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    You are at:Home»Time & Mortality»61 The Mind Set on Life

    61 The Mind Set on Life

    Fishing harbour at low tide with boats resting on exposed seabed beside wooden docks.
    Small harbour basin at low tide.

    Romans 8:6–11 (KJV)

    “For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and peace.
    Because the carnal mind is enmity against God…
    So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God.
    But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit…
    And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin; but the Spirit is life because of righteousness.
    But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you… he shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you.”


    Where the Mind Rests

    This passage turns not to action, but to attention.

    “To be minded…”
    “To set the mind…”

    It speaks of where thought settles when nothing demands it. Where awareness drifts when left unguarded. The quiet direction in which the inner life naturally leans.

    I begin to see how much of life is shaped not by what I do, but by where my mind habitually rests.

    Large stone railway viaduct stretching across a green valley in open countryside.
    Stone viaduct crossing a wide rural valley.

    The Quiet Formation of Disposition

    In the Lodge, the tools are returned to again and again. The square, the compasses, the level — not because they change, but because I do. Their constancy gradually reshapes perception.

    This feels close to what Paul describes. A steady, repeated turning of the mind toward what gives life. Not a dramatic effort, but a slow formation of disposition.

    A habit of inward orientation.

    Life and Peace

    “Life and peace.”

    The words are simple, but they carry weight. Not excitement, not intensity — life and peace. A steadiness of being. A sense of inward alignment that does not depend on circumstances being favourable.

    I recognise how easily I pursue activity while neglecting peace. How often I fill time without attending to the state of mind in which I move through it.

    Yet this passage suggests that peace is not an outcome, but a direction.

    Narrow road winding across steep mountain slopes in a high pass landscape.
    Road crossing a high mountain pass.

    The Hidden Conflict

    The language of the passage is firm. It acknowledges a tension within the human condition — a pull between different orientations of thought, different ways of seeing the world.

    This is not presented as dramatic struggle, but as quiet reality. A daily choosing of where attention will rest.

    Small decisions, repeated often, shaping the tone of the inner life.

    The Memorable Line

    What the mind returns to quietly, it eventually becomes.

    The Presence Within

    “If the Spirit… dwell in you…”

    There is a gentleness to this phrase. Not visiting, not appearing occasionally, but dwelling. Remaining. Quietly present in the background of daily life.

    I begin to see how easily I treat the inner life as something to be attended to occasionally, rather than something that quietly inhabits every moment.

    A presence not noticed because it is always there.

    Straight canal towpath running beside calm water with trees lining the banks.
    Towpath beside a rural canal.

    Quickening the Mortal

    The promise at the end of the passage is not abstract. It speaks of mortal bodies, of ordinary life animated by something deeper.

    This is not about escape from the world, but about a different quality of living within it. A vitality that comes from inward alignment rather than outward success.

    A life that feels steady, even when circumstances are unsettled.

    Walking On

    As I sit with these words, I find myself less concerned with what I must do and more attentive to how I must think. Less focused on effort, more on orientation.

    To walk through the day with a mind set gently toward what gives life.

    To allow peace to be the quiet background of ordinary moments.

    And perhaps, over time, to discover that this is where true change begins.

    Previous Article60 Waiting in the Depths
    Next Article 62 Remaining Present When Others Depart

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