AlO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 20, 1999 l^nuss OPINION The FFA Theme Making the Connection The future is only u tomorrow away, and we need leaders to meet the challenges rapidly transforming our world Grown from the strong roots of American agriculture, an organization is preparing today's students with the Icnowl edge and skills to provide this leadership These are the young men and women of the FFA In schools across the nation, agricultural education and the FFA are connecting students to their communities Their contributions are valued by government and businesses that recognize the importance of investing well By working with community leaders, members embrace their civic duty and become active citizens Becoming a leader takes strong personal commitment Members make the connection between education, hard work and a strong entrepreneurial spirit FFA programs and activities reveal that education is more than homework and classes, and include competitive events that provide recognition lor members who want to lest their talents and strengthen their skills America leads the world in agricultural production and technology The global market is full of opportunity FFA con nects members to the limitless possibilities by equipping them with a larger understanding of the world around them FFA has made a commitment to provide a stepping stone to the diverse and exciting careers awaiting our members The spirit of "the blue and gold" reaches out in all directions FFA members stretch across the nation from the smallest of towns to the largest af cities, yet they are still connected Through agricultural education and FFA, all are developing their potential for premier leadership, personal growth and career success They are truly "Making the Connection" Saturday, February 20 Lancaster County 4-H Benefit Auction, Farm and Home Center. Dauphin County 4-H Banquet, Dauphin County Ag and Natur al Resources Center, Dauphin. Western Pa. Gardening and Land scaping Symposium, Pitts burgh Civic Garden Center. Crop Management School, Thompson’s Daily Bar, Clarks Summit. Beginning Beekeeper Seminar, Leslie Firth Learning Center, Mercer, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Careers In Ag Night, York County 4-H Center, 6:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m. Annual Lambing School, Wyom ing County Sheep and Wool Producers Association, PDA Building, Tunkhannock, 9:30 a.m.-noon. Beekeeping Short Course, S&S Apiaries, Little Creek, Del., Neb., thru Feb. 26. Game Bird Production and Man agement of Hunting Preserves, Nittany Lion Inn and Penn State Winter Meeting, Franklin County extension office, 7:30 u m <■ ❖ Farm Calendar ❖ p.m.-9:30 p.m. USDA’s 75th Ag Outlook Forum, Crystal Gateway Marriott Hotel, Arlington, Va., thru Feb. 23. Pesticide Applicator Recertifica tion Meeting, Southern Fulton High School, Warfordsburg, 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Pork Workshop, Farm and Home ■BSE9MOBSH Tri-State Conservation Tillage Conference, Radisson Hotel, West Middlesex. • Solanco Young Farmers meeting. Global Positioning, Solanco High School, 7:30 p.m. Schuylkill County Regional Veg etable Meeting, Ag Center, Pottsvillc, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Feeder School, Green Hill Sewing Club, Harrisonville, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Bucks County Conservation and pesticide update meetings, Neshaminy Manor Center, Doylestown, also March 2. Beef Producers Meeting, Olter bein United Methodist Church, Sunbury, 7 p.m.-8:45 p.m. Public Hearing by House Agricul ture and Rural Affairs Commit tee on Northeast Dairy Com pact, Room 60, East Wing of Mid-Atlantic Dairy Management Conference, Radisson Penn To Think Safety Farming has the undesirable distinction of being the most haz ardous occupation in the United States, reports Leon Resslcr, Lan caster County Extension Agricul tural Environment Agent. Now is a good time to review your equipment and regular routines to spot safety lapses. Do not wait until tragedy strikes' Take the time now to re place any missing guards on PTO shafts or covers on augers. Check all fire extinguishers on the farm to make sure they are in working order. If you do not have any, pur chase several for important loca tions on the farm. Remove any piles of flamma ble trash that may have accumu lated. Make sure all crop protec tion chemicals are stored away from food and feed and kept under lock and key at all times. Any hazardous sanitizing products should be stored out of reach of children. To Make Tractors Safe Harris, Camp Hill, thru Feb. 25. Pa, Potato Growers Cooperative Annual Meeting, Nittany Lion Inn, Penn State University Park, thru Feb. 25. Vegetable growers meeting, Mey ers Family Restaurant, Quaker town, 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Huntingdon County Dairy Day, Alexandria Fire Hall, Alexan- Pa. Ag In the 21st Century 1999 Conference, Holiday Inn Har risburg East, Harrisburg, thru Feb. 26. Sheep Production, Wesley Grange, Barkeyville, 7 p.m. Kutztown Produce Auction Annu al Growers Meeting, Fleetwood Grange, 10:30 a.m.-3:45 p.m. N.Y. Farm Show, N.Y. State Fair grounds, Syracuse, N.Y., thru Feb. 27. Corn Roundtable Discussion, Hill top Restaurant, Shade Gap, 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. York County Beekeepers Meeting, York extension office, 7 p.tn. Commercial Tree Fruit Growers Meeting, Carriage Corner Restaurant, Route 45, east side of Mifflinburg, 9 a.m.-3:30 Bucks County extension annual banquet, St Matthews Luthe ran Church, 6:30 p.m. Governor’s Conference on Dela ware Ag, Sheraton Inn, Dover, Del. 2nd Annual Northwest Grazing Conference, Clarion Holiday Inn, 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. * Feeder School, Jim Rider Farm, Woodlot Owners Workshop, (Turn to Page A 35) Rollovers and runovers account for a majority of fatalities on farms each year, according to Leon Ressler, Lancaster County Exten sion Agricultural Environment Agent. With this m mind, now is a good time to install ROPS de vices on any tractors lacking them. When operating a tractor make sure you always wear the seat belt. Also, decide now to adopt a firm policy of no riders on any tractor at any time. Check to make sure your lights are working on all tractors. Make sure all im plements and tractors have an or ange triangular slow moving ve hicle sign easily seen by anyone overtaking the equipment. To Protect Your Hearing Power equipment may be re sponsible for reducing the hearing of many farmers and their family members. Agricultural workers are definitely at risk, many at high risk tor noise exposure, according to Dr. Chris Etcher, Ohio State RECONCILED and RECONCILING February 21,1999 Background Scripture: II Corinthians 5:11-21 Devotional Reading I Peter 2:18-25 I have been reading “plow ing my way through” would be a more apt description a little 177-page paperback book by the Nobel Prize-winning physicist, Steven Weinberg. It is entitled The First Three Minutes: A Modern View of the Origin of the Uni verse. It is essentially a recon struction of the first three minutes of the creation. For me, it is fas cinating but very tough going; there’s so much that I do not un derstand. I’m only up to the first 1.09 seconds after the “Big Bang." This book is helping me to ap prehend, if not comprehend, the sheer enormity and wonder of God’s creation (that’s me speak ing, not Weinberg). Once again I have been made to realize that my God is too small my concept of God, that is. This glimpse of God the Creator, has staggered my imagination and the suggestion that all this is the product of mere chance and not design (and a De signer) is utterly unthinkable. GOD IN A TREE Yet, regardless of how much and how often I find the Creator revealed in his creation, I am fre quently reminded that nature speaks only of the majestic power and design of God. Commenting upon this passage, the late Halford E. Luccock quotes Randall Ste wart’s observation that “The romantic poet is forever tunning the risk of mistaking God for a tree,” and then adds, “In Paul there was no risk of ‘mistaking God for a tree.’ God was in Christ" Nature may have spoken to Paul of God, but Christ spoke to him more deeply and more fully. The great mystery, the sublime reality is not only that God makes a tree, but that in Jesus of Nazar eth he was “reconciling the world to himself." Magnificent as is the sheer creation of the cosmos, without the love made manifest in Christ the universe would be no thing but an inhospitable, imper sonal, even hostile penitentiary for Agricultural Engineer. He believes that ear plugs should be part of the dress of every person operating equipment. Normal speech is in the range of 50 to 60 decibels. The thresh old for pain is 140 decibels. Most farm tractors without a soundproof cab emit noise at 100 to 110 deci bels. Soundproof cabs reduce the level to 85 to 90 decibels O.S.H.A. recommendations limit exposure to 90 decibels tor an eight hour work day. Hearing loss is related not only to the decibel level of the sound but also to the pitch and length of time a person is exposed to it. Farmers should wear hearing protection at all times when oper ating equipment because there will be times the noise level will ex ceed what is safe for the ear to hear. Feather Prof, 's Footnote "Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you fail to focus on your goals." the human race. So, even more im portant than the God who creates this unimaginable universe is the God who loves bis creatures so much that he becomes incarnate in the man Jesus to effect our recon ciliation with him. Somewhere I read that philoso pher Henry Thoreau was once asked by his mother whether he had made his peace with God and he replied, “Made my peace? I didn't know we were at war!” It is an amusing answer but it glibly glosses over a persistent fact: all of us at times, maybe all the time, in some way or ways, whether we are aware or not, are “at war” with God. No matter how close we may feel in our relationship with God, we all violate or adulterate that re lationship from time to time. Even the best of his children must disap point the Father. UNLESS, GOD... So reconciliation with God is our greatest need, but it’s too big a job for us to be able to achieve it unless God takes the initiative. And that is what Paul is saying: “God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself." There is no bet ter nor briefer statement of the gospel in a nutshell than that Neither is there a more concise and yet comprehensive statement of the gospel's meaning for each of us personally: “So we are am bassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us” (5:20). If we are to be reconciled with God we must in turn take up his minis try of reconciliation. We don’t have to preach sermons, teach les sons or stand on street comers to make public witness. Actually, we don’t have to say much of any thing so long as we let God be in us reconciling others to himself and to each other. Wherever we arc or go in the world we can be ambassadors for Christ, working for reconciliation in a broken, divided world. We do not have to bring nations together or personally reconcile the races and ethnic groups. But we can help people to be reconciled through the love of God in Christ that shines through us. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 -by Lancaster Farming. Inc. A Steinman Enteipnse William J. Burgess General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Managing Editor Copyright 1999 by Lancaster Farming