Back when the Hopper boys, David, Glenn, and me, were growing up, daddy got us two burros. They were wild and hard to catch and even more difficult to ride. On one particular day my baby brother Glenn decided to take the family John Deere 1020 tractor and chase the burros. He chased them with a disc hitched to the tractor. He was having fun using the John Deere as a horse. We were creative e and named the John Deere, John
There was a place in the pasture where water from the highway and hillside drained. It was damp, not muddy until brother ran across it several times in pursuit of the uncontrollable and untamed burros. John went down in a soft spot. My brother was stuck. Daddy, David, and I went down to help. The first thing we did was unhitch the disc. Our utility vehicle was a 1950 Plymouth Special Deluxe. We used the Plymouth to haul firewood, pull the John, and all the other things people would use on a farm to pull the disc away from the tractor. Then we used the Plymouth to try to unstick the tractor. All we tried was vain attempts of futility.
The more we tried to free the tractor, the dipper it got. Daddy decided to use a power pole to free John. We slide the pole under the front of the rear tires and chained the pole to them. Daddy assured us that when we moved John forward that the pole would raise John up and out to firmer ground. It seemed like a very intellect solution to a dumb attempt to corral wild burros with a tractor.
Being the oldest and more experienced at helping daddy in easier said than done situations, daddy gave specific instruction for freeing John. “Get on John and put it low gear. Idle John down and slowly ease off the cutch. Be careful and stop John when it picks you up and out.”
Sounded like a plan to me. Something happened that would be the start of a long and challenging attempt to lift up John. I did exactly as instructed. When the rear tired started to rotate the pole, it became a giant twelve feet scoop and John was sinking deeper. When we finally surrendered to the gravitation pull of the earth, John was so deep that the seat was below ground level, and I had step up to the surface. The whole episode looked as a giant ice cream scoop in a giant bucket of chocolate ice cream.
For days neighbors would offer to help free sinking John. Neighbors used tractors, log trucks, chains, cables, and the like but John was on a journey to the center of the earth. More rains came and John was an attraction site for everyone traveling County Road 50. People laughed, joked, and made fun of the Hopper Folly. Garden time was coming, and John’s rear went lower, and the front went higher.
Finally, one of our neighbors owned a landscaping business. He said, “When we get some day days, I will help ya’ll get that tractor unstuck.” That day finally arrived and Larry, our neighbor appeared on the crime scene with a large Massey Ferguson tractor. It had a large bucket on the front. Larry had us put a large log chain around John toward the rear. I dug around in the mud to put the chain around John.
Larry put that big Massey Ferguson bucket direct over John and lifted the bucket. His tractor strained, shacked, and finally up came John. I will never forget the sound freeing John. It was a sucking sound similar to the sound a commode makes when flushing. Larry put John on dry ground. Larry said, “You would never get that tractor out by pulling. The earth had suction on it. Pulling it straight breaks the suction.”
Daddy got rid the burros. We never did ride them, but the Hopper boys became very good defensive football players that honed their tackling skills on wild burros, Welch ponies, and later on loose hogs. We never used John to chase livestock after the sinking fiasco.
I have shared this story many times in sermons. When I studied Greek, I learned that Peter walked on the water when Jesus bid him to come. He did the impossible until he lost focus on Jesus and he began to sink. Sink in the Greek, katapontizo means to drown. The less Peter focused on Jesus the more the earth overwhelmed and sucked him down. An experienced fisherman and swimmer was drowning. When Peter called on Jesus, Jesus lifted him having power over the gravitational pull.
My Greek professor explained that katapontizo was the concept of the pulling down which reminded of the Hopper boys and John. The professor reminded the class that we do not sink in sin, sin draws us especially when we take our eyes off Jesus and focus on circumstances
“But when he saw the wind boisterous, he was afraid; and beginning to sink, he cried, saying, Lord, save me.” Matthew 14:30 KJV
At a Sunday dinner after sharing the John Deere illustration, a man approached me and told a related story. He said that from the Tuscaloosa Waffle House he witnessed a dozier preparing the ground for a Shrimp Basket Restaurant. It started rain and the construction company left the dozier on site. It rained for several days and when they tried to retrieve the dozier it was stuck.
As he had breakfast each morning he said that he watched the dozier slowly sink. He said that the last thing he saw was the exhaust pipe sticking up as the dozier journeyed to the center of the earth as I had referred in the sermon. He laughed and said just remember when you eat at the Shrimp Basket there is a large dozier underneath.