Box Stove After a while things deteriorate. If it wasn't for people, our goods and possessions wear away, rust and succumb to the elements. Without use things fall apart faster from the elements. It's all temporary and humankind makes a difference, by building, maintaining and using. I'm thinking of a wood stove in a small church basement room. The room is used for meetings, prayer and Sunday school. Every day the room is used, in winter, someone builds a fire in the stove to heat the room. People warm their hands or huddle around on really cold days. The stove is made out of sheet metal. It is a box stove, rectangular shaped, twenty inches long and half that on each side. It stands on long slender legs, bolted to the floor through tile placed when the stove was first installed. There is an elderly gentleman who makes the stoves. Sheet metal stoves rust and wear out after a few years and the gentleman always makes a new one when the old one starts to show wear. He replaces the stove and inspects and patches the stove pipe that goes out through the wall through a sheet metal baffle the man also built. When he replaces it, the new stove is just like the old one, except maybe a latch or door mechanism is a little different, but it's the same size and always fits in the same place as the old one. The man who makes the stove does other things for the church but is fulfilled when he makes the stove and it provides heat to his fellow members of the church community. I just wonder sometimes, how long things would last if people weren't around to maintain or use them. It's an important purpose for people, that may transcend routine and other menial responsibilties. kb kbushnel.sdf-us.org/contact.html