FROM
THE HEART
Is The Bible True?
by Alan Cohen
Did Moses really part the Red Sea with a
pass of his staff? Did Jesus say and do all the things attributed to him
in the sacred texts? How can the gospels be accurate if they were
recorded hundred of years after Jesus’ crucifixion, scribed by people
who never met him and tampered with by interpreters over 20 centuries?
How do you know what to believe?
Our answer lies not with
historians or biblical scholars, who present more theories than facts.
Instead it lies with the beloved stage character Auntie Mame, who
proclaimed, “Life is a feast and half of the poor suckers think they are
starving to death!” Her assessment is strikingly similar to Jesus’
teaching, “The kingdom of heaven is like a banquet... ” Though Jesus and
Mame lived 2,000 years and worlds apart, they independently arrived at
the same metaphor.
The cool thing about truth
is that it keeps showing up. You can ignore it, deny it, stifle it,
twist it, cover it, pervert it, misuse it and flat out outlaw it, but it
always keeps coming back. You can’t stop it. Real wisdom is eternal and
unbreakable and emerges triumphant over human manipulation. Squash or
distort the truth all you want, but it will have its way. As a bumper
sticker proclaimed, “Nature bats last.” So does anything real.
Deepak Chopra explains
that if you dissolve a sea cucumber in a blender, the cells will find
each other and re-form themselves into its original shape. Smart cells.
Likewise, true wisdom keeps popping up like grass through a crack in
concrete. If you don’t keep covering it, it will eventually displace
massive heavy blocks. Gandhi noted, “In a gentle way you can shake the
world.”
Even if biblical
translators or interpreters mangled or axed the original prophets’
wisdom, its essence will pour anew through the pens, brushes and flutes
throughout the ages. Every human being embodies the capacity to know and
reveal God – and many do – in every generation. We simply have to trust
our inner promptings more than outer pressure, vision more than
appearances and love more than fear. Goethe exhorted, “As soon as you
trust yourself, you will know how to live.”
There is a way to
recognize truth in the Bible or anywhere else: it resonates within your
soul. Why is it that some passages in the Bible (or any teaching) put
you to sleep and others stir you passionately? A part of you recognizes
truth when you hear it and that part clamors, “Yo! Pay attention to
this! It will make you happy and successful to know and live this!”
While I was a guest on a
radio interview, the host asked listeners to phone in and report how
they knew the truth when they heard it. The responses were fascinating:
“A shiver runs up my spine.” “I feel a warm sensation in my solar
plexus.” “I feel relaxed and at ease.” “It’s as if a bell has rung
inside me.” “I feel as if I am coming home.”
Likewise, you have your
own personal way of knowing the truth when it is spoken. Trust it. It is
the voice of God speaking to you. That voice does not boom out of the
heavens with heavy ominous bass tones. It is gentle and comforting and
guides you through ease, not pressure.
That voice will also
inform you when you have spoken the truth (or not). Sometimes when I am
speaking in conversation or presenting a seminar, certain phrases
resonate with me, as if my inner spirit is saying, “Pay attention to
what you just said, because it’s true for you and you need to act on
it.” By contrast, sometimes I say something that feels empty, numb or
dead. The message is that I do not really believe this or I have not yet
mastered it. So you can learn from your own speech when it goes hot or
cold.
If you are teaching a
group or conversing with an individual, your audience is your truth
meter. If your listeners are present, focused and attentive, you are
aligned with honesty or wisdom. If your audience is bored, distracted or
fidgety, you have drifted and you are being advised to get back on
track. During a recent seminar a participant spoke from her head rather
than her heart and rambled. The next time she took the microphone, five
people in the audience got up to go to the restroom. Something inside
them knew that they would not miss anything when she spoke, so they
availed themselves the opportunity for a break. By contrast, when other
seminar participants speak from their soul, everyone is rapt and no one
would dare leave their seat. They crave realness and eat it up like soul
food. “When you speak from your heart, everyone listens, because God is
talking.”
So how do you know what in
the Bible is true? You just know. No one has to prove it to you and no
one can. God spoke through Moses, Buddha, Mohammed and Jesus during
their times and God continues to speak through many people in our time –
including you. Prophecy is not relegated to days of yore. It is equally
available in days of yours.

Alan Cohen is the author
of many popular inspirational books, including The Dragon Doesn’t Live
Here Anymore and Why Your Life Sucks and What You can do about It. Join
Alan this April in Assisi, Italy with Pat Rodegast and Emmanuel. For
information on this program or to receive Alan’s daily inspirational
quote and monthly newsletter, visit
www.alancohen.com, email
info@alancohen.com or phone (800) 568-3079.
|