In a world obsessed with perfection—polished homes, curated Instagram feeds, and streamlined workflows—it’s easy to assume that cleanliness and control are signs of success.
But what if the mess we’re working so hard to eliminate is actually evidence that life is being fully lived?
“Where there are no oxen, the manger is clean, but abundant crops come by the strength of the ox.” - Proverbs 14:4
If you want a perfectly clean barn, it’s easy: just don’t have any animals.
But the path to abundance is often paved with hay, hoof prints, and a little chaos. The question isn’t how clean your life looks, but how much fruit it’s producing.
The Ox Is Strong—but Messy
An ox is a powerful, valuable asset on a farm—capable of pulling loads, plowing fields, and producing far more than a farmer could alone.
But it also eats, smells, tramples hay, and leaves cow patties everywhere.
The metaphor is simple but potent: abundance comes with a cost.
In our lives, the ox might be a new project, a big idea, or even a child.
These blessings bring growth and momentum, but they also require space, resources, and grace for the mess they leave in their wake.
If we’re not willing to tolerate the droppings, we may never see the harvest.
Mess Is a Sign of Life Well-Lived
I like a clean, tidy house as much as anyone. (My sisters might tell you “a bit more than most.” 😅)
But magazine-spread, Instagram-worthy houses are sterile, and sterility is the hallmark of museums, not homes.
A home full of laundry, dishes, and crumbs means life is in motion.
The author of one of my favorite books, Hands on Home, puts this beautifully: mess doesn’t mean failure—it means people are living, loving, and creating.
Dirty dishes in the sink means your family is fed and healthy.
A mountain of laundry means kids are playing and growing and experimenting.
Mud in the entryway means friends visiting to share life with you.
True warmth, connection, and creativity are rarely tidy.
Why It’s Worth It: The Hundredfold Return
Any of these sound familiar?
- You have to spend money to make money.
- Nothing ventured, nothing gained.
- You can’t make an omelet without breaking a few eggs.
- You reap what you sow.
- No pain, no gain.
- Rome wasn’t built in a day.
- Good things take time.
- You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.
- Fortune favors the bold.
- Don’t expect champagne results on a beer budget.
- You can’t win if you don’t play.
Whether it’s launching a business, raising children, pursuing a calling, or tending to a relationship, the return on investment can be a hundredfold—but only if we can be okay with the mess.
Hiring help costs money.
Starting a project takes time.
Letting your home look “lived in” may feel like you’re out of control.
But like scattering seed across a field, these messy efforts multiply. What looks like chaos today might be the foundation of next year’s abundance.
Purpose, Not Perfect
It’s time to let go of the idea that things must be polished before they’re valid.
The "clean barn" mindset—where everything looks good but nothing is growing—keeps us stuck in fear and performance.
Shifting to a “fruitful field” mindset frees us to prioritize real impact.
That might mean shipping good-enough work, announcing to guests that you haven’t vacuumed the house (and you don’t care if they judge you), and letting your dining table be covered in science projects. For days.
Perfection paralyzes.
Purpose produces.
It’s time to measure success by growth and impact, not aesthetics or appearances.
Let the Ox Work
The ox isn’t a burden—it’s the blessing that brings the harvest.
Real life happens in the overflowing, gritty, glorious places where strength is being spent and seeds are being sown.
So let the ox do its work.
Let there be hay and cow patties and laughter and noise.
Because in the end, those are the signs that life is being lived—and fruit is on the way.

