There is something deeply awakening in these words: “If then you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above.” They remind us that the Christian life is not meant to stay flat, earthbound, and absorbed only in what passes away.
If we truly belong to Christ, then our hearts cannot live only at the level of temporary things.
We still live in this world. We still work, struggle, love, carry responsibilities, and face sorrow. But something in us has changed. A soul touched by Christ begins to look higher. It begins to hunger for what lasts: truth instead of illusion, holiness instead of compromise, mercy instead of bitterness, eternity instead of whatever fades quickest.
And that is what makes this verse so powerful. It is not telling us to despise the world or ignore life here below. It is telling us not to let passing things become our master. The world can so easily pull the heart downward into anxiety, pride, comparison, greed, distraction, and endless chasing after things that never truly satisfy. But Saint Paul calls us upward again: seek the things that are above.
Why? Because that is where Christ is.
That is the center of it all. We lift our hearts not toward an idea, but toward a Person. Christ is not only someone we remember; He is the risen Lord. He is alive. He reigns. And if our life is truly hidden in Him, then our deepest desires should begin to reflect where He is.
This Alleluia is a reminder that resurrection is not just something we hope for at the end of life. It is something that should already begin shaping how we live now. A Christian should carry a different weight in the world, not because life is easy, but because the heart knows it is made for more than this world can give.
So these words feel like a gentle but firm call:
lift your eyes,
lift your heart,
do not settle for what is too small for your soul.
You have been raised with Christ.
Live like someone who knows where his true home is.