The Search and Rescue Dog Who Never Quit
In 2010, a border collie named Keno worked with Montana Search and Rescue, covering terrain no human team could manage alone. When a twelve-year-old boy named Jared wandered off a hiking trail near Glacier National Park, temperatures dropped below freezing overnight. Helicopters couldn't fly. Ground teams lost the trail at a creek crossing. But Keno kept working — nose to the ground, circling back through dense timber, crossing the same icy water three times.
Eighteen hours later, Keno found Jared huddled beneath a fallen pine, hypothermic and disoriented. The dog lay across the boy's chest, warming him until handlers arrived. Rescuers later said Jared had been moving in circles, getting more lost with every step. He couldn't have saved himself.
That image — a relentless searcher who refuses to abandon the lost — is exactly what the Lord declares in Ezekiel 34. "I Myself will search for My sheep and look after them," says Adonai. Not a hired hand. Not a delegate. God Himself crossing the rough ground, stepping into the dark ravines, binding up the injured, strengthening the weak. The sheep in this passage haven't earned the rescue. They're scattered, broken, and wandering in circles. But the Good Shepherd doesn't calculate whether they're worth the effort. He goes out, He finds them, and He brings them home to good pasture — because that is simply who He is.
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