Trisha Mugo

Real Grace. For Real Life.

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Grace and Beautiful Feet

August 10, 2014 by Trisha Mugo 7 Comments

grace photo

I’m hungry for grace, ravenous. Each week I sit in church practically salivating for the good news.

Jesus, gives me Jesus, my inner self pleads, but the pastor cannot read minds.

Smiling, I nod my head. Yes there’s Paul. I love his words. Then comes the faith pep talk. We need to get more of that. Pastor sprinkles in some good advice for Christian living, and I listen.

Wisdom always opens my ears.

But later, on the car ride home, hunger pangs return. This soul wants to feast on Jesus, to weep at His feet.

Well-meaning churches often dole out a self-help gospel. I’ve preached it. I’ve lived it, and I don’t want to visit there again—not even on the outskirts.

What would happen if we heard less teaching on how to become a better Christian, and more teaching on who Jesus was, who He helped—people like us?

We need Grace, and we need to know His name is Jesus.

Forgetfulness plagues us. It’s a remnant of the fall, part of the human condition. The old heresy stalks us, always whispering works equals salvation.

We must remind ourselves of the true gospel. We must be RE-minded, by the Word who became flesh.

How can we forget this deep love and grace once it saturates us?

Oh we can, and we do. We can become inoculated by grace, unable to hear and see the miracle. We have to unstop our ears. God knew about our forgetting, and he knew we would need preachers.

“How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news” (Romans 10:15 NIV).

Paul even had to remind the churches to “preach Christ, and Him crucified.”

God knew we would need the reminder. He knew we could get caught up in our own clever ideas and thought-provoking sermons. But the gospel is the main point. It always has been.

There are many valuable things to be said from a church’s pulpit, but they will never trump the gospel in terms of need and effectiveness.

We cannot tire of preaching Jesus Sunday after Sunday. He is not dull. He doesn’t grow boring.

Only an experience with Jesus—the true gospel— will satisfy our soul-hunger. And only an experience with Jesus will teach us how to serve and love the way we ought.

If you’re a leader or a pastor, weave these words of Christ through your messages. Someone on your pew, like me, needs to hear them.

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On Making Altars, Prayer and C.S. Lewis

August 2, 2014 by Trisha Mugo 5 Comments

I grew up in a church that gave altar calls every service.

The pastor called it an “old-fashioned altar,” and I practically ran to it three times a week. My tears soaked the burnt orange upholstery, and boy did I cry. I wept like only a teenage girl can.

That plush bench held all my melancholy, angst and shame. That altar gave birth to so much striving and sin-consciousness, and my thoughts about God were based in fear, not rooted in love. Still, the time I spent on my knees at the front of that church sings in my memories.

That time at the altar forged intimacy in a way only full submission does.

I came to the altar empty and left complete, knelt depraved only to stand in righteousness. When hungry, there Jesus fed me food that brings soul-deep satisfaction I can only find at His feet.

More than a decade has flashed by since I huddled over that prayer bench, but I realize how I miss that prayer time, how I need it more than ever.

Neck-deep in mom hood, I can’t even pee by myself, let alone crawl onto the floor to pray without a little boy hopping on my back wanting a ride.

How you pray or the posture you take matters little, but kneeling or lying prone seems to nudge my heart toward full surrender.

Today, praying comes in quick spurts while washing dishes. I seize another few minutes while folding laundry. But sadly, I have fewer and fewer of these altar moments my life so desperately needs.

Recently we watched Prince Caspian, and one scene speaks to me about prayer. When Susan asks Lucy why she didn’t see Aslan as Lucy had, Lucy responds with the frankness and simplicity of a child.

“Maybe you don’t want to see him,” she says.

Isn’t this true of prayer? If I wanted to see Jesus—to talk to Him and commune with Him—I would pray more. Lucy was telling Susan she saw Aslan because she was looking for him.

She spent time watching and waiting and not half-heartedly the way we often do.

My heart longs to adore Christ the way Lucy loves Aslan. Where is the passion and the ardor that once sent me running to the altar? My heart more closely resembles Susan’s as she sheds her child-like faith in Aslan. It seems clear her year apart from Narnia has wrought doubt.

Earlier in the movie Susan confesses that she was just getting used to London. She seems disappointed they hadn’t returned sooner or on her own terms.

How often are we too caught up in our lives to hear Jesus calling us? How often do our daily pursuits and pleasures blind us from seeing Christ the way he wants us to see Him, in full adoration with the brazen faith of a child?

In another scene from the movie, it takes Lucy only one glimpse of Aslan in a dream to begin a wild chase after him through the forest.

I can’t help draw the parallel further. Is Jesus beckoning us on those nights we can’t sleep to follow Him and chase Him the way Lucy chased Aslan? But instead of trodding over branches and jumping over bushes, could this chase involve our Bible, wide open hearts and our full attention?

The church I attend now doesn’t have an altar. Instead, we’re encouraged to pray often—to make little altars in our hearts.

Repentance seems to get harder the older I become. It seems a little more humiliating to keep looking up and asking for help. But I’m learning humility doesn’t have to be humiliating.

Consider what would happen if we all made little altars—times of focused prayer and adoration—multiple times a day? What if we stopped multitasking our prayer lives? What if we turned our sofas into altars?

The following verse speaks to me about my prayer procrastination.

“Seek the LORD while he may be found; call on him while he may be found.” (Isaiah 55:6 NIV)

What if we chose to stop procrastinating prayer?

 

 

 

 

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