Author: SO GOOD QUOTES

  • It’s easier to ask for money from the poor than from the wealthy.

    —Anton Chekhov

  • View situations with simplicity and let them take their natural course.

    —H.H. Pope Shenouda III, Monastic Treasures for All of Us

  • Among the items that waste time is for the mind to replay what it saw during the day. It finds audiovisual flashbacks of the entire past: discussions, images, actions, meetings, and conversations, as well as the mind’s consequent inferences— this consumes a great amount of time.

    —H.H. Pope Shenouda III, Monastic Treasures for All of Us

  • Properly Valuing the Whole World

    What is this whole world, with all its continents, its past, present, and future? What does it amount to? Nothing! I resonate with a statement from one scholar who once said: “When I was a child I saw myself in comparison to the world as a small speck of sand on an endless beach of an endless ocean.” So what if someone lives in any given city within a specific country, which is part of a specific continent, which in turn is a small part of planet Earth, itself just one of innumerable planets? What would that mean? It is nothing. What does this person turn out to be? He says: “When I was a child, I saw myself as a small speck of sand on an endless beach of an endless ocean, but now I know that I am the endless ocean and the whole world is a small speck of sand on my beach.” 

    What is this world?! One who sits to think of the world finds that it is frivolous. If you asked him, “What is the world?” he would say, “A small speck of sand on my beach.” And if you asked, “What is your endless beach?” he would reply, “This is the beach leading to eternity.” If you see yourself as the image and likeness of God, then what does this world amount to? With all its noise, struggles, desires, and status, what does the world amount to? Nothing. This is a person’s valuation of the world.

    —H.H. Pope Shenouda III, Monastic Treasures for All of Us

  • He does not search people’s intentions and inner purposes, which God alone knows.

    —H.H. Pope Shenouda III, Fruits of the Spirit

  • Even all the incidents you experience are permitted by God so you can gain a spiritual benefit from them…

    There are those who become nervously, psychologically or mentally affected by incidents. Others are affected spiritually by whatever events they experience; everything that happens to them makes them closer to God….

    The people that you meet, are sent by God. Passing your way, they are for your own spiritual benefit, if you know how to benefit from them.

    The righteous present you with an example and a blessing, while you benefit endurance, patience, and forgiveness for others from evil.

    —H.H. Pope Shenouda III, WORDS OF SPIRITUAL BENEFIT VOL. II

  • Truly God has many solutions… We think of our problems, using our human mind, which is limited. As for God He is unlimited in His knowledge and His wisdom. When matters become complicated, their complication is relative for us human beings. As for God nothing becomes complicated, everything is easy and the solutions are many. God interferes at the right time and in the suitable way. It could be a solution that never crossed our minds, one that we never thought of or expected…

    —H.H. Pope Shenouda III, WORDS OF SPIRITUAL BENEFIT VOL. II

  • 153. YOUR COMFORT AND THE COMFORT OF OTHERS 

    A noble person does not build his comfort on the weariness of others. But the noble one is he who sacrifices his comfort in order to comfort others. 

    A mother might feel comfort in having her son by her side while the son, at the same time, might find comfort in being far from home. He might travel, migrate, become a monk or live on his own with a wife. Here, the noble mother would let him go without insisting on her comfort by his side.

    —H.H. Pope Shenouda III, Words of Spiritual Benefit Vol. IV

  • I never met one interesting mind that was not richly endowed with inadmissible deficiencies.

    —Emil Cioran, The Trouble with Being Born

  • The more gifted a man is, the less progress he makes on the spiritual level. Talent is an obstacle to the inner life.

    —Emil Cioran, The Trouble with Being Born