It was an ordinary day. Reading a story titled "The Fix-It Man! Sub-head was "Healing a broken farmhouse. So...follow along with me... Near our farmhouse in Southern Indiana sits a home built in the early 1900s. Until recently, an elderly woman lived there before passing away. A for-sale sign went up in the yard; it was quickly purchased and then just as quickly torn down and replaced with a new house with none of the character of the old one. I have a bad habit of telling people what I think whether or not they want to hear it, so when I saw the new owner in the hardware store, I mentioned my disappointment in seeing the old house torn down. "It's a lot easier finding someone who'll build you a new house than finding someone willing to fix up an old one," he told me. In one sentence, he summerized the biggest problem in America today. Well, maybe not the biggest, but certainly in the top five. No one knows how to fix things anymore, whether it's a house, a car, or Congress. So you can imagine my delight when my wife and I purchased her family farm-house 13 years ago and, against all counsel, decided to restore it rather than tear it down. That brought us into the orbit of Ross Hutcheon, perhaps the busiest man in America who can fix anything. Ross and I met at the farmhouse in October of 2011, a carpenter with leather skin and a pastor with soft hands, standing in the front yard inspecting the sagging lines of the house, cobbled together by my wife's grandfather, a farmer, in 1913. Ross circled the house, then went inside, poking, examining, frowning. "Can it be fixed?" I asked. "Anything can be fixed," he said. That was the can-do attitude I was hoping to find, so I asked him when he could start. "Next week," he said, shaking my hand, sandpaper meeting silk. I agreed to meet Ross every Friday at the farmhouse to pay him for that week's labor and materials. It soon became my favorite day of the week, rising before sunrise and driving a hundred miles south to witness that week's progress and pass out the money I had saved for my retirement, but then retirement is overrated. Ask anyone who's retired whether they'ed prefer a rebuilt farmhouse on 80 acres or more money, and if they'd have half a brain, they'll pic the farmhouse everytime. As my friends became aware of the project, they offered advice: get everything in writing, demand receipts, buy extra liability insurance, and make sure a lawyer looks over the contract, which wasn't possible since I didn't have a contract or anything else in writing, or anything signed....or a lawyer, for the matter. Each Friday morning, Ross told me what I owned him, it always seemed perfectly reasonable, and I wrote him a check. Six months later, the crooked had been set straight, the weak made strong, and the worn-out renewed. Ross and I hail from the same generation, when young people were told that if they didn't go to college their lives would end in disaster. Thank God Ross paid no attention to those gloomy predictions and decided instead to be useful. I, on the other hand, attended college for ten years, but still can't look at a roof and calculate its pitch and rafter lengths in my head. Nor can I do it on paper, or with a calculator for that matter, but Ross can in five seconds and be spot on every time. It just goes to show you the enduring usefulness of a master's degree in theology.
Mr. Philip Gulley, the author of this story, is a Quaker pastor and author of 22 books, including the "Harmony and Hope" series, featuring Sam Gardner. Perhaps you may have read a few of them. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
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