2026-06-26

The Compass of the Soul — Colossians 3:2

 The Compass of the Soul

"Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things." — Colossians 3:2

We are creatures of habit, and nowhere is that more true than in our thought life. Without even realizing it, we wake up and set our mental default to "earthly": What do I need? What if this goes wrong? What did they think of me? What am I lacking? These are not sinful thoughts in isolation, but they are anchors—and anchors belong on ships, not on souls meant to soar. 

Paul does not give us a vague, mystical command to "think heavenly thoughts." He gives us a razor-sharp redirection. When he says "things above," he is pointing us to five tangible, concrete realities we can grab hold of every single moment:


1. Christ Himself (v. 1-4)
The primary "thing above" is a Person. Paul says Christ is seated at the right hand of God, and that your life is hidden with Christ in God. When He appears, you will appear with Him.
Practically: Set your mind on His finished work (He already won), His current reign (He is in control), and His future return (this isn’t the end of the story).

2. Your True Identity (v. 10-12)
Paul lists who you actually are now: Chosen, holy, beloved, a new creation being renewed in knowledge after the image of your Creator.
Practically: Set your mind on what God says about you, not what your failures, your boss, or your social media feed says about you.

3. Heavenly Virtues (v. 12-14)
He gives a specific list: Compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, patience, forgiveness, and above all, love.
Practically: These are the currency of Heaven. Set your mind on becoming these things in your daily interactions, rather than on winning arguments or protecting your ego.

4. The Peace and Word of Christ (v. 15-16)
Let the peace of Christ rule in your heart, and let His word dwell in you richly.
Practically: Set your mind on Scripture, letting it shape your thoughts more than the news or entertainment does. Let His peace be the umpire that decides what you dwell on.

5. Eternal Realities, Not Temporal Ones (2 Cor 4:18)
Paul contrasts the "seen" (temporary) with the "unseen" (eternal).
Practically: Set your mind on your eternal inheritance, the rewards of faithfulness, and the coming new heavens and new earth.


The Shortcut:
If you are unsure whether a thought counts as "above" or "earthly," ask this:

  • Earthly: "What do I want? What do I fear? What do I lack? Who hurt me?"
  • Above: "What does God want? What has He promised? Who does He say I am? How can I reflect Jesus right now?" 

The Practical Shift:

You cannot stop earthly thoughts from knocking at the door of your mind, but you do not have to invite them in for tea. When anxiety knocks, answer with the sovereignty of Christ. When insecurity knocks, answer with your identity in Him. When resentment knocks, answer with heavenly character. When confusion knocks, answer with His peace and Word. When despair knocks, answer with eternal hope.

Setting your mind above does not mean escaping earth; it means interpreting earth through the lens of Heaven. You pay your bills, love your family, and do your work—but you do so as a citizen of Heaven on temporary assignment, with your compass firmly fixed on true North.


Prayer:

Father, my mind is prone to wander—down into worry, down into pride, down into fear. Today, I choose to reset my compass. Lift my gaze from my problems to Your promises. Help me to fix my thoughts on Christ my Savior, my identity as Your child, the character You are forming in me, the peace and Word that steady my soul, and the eternity that awaits. Since I have been raised with Christ, let me think like it—moment by moment, thought by thought. Amen.


The Shortcut:
If you are unsure whether a thought counts as "above" or "earthly," ask this:

  • Earthly: "What do I want? What do I fear? What do I lack? Who hurt me?"
  • Above: "What does God want? What has He promised? Who does He say I am? How can I reflect Jesus right now?"

 

 Final Takeaway:

The birds of anxious, earthly thoughts will fly over your head—you cannot stop that. But you can stop them from building a nest in your hair. Set your mind above. Not just once, but continuously. Not vaguely, but on Christ, your identity, His character, His peace and Word, and eternity. That is how an anchored soul learns to fly.



2026-06-25

From Temporary Pain to Eternal Gain — Romans 8:18

 

From Temporary Pain to Eternal Gain

“For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us.”
— Romans 8:18 (ESV)

When you are in the middle of hardship, suffering fills your entire field of vision. It is loud, heavy, and real. It feels like an interruption—something blocking your path, breaking your peace, delaying your dreams.

But Paul invites us to do something counterintuitive: he invites us to shift our lens.

First, he asks us to zoom out—to weigh our present pain against the eternal glory awaiting us. Not to minimize our suffering, but to relativize it. The pain is a sentence; the glory is the whole story. And the story ends not with sorrow, but with resurrection, restoration, and the visible presence of God.

Second, he invites us to look inward—to see suffering not as punishment or detour, but as training ground. The drill is not the game; it is repetitive, painful, and unglamorous. But the drill builds muscles that will perform on game day. Without it, there is no capacity for victory.

Three Witnesses of Training Through Trial

Joseph knew the pit, slavery, and prison. But he later told his brothers, “You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good” (Gen 50:20). Slavery taught him administration. Prison taught him leadership. Waiting taught him trust. By the time glory came—ruling Egypt—he had been prepared to steward it with wisdom and mercy. His suffering wasn’t a pause before purpose; it was the pathway to purpose.

Moses spent 40 years in exile as a fugitive shepherd—far from his calling, tending sheep in obscurity. He thought he was ready at 40; God said “Not yet.” At 80, God called him—not when Moses was strong, but when he was broken. The wilderness taught him humility, patience, and dependence. Shepherding literal sheep prepared him to shepherd God’s people. His stammering tongue became the voice that confronted Pharaoh. The waiting was not wasted—it was weaving.

David was anointed king as a teenager, then spent years running for his life from Saul—living in caves, playing the madman, watching his reputation be slandered. He refused to rush the throne. He wrote psalms of desperation that would comfort millions for millennia. The wilderness taught him warfare, leadership of outcasts, and intimacy with God. The caves became his seminary. The 15 years between anointing and coronation were not a delay—they were the making of the man.

PersonSufferingTrainingGlory
JosephPit, slavery, prisonAdministration, forgiveness, trustRuler of Egypt, savior of nations
MosesExile, wilderness, obscurityHumility, dependence, shepherdingDeliverer of Israel, mouthpiece of God
DavidCaves, slander, running for lifeWarfare, intimacy, patienceKing of Israel, man after God’s own heart

The Common Thread: None of them saw the full picture in the middle of their pain. But each one cooperated with the process—and the glory that came was not just a reward for suffering, but a result of it.

So your hardest moment is not just leading to glory—it is producing it. Right now, God is developing in you:

  • Endurance where impatience once lived.
  • Humility where pride used to rule.
  • Dependence where self-reliance reigned.
  • Compassion for others in their pain.

And here is the deepest truth: The “glory to be revealed” is not just a future reward—it is a future you. A version of you shaped, strengthened, and made more like Christ through the very thing you are walking through now.

So the question is no longer “When will this end?” but “What is this building in me that will last forever?”

Today’s Prayer:
Father, help me stop praying only for relief—and start praying for transformation. When my eyes are fixed on today’s pain, give me the faith to see tomorrow’s glory. Open my eyes to see this trial as training, not tragedy. Like Joseph, help me trust Your sovereignty. Like Moses, help me embrace the waiting. Like David, help me find intimacy in the wilderness. I trust not just that You will rescue me, but that You are reshaping me—right here, right now. Amen.
Reflection Question:
Which of these three (Joseph, Moses, or David) resonates most with your current season? What is God training in you right now that you might only recognize in hindsight—and how can you cooperate with it today instead of just resisting the pain?

See also 15 Wisdoms to Survive Rock Bottom