His Holiness Pope Shenouda III’s Lecture at the Book Fair — A Talk on the Mind

His Holiness Pope Shenouda III speaks in this lecture about the mind and its importance and the types of minds and their differences among people, explaining that the mind is not one fixed thing and that it has multiple functions such as understanding, memory, and inference.
The main idea of the lecture
The main idea is that the mind is a gift from God whose quality varies from one person to another (intelligent, average, genius, weak) but the mind alone is not sufficient because there are other forces that may lead it or hinder it, such as the desires of the soul, the nerves, fear, and ignorance.
Classifications and manifestations of the mind
His Holiness explains that the mind has attributes: strength of understanding, strength of memory (memorizer or collector or photographic), comprehensiveness of understanding or viewing from a single angle, and that some minds become tired and imprisoned within a single problem.
What leads and restricts the mind
He points out that the mind may serve the appetites of the soul or be enslaved to them, or be led by the nerves when they flare up, or be led by fear and doubts and suspicions, or be restricted by rigid principles or blind obedience to a leader, or be influenced by society, books, friends, and the media.
The mind, faith, and conscience
His Holiness addresses the issue of doubt in matters of faith and how excessive doubt tires the mind and opens doors to errant ideas, and he mentions that conscience, if enlightened by divine knowledge, guides the mind rightly, while a misguided conscience may err.
The need for deliberation and intellectual companionship
He recommends not to accept what we hear easily but to examine and verify, and that the mind sometimes needs an accompanying mind to illuminate it and show it the truth, and that the disagreement of thinkers indicates that the mind is not the sole source of certainty.
Spiritual and educational conclusion
The summary is that the mind is a gift to be used with wisdom: we must protect the mind from destructive doubt, fear, and ignorance, and make it an instrument of service and discernment with cultivation of memory and knowledge and balance between mind and conscience.
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