Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Traps and Tricks

First off, I'd like to apologize for not writing these past two weeks. I was very under the weather and felt no inspiration. Isn't that how it is when you're sick? Anywho, I'm writing today...


Let me take you to a scene of a cute cartoon. You have a road runner and a coyote, who is always after the road runner. The long-legged bird is very fast, so the coyote must set traps for his 'breakfast." The coyote then sets a noose on the ground to catch the bird's foot. When he hears the notorious "beep, beep," he pulls the noose, but the road runner dodged the rope, and the force of the coyote's pull causes him to fall backward off the cliff. His noose snatches on a heavy rock, but, as his luck would have it, the rope is too long, and he lands hard against the desert ground. As he rises, he tugs the rope still attached to the rock, which lands on his head. Thus ends the coyote's attempt to catch the road runner.
This scene is similar to several fun shows such as Tom and Jerry or Bugs Bunny when Yosemite Sam tries to hunt the rabbit down. Additionally, on the adult side, there are movies like How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, where the main characters (both male and female) are fooling each other only to be bit in the butt by their dirty tricks.
In the end, the traps that sit in wait fail and backfire. This is, excitingly, a Biblical concept. As you know, the Bible book we ladies are studying is Esther, in which Haman justly hangs on the gallows he had built for his nemesis, Mordecai. But unlike the coyote, there is no recovery. No redo.
Now if Haman had just read Psalms and Proverbs, maybe he'd have known better. Proverbs 26:27 says, "If you set a trap for others, you will get caught in it yourself. If you roll a boulder down on others, it will crush you instead." I wonder if the writers for Looney Toons read this before creating a couple of their scenes. Likewise, Psalms 7:15-16 says, "They dig a deep pit to trap others, then fall into it themselves. The trouble they make for others backfires on them. The violence they plan falls on their own heads."
This blog has no life application, unless, of course, you are planning an evil scheme. If not, take peace in knowing that tricksters always lose in the end.  =)

1 comment:

  1. The best part of that cartoon, in my opinion, is when Wyle-E-Coyote has run off the edge of a cliff and as he's suspended in mid-air he holds up a little sign that says "Uh-Oh" or "Help!" HAHAHA! It gets me every time!

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