Posted on 02/27/2017 11:01:55 AM PST by nickcarraway
"Our lives have been turned upside down and we're not sure what's next," one of the dog's owners said
A frantic couple in the South Bay has put their wedding on hold to blanket neighborhoods with yellow signs and pour thousands of dollars into the search for their beloved dog, who went missing on Feb. 13.
Trendee King and James Galley, who recently moved to the Bay Area from Southern California, dropped off their black and tan Brussels Griffon pooch named Theo at a national dog sitting service located near Blossom Hill Road and Almaden Expressway. The next thing they knew, he managed to slip out of a door and escape.
"Our lives have been turned upside down and we're not sure what's next," Galley said in an email.
King, who was in the midst of purchasing her wedding gown when Theo went missing, and Galley put a halt to their wedding preparation in order to search for their missing pup.
The worrisome owners have poured dollar after dollar into covering the South Bay with signs, and they even said they used six Bloodhounds in an attempt to track down the 12-pound Brussels Griffon with a snaggletooth. They are also offering a $3,500 reward.
"Theo is family and we're sinking our wedding savings into finding our beloved pup," Galley wrote.
Aside from the signs, the couple has littered social media with pleas asking for any information about Theo's location. King, who has more than 27,000 followers on her Instagram account, has plastered her profile with photos of the dog. Even an Instagram account with more than six million followers has joined in the search effort by sharing a photo of the yellow sign.
"People are supporting us because they know dogs are our best friends, our better halves, our kids," Galley wrote. "Sometimes they fill that void in your life, sometimes they bring two people closer together, and they always make your life better. It was clear that Theo brought my fiancée and I closer together."
Anyone with information about Theo's whereabouts is asked to text or call 310-663-2652.
As far as a convincing case in the Bible, I tend to think Romans 8 followed by I Corinthians 15. Sin came by man and by man came death. Ultimately death itself will be thrown into the lake of fire. There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body. God has given bodies as it has pleased Him, all bodies have their unique glory. Man, beasts, birds, fish. None of them died before man sinned. None of them will die when death is destroyed.
I appreciate your exegesis; I guess some people think that some forms of Life don’t have a spiritual body - even though all forms of life were made by the same Creator, from the same substance. I also like this:
‘Those who live according to the flesh have their minds set on what the flesh desires; but those who live in accordance with the Spirit have their minds set on what the Spirit desires.’
(As an aside, there’s a difference between a mere ‘wedding’ and a ‘marriage’.)
If people were still as down to earth as once was the case when the agrarian life was most often the case, I suspect it would be harder to deny that the lesser creatures are also beloved of God and have hope beyond pain, suffering and death. I also think that glossing past Genesis tends to make some Christians lose their moorings as far as just why creatures die and just who subjected them to it, through no fault of their own. That knowledge and understanding would make Romans 8 much more clear. There is no doubt in my mind that the Apostle Paul accepted Genesis as literal. Jesus certainly did. Those who believe themselves too intelligent for what is deemed something of a fairy tale now due to apparent conflict with modern science are just too proud to accept something that might make them look foolish in the eyes of the world.
My wife and I spent three days and nights driving around in farming country looking for our lost heeler.We door knocked every house in the area and left our number.We even had a conversation with one farmer who had taken three shots at her but missed thankfully.We understood that farmers take a very dim view of stray dogs and bore him no ill will for shooting at her but it sure made for sleepness nights worrying.
We got her back eventually,without any wounds thank God.
I can certainly identify with these folks trying everything to get their pooch back and I also think God fully understands the love we have for our pets.
Our beautifull heeler 'Maddie' died years ago now.We still miss her,she was "as a daughter" to us.
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