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God Saves Humans And Animals

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Your steadfast love, O Lord, extends to the heavens, your faithfulness to the clouds. Your righteousness is like the mountains of God; your judgments are like the great deep; man and beast you save, O Lord. (vv. 5-6)

It happened twenty years ago a few days after the death of Eli, our beloved West Highland Terrier. We were missing him fiercely as we were putting away dog toys and discovering hidden chewy bones. My wife, Jo, remembers:

“I was at the kitchen sink, and when I turned to the side to place something on the counter, I saw white behind me out of the corner of my eye. But when I turned around there was nothing there, so I turned back to the sink. Then I felt a little nudge on the back of my leg, and I knew Eli had come back to visit. There were several more times that I got just that small glimpse of white and knew he was there. He loved his Mama!”

Was this just wishful thinking; the imagination of a grieving doggie mama?  Or is it something that is common with other bereaved dog lovers? I decided to ask. 

I posted these two questions in several Facebook groups recently under the heading, “Seeking Mystical Dog Stories:” 

1) Have you had a mystical experience that involved a beloved dog? 

2) Did it occur while your dog was alive, or after death?

I was amazed at the number of impassioned responses. Karen Polzin, of Chippewa Falls, WI wrote, “Yup, our Golden Retriever, Lance, came and barked at me at 3:00AM for three days in a row, I would sleepily get up to let him out and then remember he was gone.”

Sara Hyde Blum, Lancaster, WI: "I currently have a dog that from time to time sits in front my couch and looks up and wags her tail and moves her head like she's watching someone. This started a month after my brother died."

Laura Johnson, Oshkosh, WI: "A few nights after my husband died, I was sitting at home with our dog and cat. The dog suddenly sat up, stuck his nose straight up and began to lick the air over and over. He kept this up, off and on, for about fifteen minutes. He never did this before or since. I believe his “dad” stopped in to say goodbye."

Amy Bailey, Kenosha, WI: “Mackenzie, my first Husky, was a rescue who I only had for ten months, due to cancer. I got very depressed when she passed. I came home from work one day and looked out the backyard and saw her running across the yard… I was sitting on the sofa one day (again, after she passed) and I felt her paws on the sofa, on my legs and then I could feel her curl into a ball onto my lap. I started crying I was so happy.”

Kay Laundrie, Green Bay, WI:  “Had to have our Airedale put down due to cancer. On going to bed, I heard a sound from where her bed was still in the room. Then later I felt a nose pushing my arm around on the bed.”

Molly Rice Cross, Auburn AL: "I found my precious dog, Brody, collapsed outside late one night. I called the vet and rushed Brody to the clinic. Brody needed a cardiac specialist, but it was very late. The vet sent me home and agreed to stay with him through the night. During the night, Brody’s smell woke me up, as if I had my nose in his fur. I received a call the next morning that Brody had died, and it was at the same time I smelled him. Did God give me that moment? Did Brody pass by me? I do not know. It was quite real, though.”

Edward Kodaj, Marinette, WI: "After I had to put my Border Collie down I was pretty upset. She came to me in a dream that was so real. I was in a prairie-type town with dust blowing and I was walking. Then I saw her walking ahead of me by fifty yards or so. I called to her and she turned around to look at me. Suddenly my late dad's voice broke in to tell me that she wanted to let me know she was ok and that she would be fine and not to worry. So I stopped walking and watched her go until I couldn't see her anymore.”

Jane Mussey, Holiday, FL: "As a kid, after my family’s second Springer Spaniel died, we got a Standard Poodle puppy, Josephine. I basically grew up with her. We connected deeply. She was wicked intelligent, learned many of our words, and then learned the spellings when we attempted to conceal things like “out”, “walk”, “car”, “treat”. She and I connected deeply. She knew when I was about to wake up and laid by my door. We played intricate games involving planning and strategy. This shy kid could not have asked for a better companion. I got older and so did she. I moved away, and left her in my mother’s loving and capable hands. One night, after having no contact with my family for weeks and no news of my beloved Josie, she came to me in a dream and said in plain English, “It’s time for me to die”. Next day, I called home to see what might be happening with her. She had a respiratory infection, but was expected to recover. In two days she was dead. Perforated esophagus diagnosed too late to save her from a massive internal infection. I’m a huge skeptic (and a veterinarian) and not given to wild theories. But, I have no other explanation for this dream than that Josie deliberately communicated with me, somehow. ‘There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in our philosophy.’ ”

Dot Hasler wrote, "Good dogs never leave you. They just get harder to see."
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John Jamison
Object: The lying game. You have probably played this game but called it something else. The idea is that you will ask a child a question, have them either answer truthfully or with a lie, and then have everyone else try to guess if they are telling the truth or not. After everyone has guessed, ask the child if they told the truth or not so everyone knows if they were right and then either congratulation the child for tricking everyone, or congratulate the others for guessing correctly.

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Nazish Naseem
For June 15, 2025:

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Wayne Brouwer
When Ryan Barbarisi was in fifth grade at Grace Community Christian School in Tempe, Arizona, his teacher asked each member of his class to finish this sentence — “I would be rich if . . . ” — and then to draw a picture of what he or she was thinking about. Here is what Ryan wrote: “I would be rich if I had enough money to buy a mansion and a red Ferrari. I would like to have these things because if I had a mansion, I would have a good life. If I had a Ferrari, I would burn up the streets.”
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Proverbs 8:1-4, 22-31; Psalm 8

StoryShare

Frank Ramirez
A little while, and you will no longer see me…. (v. 12)

As the autumn of 1796 approached George Washington, who was nearing the end of his second term as President of the United States, set about to accomplish what many considered unthinkable — write a farewell letter to the nation he’d led in battles both military and political for 45 years.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Prayers usually include these concerns and may follow this sequence:



These responses may be used:




Let us pray for the Church and for the world, and let us thank God for his goodness.

Almighty God our heavenly father, you promised through your Son Jesus Christ to hear us when we pray in faith.

SermonStudio

James Evans
(See Trinity Sunday, Cycle A, for an alternative approach.)

John Jamison
He had been looking forward to Sunday afternoon all week. As a pastor, Sunday afternoons were usually as busy as any time, with youth groups and then preparing for Sunday evening services. But this week, there was no youth group meeting. And this week, there were no Sunday evening services. He had been very careful to protect the calendar so that nothing got scheduled in place of these things, and he would have a full Sunday afternoon, and evening, all to himself -- or at least with the family. Who knows? Maybe he would read a book. Or maybe go for a walk.
Stephen P. McCutchan
If I mentioned Sophia to you, what memories would it evoke? Would you think of a movie called Sophie's Choice? Or perhaps you know of someone whose name is Sophia. Some of you might think of a controversy stirred up several years ago at a women's conference that was exploring feminine images for God. Some who objected to their ideas accused them of pagan worship when they used Sophia to refer to the feminine side of God.
Glenn E. Ludwig
Probably most of us are familiar with the phrase that serves as the title for my sermon this day -- on a need-to-know basis. Some of you who work in government jobs or on highly classified positions where national security is involved certainly know what it means. When I first came to this church I made the mistake of asking someone where he worked and when he told me of the famous government agency whose headquarters are near here I made the mistake of asking him what he did there. The response was: "If I told you, I'd have to kill you." Okay. I learned a big lesson on that one.
One of the Apollo 17 astronauts said that, as he looked back upon the earth from the moon, the earth, spinning slowly against the vast, black background of space, looked like "a big, blue marble." Think about how beautiful, but fragile and precious, irreplaceable and unique, the earth is. Consider the earth.

From Psalm 8, our First Reading:

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