Set your mind on things above, not on things on the earth. —Colossians 3:2
On a trip through Chicago, I saw a poster advertising a business management seminar.
The poster’s message was intriguing: The Value of a Leader Is Directly Proportional to That Leader’s Values.
The accuracy of that statement struck me. What we value shapes our character—and will ultimately define how we lead, or whether we can lead at all. This does not apply only to leaders, however. For the follower of Christ, values are even more significant. When Paul wrote to the believers at Colosse, he said, “Set your mind on things above, not on things on the earth” (Col. 3:2).
His point is that only as we allow our values to be motivated and shaped by the eternal (not the temporal) will we be effective ambassadors of Christ in the world. It is in the understanding that we are pilgrims in this world, not tourists, that we can keep a clear perspective and an undistracted heart—and can more effectively serve the Savior. It has been said that we live in a world that knows the cost of everything but the value of nothing.
In this world of the “here and now,” however, followers of Christ are called to build our values around what lasts forever. To say it another way: The Effectiveness of a Believer Is Directly Proportional to That Believer’s Values.
Source: Bill Crowder, Our Daily Bread, rbc.org