By H.H. Pope Shenouda III 
Whoever loves God and attaches his mind to Him will take everything as a reminder of God whom he loves. 
 He watches heaven, but not to watch its planets and  stars or the sun and the moon, but to say, "The heavens declare the  glory of God; and the firmament shows His handiwork," 'Heaven is God's  throne, and the earth is His footstool,' 'The tabernacle of God with  men." (Ps 19; Mt 5: 34, 35; Rev 21) He remembers the words of the Lord's  Prayer, "Our God in heaven" and remembers that the heaven we see is not  everything, for there is also the third heaven where St. Paul the  Apostle was taken up (2 Cor 12: 2), and the heaven of heavens of which  the Lord spoke, saying, "No one has ascended to heaven but He who came  down from heaven … the Son of Man who is in heaven." (Jn 3: 13)
 
 He watches the beautiful nature, not to admire its  beauty, but to glorify God who created such beauty. Indeed, it is not  proper that God's gifts to us take us away from Him who gave them. They  rather give us an idea about His love, His generosity and His power.
 When he sees the lilies of the field he would say,  "Even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these." How  amazing is God's power who so clothes them! The same applies to the  butterflies with their colors, the birds with their singing, the bee  which makes honey, and the ant with its activity. How God has endowed  this creation with the most amazing and wondrous gifts!
 
 If even a person sees a cat pursued by a dog which  cannot catch it, he will say: 'How compassionate is God who gave such a  weak creation the means to escape from the powerful. The cat in this  case has the ability to climb a tree, whereas the dog cannot. The lion  likewise, though much stronger than the deer, the latter has the power  to run much faster than the lion to flee from it.