The Nature of Response and Reaction

His Holiness Pope Shenouda III explains that people differ in their reactions to life’s events, whether joyful or painful. The essence is that the problem lies not in the event itself but in how a person responds to it.
Illustrative Examples
Just as water can spoil wet cement or strengthen it once dry, and as fire can burn straw but bake clay, so reactions differ. What destroys one person may strengthen another, because the difference is in the quality of response, not in the situation itself.
Types of Human Responses
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One person hears a frank word and benefits, repenting sincerely.
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Another feels insulted and closes his heart.
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One faces trouble and collapses, another thinks calmly, and a third surrenders to God saying, “All things work together for good to those who love God.”
Differences in Temperament and Spirit
People differ in temperament, thought, spirituality, age, and education. Some see life darkly, others brightly; some are impulsive, others calm; some cry, while others pray and trust God.
Attitude Toward Insult and Criticism
The spiritual person, when hearing harsh words, examines himself: is there truth in them? If yes, he corrects himself; if not, he ignores them peacefully. The unspiritual person may hold grudges or seek revenge.
Dealing with Praise and Authority
His Holiness warns against pride when receiving praise or positions of power. The true believer gives glory to God, like the Virgin Mary who said, “The Mighty One has done great things for me, for He has regarded the lowliness of His handmaid.” The proud, however, fall like Herod.
Benefiting from the Means of Grace
The Church offers means of grace—prayer, fasting, praise, confession—but benefit depends on the heart. The same prayer can be said formally by one, and deeply by another who feels communion with God. The same fast can be lived in repentance or merely in diet.
Conclusion
The real difference in spiritual life is not in circumstances but in the way one receives them. Therefore, each person must examine himself, recognize his faults, and work on correcting them, so that every trial, fast, or prayer leads to greater purity and spiritual growth.
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