Introduction
  Brief setting of letter (MAP).  Paul is helping the Colossian Christians toward spiritual maturity  (1:28) – a lifestyle of love for God and other people. His instruction and counsel so far has been: “Stay  away from religious ‘short-cuts’” because they are blind alleys that will lead  you away from true spiritual maturity (2:16-23; BRIEFLY REVIEW RITUALISM,  MYSTICISM & LEGALISM).
  Now in 3:1-17, Paul explains the proper path to spiritual maturity. This path may seem impractical – even  counter-intuitive – but it unleashes God’s power to radically “renovate” our  lives (3:11). We will fill in part of  this path today (3:1-4), and then fill in the rest of it (3:5-17) in the next  week or two.
“The things above”
  Read 3:1-4. You can see  that “the things above” are crucially important. What are these things? They don’t refer to physical things – the sky, sun, moon, stars, etc. They refer  to the things that originate from God – specifically, the things He says about  who Jesus is and what God has provided for us through Jesus. 
  
    They include the fact that Jesus is the Messiah (Christ) who He  has conquered death and has full authority (3:1b). 
    They also include the fact that those who belong to Jesus have  been given spiritual life (3:3) and are fully resourced through Jesus’ death on  the cross (2:10-15 – complete forgiveness, deliverance from sin’s authority,  and deliverance from demonic domination).  GOSPEL: God gives you all this the moment you receive Christ.
    They also include the promise that those who belong to Jesus  will reign forever with Him when He returns at the end of the age (3:4). 
    These are the “things” that are the most true and real. They are “hidden” now – not known by physical  sight, but by revelation from God’s Word (1Cor.2:12). But one day they will be evident to all.
  
  By contrast, there are “the things that are on earth.” What are these things? They don’t refer to physical things – trees,  mountains, oceans, animals, other people, etc.  They refer to the religious and philosophical “truths” that don’t  originate from God, but that originate from fallen humans and deceiving spirits  (read 2:8). They contradict what God  says about who Jesus is and what He has provided for us. 
  
    In context, these things refer to the religious blind alleys of  2:16-23. They also refer to the lie that  self-indulgence (2:23) – living for self – will lead to health and fulfillment  (see 3:5,8,9).
  
  Paul is saying: “If you want to grow toward spiritual maturity,  you must cultivate a mental focus on what God has provided for you through  Jesus.” This is what Paul teaches in  Rom.12:2a (read and explain). Paul  uses two different verbs to describe related-but-distinct aspects of this focus. We need both of these, so listen very  closely...
“Keep seeking the things above”
  “Keep seeking” (zeteo)  means “to inquire into; to find out by thinking, meditating, reasoning.”  Jesus uses zeteo when He asks His disciples: “Are you deliberating together about (what I said)” (Jn.16:19). 
  This command is in the present tense, which emphasizes that  this is something that we are to continue to do. So Paul is saying: “Keep increasing in your understanding  of God’s provision through Jesus.” Keep inquiring  into this, keep thinking about this, keep reasoning about this, keep meditating  on this. He is describing an insatiable spiritual  curiosity – similar to (but far more important than) the curiosity that drives  a scientific researcher to discover more and more about the subject of his  research.
  
    Implicit in Paul’s command is the assumption that what God has  given us through Jesus is so vast that we can never fully comprehend it, and  that it is so precious that we can never fully appreciate it. But this increasing comprehension and  appreciation of God’s gift is right at the core of a spiritually healthy life. This is what deepens our confidence and  security in God and His love. This is  what increases our gratitude to God.  This is what fires our motivation to follow and serve God.
    Conversely, to lose this curiosity, to settle for the  understanding you already have, to cool in your appreciation of this treasure  so that you take it for granted is the most common cause of spiritual sickness  in the Christian life. This is what  opens the door of your heart to envying other people. This is what leads to  lusting for more money, possessions, prestige, etc. This is what leads to using other people in  various ways, and to disposing of them when they disappoint you.
  
  How can we “keep seeking the things above?” Several things are very helpful to me:
  
    Pray for God to open the eyes of your heart to see what He has  given you (Eph.1:18,19a). These  things are not merely cognitive concepts; they are spiritual truths that  require spiritual illumination. How  often do you ask God for this?
    Start listening to quality teachings and read quality books on  this subject. Ask your friends and/or  study center staff for suggestions. When  you find one that really speaks to you, deeply digest what it has to say by  re-listening and re-reading. What was  the last teaching/book that you did this with?
    Regularly discuss this subject with Christian friends who have  the same aspiration. “What provisions in  God’s Word have been arresting you lately?” is a great question to keep  discussing. Such conversations will  stimulate you in the best sense of the word.  They will lead you to great teachings and books. They will lead to great prayer together. Who is in your life that you can do this  with?
    Most importantly, memorize and regularly meditate on key  biblical passages on this subject. Meditation  is mentally “chewing” the very words of God so that your soul digests their  nourishment. Spurgeon said: “Meditation  is of great value in opening up truth and leading us into (the Bible’s)  secrets... He who would be rich in these treasures must dig  into scripture as one who seeks for choice pearls. You must go down into its depths, and you  must rummage there until you get at last to the treasure...  Cultivate much, then, the habit of... meditation, because of  the way in which it opens up the truth.”
    
      Take a small passage like this one (Col.3:1-4). Keep writing it down, or listening to it, or  repeating it until you know it by heart.  Then say it back to God throughout the day or for several days, turning  it into prayer. Turn its promises into  prayers of thanks: “God, I thank You that I have been raised up with  Christ. Thank You that I have died and  my life is hidden with Christ in God.  Thank You that when Christ appears, I will appear with Him in  glory.” As this brings to mind related  promises, thank God for these also. Turn  its commands into prayer requests: “God, help me to keep seeking these  things. Give me renewed thirst to do  this. God, help me to set my mind on  these things. Teach me how to do this.” As this brings to mind other related needs,  ask God for these also.
      I wish I knew how to convince my brothers and sister to  memorize and meditate on biblical passages about God’s provisions! This is a vanishing art among American  Christians (and I fear among Xenoids), and we are forfeiting incalculable  spiritual blessing because of this. Read  Ps.1:1a,2,3. Don’t you want your  life to be like this? Build the habit of  biblical meditation!
    
  
  So “keep seeking the things above” is foundational to growth  toward spiritual maturity. And just as  foundational is Paul’s command in 3:2 – “set your mind on the things  above”...
“Set your mind on the things above”
  “Set your mind” (phroneo)  means “to direct one’s mind to a thing; to choose to adopt or maintain a point  of view.” This sense of phroneo implies a mental battle with opposing  points of view that are contradictory and must be rejected and/or replaced  (thus, “not on the things that are on  earth”). This command is also in the  present tense, so it is also something that we are to continue to do. So while “keep seeking the things above”  emphasizes the need to keep increasing your understanding of God’s gift, “set  your mind on the things above” emphasizes the need to keep identifying false  thoughts and replacing them with the truth about what God has given you.
  
    Paul describes this as “mental combat” in 2Cor.10:5  (read). How aggressive this language  is! We are not to passively allow false thoughts  and feelings to take us hostage; we are to vigilantly monitor our  thought-lives, and to attack these lies and take them prisoner to the promises  about God’s provisions through Jesus.
    J. I. Packer describes what this “mental combat” looks like in  his comments on Romans 8: “Think of what you know of God through the gospel,  says Paul, and apply it. Think against  your feelings; argue yourself out of the gloom they have spread; unmask the  unbelief they have nourished; take yourself in hand, talk to yourself, make  yourself look up from your problems to the God of the gospel; let evangelical (gospel-centered) thinking  correct emotional thinking.” 
    D. M. Lloyd-Jones also describes it: “Have you realized that most of your unhappiness in life is due to the  fact that you are listening to yourself instead of talking to yourself? Take  those thoughts that come to you the moment you wake up in the morning. You have  not originated them, but they start talking to you, they bring back the  problems of yesterday, etc. Somebody is talking. Who is talking to you? Your  self is talking to you... You have to take yourself in hand,  you have to address yourself, preach to yourself, question yourself...  You must turn on yourself, upbraid  yourself... exhort yourself, and say to yourself: ‘Hope in  God’—instead of muttering in this depressed unhappy way. And then you must go  on to remind yourself of God, Who God is, and what God has done and what God  has pledged Himself to do.” 
  
  What will help us to “set our minds on the things above?” Here are things that have been very helpful  to me:
  
    Ask God to reveal to you ingrained lies (Ps.139:23,24). He will usually answer in two ways. As you read and listen to God’s Word, He will  cause certain promises to “light up” and then challenge a cynical or despairing  response to them (e.g., Col.3:12 vs. “I’m a loser;” “Rom.8:28 vs.  “God can’t forgive and/or redeem my bad choices”). As you talk with Christian friends about  this, they will often have insight into lies you tend to believe (e.g., “Negatron”  when adversity or disappointment hits).
    When you become aware of an “intruder” lie, verbalize it to God  and then attack it by agreeing with what He says. “God, it seems like this adversity will crush  me, but Your Word saysthat (quote 1Cor.10:13). I choose  to believe what You say, Lord. Help me  as I choose to move in this direction.”  “God, I feel like I will always be a prisoner to this sin, but Your Word  says (quote Rom.8:2). I choose to  believe what You say, Lord. Help me as I  choose to move in this direction.”
    When you realize that a lie has a “stronghold,” tell your  Christian friends about it and ask them to pray daily with you/for your  deliverance. Then go on the offensive by  laying down a rolling barrage by praying a key related passage daily, asking God  to renew your mind in this area (e.g., Ps. 23 before getting out of bed).
  
Conclusion
  NEXT WEEK: Colossians 3:5-17 – “The Path to Spiritual Maturity  – Part #2”
  SUMMARIZE. At the heart  of growth toward spiritual maturity is this kind of ongoing application of  God’s Word in our thought-lives. 
  
    DISCUSSION: What are other practical ways to “keep seeking” and  “set your mind on” the things above?
  
  Enhanced Strong’s Lexicon. 
  J. I.  Packer, Knowing God (Downers Grove:  InterVarsity Press, 1973), p.236.
  D. M. Lloyd-Jones, Spiritual Depression: Its Causes and Cure (Eerdmans, 1982), pp.  20,21.