Baby calves were kept warm in this place of solitude from the rip-roarin' storms and frigid winters. They were kept alive as they struggled for breath and yet others breathed their last in that very same place.
That red barn was an escape for city folk. It was a playground for us as kids, for the nieces and nephews that would follow, and for the past 10 years, my own 3 sons each and every summer as they met up with their Carlson cousins. It housed countless sleepovers on the haybales that lined the loft for a number of crazy GLBC counselors & staff, for friends & family, etc. It was the fort-building mansion kids can only dream of.
It was the place my older brother told me of Jesus' saving grace. The place I committed my life to Christ at the ripe old age of 6. The picture I have of me propped up on a bale next to the upper door where the elevator crept in a few feet, looking up at him with a bale in his hand as he stacked them one after another with his tattered blue jeans and loving smile is vividly burned in my mind.
It was the centerpiece of the classic view that beheld nearly every grandkids' eyes as they stood watching, all of 3-feet tall, from that porch door window, their Grandpa disappear behind the barn's thick, solid white door.
Selfishly, it's hard not to want more 'barn time' for our own three sons. The others' had their turn...our boys' was just beginning! But even as they shed tears over the loss of the sacred place in which memories have already been stowed away with their cousins/uncles/aunts/grandma/grandpa, it's those very memories that will usher them into the new ones that lie in wait.
watching a classic MN thunderstorm coming rollin in over the barn! |
These boys :) |
To take away this iconic landmark takes away the landscape of home we've known since the beginning.
my Dad moving the bobcat with the tractor |
my brother Keith running with a bucket of water to cool the hot seat |
Still there into the night hours |
the view from 'behind' |
There really are no words... |
The morning after.... |
The door may be gone but God's truth will remain to be the message of the Carlson heritage! |