His Holiness Pope Shenouda III’s Lecture at the Book Fair – A Talk on Knowledge

Pope Shenouda III discusses knowledge: its limits, sources, uses and responsibilities. Key points:
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Human knowledge is limited and specialized; only God possesses complete knowledge.
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Books are a means, not an end — acquire, read, understand and retain useful information.
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Not all knowledge is beneficial; some knowledge can confuse the mind, stain the conscience, or incite passions.
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Sources of knowledge include senses, reason, conscience, reflection, revelation, media, books and computers; beware overdependence on tools that may dull thinking.
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Knowledge brings responsibility: “more knowledge → more accountability.” Rejecting knowledge is culpable.
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True knowledge should lead to application, problem-solving and personal / social improvement.
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Writers/teachers should convey truth clearly and responsibly; effective communication (clarity, accuracy, usefulness) matters more than obscurity.
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Practical advice: choose age-appropriate, edifying books; favor simplicity with depth; seek works that produce moral and spiritual benefit.
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