The Bungee Cord
Hello,
My dog, McMahon, is an aging Gordon Setter. We have had him about nine years, and most often he has brought delight to our lives. Always wagging his tail and glad to see us when we get home. “Protecting” us from strangers who drive up our drive as we live out in the country. Snuggling with us on the couch. Other than his incessant wanting inside and then out, he’s been a great dog.
We installed an underground fence soon after we got him, and so he is well trained to stay around our house. So well trained, we usually do not even put his shock collar on anymore. So, it was a couple of weeks ago as my wife and I were working around the house and realized that we hadn’t seen him in a while. After a number of calls and whistles, he still did not appear. We feared that he may have spotted a deer or rabbit and took off after it, his shock collar not on. Kate went north, and I went south looking for him. Up and down hills, around pastures and woods, I trudged calling his name. Every once in a while, I would hear a dog barking in the distance, and I followed the barking thinking that McMahon had disturbed another dog. I must have walked a couple of miles looking for him, and as I walked, I feared that I might not ever find him. Setters are known to find a scent, follow it, and then get lost. My hunt had exhausted me. As I was circling back to my house, I started contemplating life without him, and it made me very sad. He’s been my buddy.
When I got back home and walked in the door, there he was, tail wagging delighted to see me. Of course, I was glad to see him, but I was too weary to get very excited. Kate had found him. Turns out that Kate had opened the fence for the chickens so they could roam around. Unlike my previous Gordon Setter, Duncan, McMahon does not harm the chickens. He stalks them, but that is where it ends.
As I said, Kate went north, which passed our chicken coop, which is off the ground and about the size of a doghouse, and just out of a whim, she opened up the doors to the coop, and guess who was there. McMahon. He had scooted his way up the ramp into the coop, but he couldn’t figure out how to scoot his way out. Apparently, he was in search of “chicken treats” which he likes to lick up and snack on, and he had found a treasure trove in the coop.
I tell you of this adventure because yesterday was Good Shepherd Sunday, the Sunday of the year when all of the Bible readings set our ears onto Jesus’ shepherding care (Psalm 23, John 10). And one of the stories in the Bible comes from Matthew 18 where Jesus says the Kingdom of Heaven is like a shepherd who has lost one sheep, and so he goes on a mission to find it, a mission that he will not end until the sheep is found. And when the sheep is found, the shepherd carries the sheep back to the flock in his arms, thrilled that he has found his beloved sheep. So thrilled that he throws a party!
I got a new understanding of the extent of the thrill that Jesus was speaking of when the shepherd found his wandering sheep after my search for McMahon. I know that I was excited to have McMahon back, but my excitement did not match my weariness. No party for McMahon! When I consider how often and how far I have wandered off from the Good Shepherd’s care and the exhaustion and frustration that Jesus must feel each time I wander, it is amazing to me that I am of that much value that Jesus throws a party in the Kingdom of Heaven when he has found me and gathered me back in his arms. No party for McMahon….but a party that rattles the Kingdom of Heaven for me! Amazing!
Know that that same party is thrown for you, too. You mean that much to the Good Shepherd, Jesus!
Have a great week.
God’s grace and peace, (ggap)
Pastor Jerry Nuernberger