One thing I discovered after baiting mousetraps with a little peanut butter (I recommend American style) is it can attract crickets that chirp all night. Crickets and roaches love peanut butter and easily clean those traps in a night without setting them off. Since I didn't want to trade one pest for another, I decided to keep the empty traps in place--just in case another mouse happened to wander in and look around. Over time, the traps snapped closed for one reason or another due to wind from a leaf blower or a nudge from a box or broom, and I didn't bother setting them again. There was no evidence of mice, and over time only one of the clean traps remained loaded by the internal garage door. This week as I was coming in from gathering the recycle, I noticed the bare trap had caught a mouse! Upon closer inspection, the mouse was at the early stages of decomposition with a bit of a smell. Unless the trap had been set, a new mouse problem was set to start all over again.
The situation illustrated well the persistence of vermin and my need for vigilance when there is no evidence of a "mouse problem." Due to a series of factors--especially the lack of mice--I had become complacent in my policing of the traps and ensuring they were ready for action. With the exception of the sole trap that was set, the other traps served no purpose whatsoever. Without thinking about it, I had adopted a reactionary approach to pest control rather than active prevention. Had I seen chewed plastic or cardboard, if I noticed animal waste, I would have sprung into action to do everything in my power to eradicate destructive and potential disease-carrying pests. The reality is there are mice outside, and experience has taught me I cannot keep them out of the garage. Since I am aware of this, it is up to me to be observant and persistent to prevent the pests from making my garage their abode.
Being watchful of the state of a garage is important, and how much more do we need to be vigilant to be on guard of the state of our minds and hearts! Mice and the devil share at least one thing in common, that they are opportunistic and prefer to operate under the cover of darkness. 1 Peter 5:8-9 says, "Be
sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil walks about like a roaring
lion, seeking whom he may devour. 9 Resist him, steadfast in the faith, knowing that the same
sufferings are experienced by your brotherhood in the world." I have never lived in a place where lions roar and prowl around looking for prey, and I imagine it could take a close call to impress upon a person the seriousness of the life-threatening risk lions present. Christians are called to be vigilant to resist the devil by steadfastness through our faith in Christ, knowing we are not alone in the conflict. Not one of us can match the devil's persistence, and thank God we have a Good Shepherd Jesus who is always aware of Satan's schemes. The apostle continued in 1 Peter 5:10: "But may
the God of all grace, who called us to His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after
you have suffered a while, perfect, establish, strengthen, and settle
you."
It takes a surprising amount of effort to keep a garage tidy and free of vermin, and it is far more difficult to resist an unseen enemy who is as sneaky and powerful as Satan. We might not be able to get on top of a pest problem without professional help, but we can do all things through Christ who strengthens us. God has called us to glory, and we are called to walk by faith in Jesus and live righteously. When we recognise sinful thoughts, attitudes and desires, we are to take them captive even as a snap-trap catches a mouse. Unlike traps that can be set that allow us to be passive and check on them occasionally (maybe only after we smell something), we are called to be sober and vigilant when the roaring is faint or afar off. We must be aware that the problems we must be mindful of are primarily not "out there" in the world or in others, it is in the confines of our own flesh, hearts and minds where this battle is fought and won. Even as springtime brings an influx of mice and insects, so a season with personal spiritual growth supplies opportunity for sin to sneak in and find a comfortable place to visit, hang out and finally settle in.
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