SOUNDING OUT:
Set Your Affection On Things Above
We have a duty of disciplined thinking.
Colossians 3:1 & 2 contains very important directives
along these lines.
Colossians 3:1a:
If ye then be risen with Christ….
Well, are you risen with
Christ? This “if” could also be translated
“since.” The NIV translates this phrase,
“Since, then, you have been raised with Christ.”
Since this is true of us, the commands that follow pertain
specifically to us.
Colossians 3:1,2:
If ye then be risen with Christ seek those things which
are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of
God.
2 Set your affection [phroneõ,
think] on things above, not on things on the earth.
Since we are risen with
Christ, it is imperative that we seek those things which
are above where Christ sits on the right hand of God.
Verse two repeats the command in similar words. It says,
“to set your affection on things above not on
things of the earth.” This is the only place phroneõ
is translated “set your affection.” An “affection”
is a mental or emotional state that connotes “good
feelings.” The reason for this unique translation
in this verse is to add the force of an emotional element.
We are to attach positive feelings to the things of
God. When we have affection for (an emotional attachment
to) someone or something, it is much easier to think
about them or it.
Our minds have the ability to concentrate upon
specific matters, and to continue in that state of concentration
for as long as we choose. Thinking on things above is
a choice we can make. The Word mentions specific things
upon which we, as believers, should concentrate our
thinking. We can also learn lessons from records of
men who concentrated upon things other than what the
Father intended. These records not only show what the
outcome of their concentration upon inferior things
was, but also, how these men recovered to once again
set their affection properly on things above.
First we will look at a negative example as we
read Psalm 77 and find out how to be miserable. Then
next week we will read Psalm 73 and discover how to
be distracted. Then the following week we will see what
David did as we read Psalm 34. Finally in the fourth
week we will look at the word, “behold”
and see what God directs us to do.
First, How To Be Miserable
Asaph, the psalmist, gives us our first
insight into this subject in Psalm 77. He tells us of
the time in his own life when he faced serious problems.
His affection was certainly not on things above while
this was going on.
Psalm 77:1:
{To the chief Musician, to Jeduthun, A Psalm of
Asaph.}
I cried unto God with my voice, even unto God with my
voice; and he gave ear unto me.
In verse one Asaph summarizes
his deliverance. The repetition there is emphatic, giving
the idea that it was an earnest or fervent cry. Then
in verses 2-9 he recaps his distress telling of a time
when he faced serious difficulties.
Psalm 77:2:
In the day of my trouble I sought the
Lord: my sore ran in the night, and
ceased not: my soul refused to be comforted.
His trouble was grievous.
It kept him up at night and wouldn’t stop. All
this time his soul refused to be comforted. The reason
his trouble ceased not was because he refused comfort.
How often have we found ourselves in similar situations?
All the time, the comfort of God was available, but
it was not realized because it was refused.
Freedom of will allows us to be miserable if
we want. Sometimes, for whatever reason, our conditioned
responses engender emotions that over power our logic
and reasoning. They can be so powerful that we often
feel incapable of controlling them. We know rationally
and logically that we have been delivered, but we do
not feel like it… sometimes we don’t even
seem to want it. We can even fight against ourselves.
Verse three explains:
Psalm 77:3:
I remembered God, and was troubled: I
complained, and my spirit [the spirit
of man, his soul life] was overwhelmed. Selah.
Many consider “selah”
as being an exhortation to “consider these words”
or “think on these things.” Bullinger goes
even further to state that it means, “That being
so, note well what follows.” (Bullinger E.W.,
The Chief Musician: or Studies in the Psalms and
Their Titles, Truth For Today, Lafayette, IN 1992,
page 107) Not only does it encourage us to pay attention
to what has just been said, but it points out the consequence
of such actions in what follows. His statement of the
problem in verses two and three lead to the even more
debilitating condition expressed in verse four.
Even his thoughts of God didn’t relieve
his trouble. The distress of the present outweighed
any memories of God’s grace and goodness in the
past. Then he explains how the situation went from bad
to worse – he complained. If you want to be overwhelmed,
start complaining. That being so, note well what follows.
Psalm 77:4:
Thou holdest mine eyes waking: I
am so troubled that I cannot speak.
He blamed God for his
sleeplessness, and became so depressed that he could
not speak.
Psalm 77:5,6:
I have considered the days of old,
the years of ancient times.
6 I call
to remembrance my song in the night: I
commune with mine own heart: and my
spirit [the spirit of man, his soul life] made diligent
search.
He ransacked his experience,
his memory, his intellect, to find or discover the reason
the deliverance was denied him. That’s the problem
in a nutshell. He communed with his own heart and looked
within himself for answers and deliverance. His introspection
continued for he was resolved to get to the bottom of
his sorrow and follow it back to its beginning. But,
his introspection in verses 2-6 (with 15 references
to himself) only led to his questioning God’s
willingness and ability in verses 7-9 (with 7 references
to God).
Although he didn’t speak, his mind was
still active. He thought about his former days and considered
how God worked even unto ancient times. He even recalled
previous deliverances when he sang songs of praise in
the darkest of nights. His heart mused, as he inquired,
“Why has this happened to me?” Then in verses
seven through nine he asks a series of six questions
[Six is the number of man and human weakness.]
all of which demonstrate his despair and his temporary
lack of confidence in God. His despair caused him to
consider that his trouble would never end.
Psalm 77:7-9:
Will the Lord cast off for ever? and
will he be favourable no more? [He
had been favorable, why did it stop?]
8 Is his
mercy clean gone for ever? doth his
promise fail for evermore?
9 Hath God
forgotten to be gracious? hath he in
anger shut up his tender mercies? Selah.
[Think on these things.]
Most of us, who have lived
for any length of time and are honest about life, may
understand the difficulty he has having. Things went
from bad to worse as his mind wandered, driven by doubt.
Although he was pressing for answers, he found none.
His focus turned from his own inability to do anything
to God’s apparent unwillingness to act on his
behalf. His uncertainty about God caused him to be double-minded.
He was no longer sure of God’s willingness and
ability to help him. That being so, note well what follows.
Psalm 77:10a:
And I said, This is my infirmity [my weakness]….
“This” refers
to what he has just described in verses two through
nine, most specifically the doubt and confusion expressed
in verses 7-9. Instead of continuing in his negative
spiral down, he took responsibility for his thinking
realizing that he had been working against himself.
However, once he realized what the problem was, he summoned
the resolve to do something about it.
Psalm 77:10b-12:
… but I will remember the years of the
right hand of the most High.
11 I will remember the works
of the LORD: surely I will remember thy wonders of old.
12 I will meditate also
of all thy work, and talk of thy doings.
“I will remember….”
“I will remember….” “I will
remember….” “I will meditate….”
He made his mind work for him not against him. He not
only remembered the goodness of God, he also meditated
upon it. He repeated it to himself over and over again.
Verses 10-12 show that he had made a complete turn around
from verses 2-9. Then he took the next step and began
talking of all God had done. He set his affection on
things above, and praised God for Who He is, thankfully
recognizing what He has done.
Psalm 77:13-20:
Thy way, O God, is in the sanctuary: who is so great
a God as our God?
14 Thou art the God that
doest wonders: thou hast declared thy strength among
the people.
15 Thou hast with thine
arm redeemed thy people, the sons of Jacob and Joseph.
Selah.
16 The waters saw thee,
O God, the waters saw thee; they were afraid: the depths
also were troubled.
17 The clouds poured out
water: the skies sent out a sound: thine arrows also
went abroad.
18 The voice of thy thunder
was in the heaven: the lightnings lightened the world:
the earth trembled and shook.
19 Thy way is in the sea,
and thy path in the great waters, and thy footsteps
are not known.
20 Thou leddest thy people
like a flock by the hand of Moses and Aaron.
If you want to be miserable
you can take lessons from Asaph and look within. When
we place our eyes on ourselves, our weaknesses and inabilities
often come to center stage. However, when we look at
God’s goodness and God’s ability and declare
it, we can get our thinking straightened out.
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