cabin that her
husband had built when they married. Her place reminded me
of the little nursery rhyme “The House That Jack
Built”—there wasn’t a level place in the whole
house. From floor to ceiling in every room were shelves
and stacks of books—including every Reader’s Digest
abridged anthology ever published. Mrs. Harvey had taught
school in the two room school house that was now preserved
by the Cave Creek Ladies’ Club’s regular fund-raisers.
Mowing grass for Mrs. Harvey was a full day affair—not
so much for the work, but for the pay. At lunchtime, she
cooked for the two of us enough food for five. Too full to
work without getting ill, we’d sit in the front porch
swing and watch the creek and talk about books and
learning. I always went home with an armful of recommended
reading. I don’t go to the library or the bookstore, two
of my favorite places, without thinking of Mrs. Harvey.
Jesus taught what it means to be a neighbor in his story
of the neighborly Samaritan (). The Samaritan was on a
journey, but when he saw the injured Jew, he felt
compassion. He cared. The priest and the Levite saw the
man like neighbors do through their fences or shades, but
the Samaritan cared when he saw him. The Samaritan came to
the injured man, anointed and bandaged his wounds, carried
him on his beast to the inn, cared for him and paid for
his lodging. The Samaritan shared. The priest and Levite,
like many neighbors today, only shared the same street as
the injured Jew while the Samaritan shared himself. Jews
typically hated Samaritans. But, the Samaritan cared for
and shared with his enemy because he came near enough to
see that his enemy could hurt just like him. The priest
and Levite, fellow Jews, “passed by on the other
side.” They came close to their brother, but the
Samaritan came near. Be a neighbor to somebody this week.
Don’t just drive by, stop and visit. Don’t just share
the pew or share the street, share yourself. Don’t just
look and wave, care enough to ask how they are. Don’t
just come close, come near. That’s what being a neighbor
is all about.


