JESUS in His most popular sermon – the Sermon on the Mount –
teaches that believers are the Salt of the Earth – Matthew 5:13. Why Jesus
chose this metaphor is something we have to ponder in order to know exactly
what He meant.
From my basic natural understanding, there are some things I
definitely know about salt. Although more, I’ll just mention three of those in
this article and then relate those physical properties/uses into my spiritual
understanding as inspired by the Holy Spirit.
The first thing I’d like to mention about salt is its ability to
preserve food and keep it from getting rotten. In the olden days before the
invention of freezers, our forefathers used salt as a preservative for their
foods in order to lengthen “shelf life”.
As Christians, we are preservatives. We help to preserve the truth
of the gospel. Jesus said in Matthew 24:11 that false prophets will arise.
People will preach various messages that are contrary to the true gospel of
Christ – Galatians 1:8-9. As salt of the earth, we are to ensure that the true
message of Christ reaches out to people everywhere. We are to live our lives
like Christ lived so that value and dignity remains associated with little
Christs on earth (us) and Christendom as a whole. Second Timothy 4:3-4 tells us
that in perilous times (which we are in now), people will have itchy ears. They
will seek for messages that will soothe their fleshly desires and serve as an encouragement for evil deeds. Salt who have lost their
savor (Matthew 5:13) will tell them what they want to hear; will encourage them negatively, even quoting some “carefully selected” Bible verses to buttress their points. But Jesus’ salt of the earth will speak only the truth. Jesus’ salt of the earth will preserve the integrity of the gospel, even if it will cost them their lives.
Salt is a preservative. As a new creation individual, you should
be too.
The second thing I’d like to note here about salt is that it
creates thirst. It causes a longing for water. When you put salt on your
tongue, it only takes a couple of seconds for you to realize that you want to
satisfy a thirst – usually, with water.
As salt of the earth, we are to create a longing for satisfaction
in the lives of people. We are to cause people to be thirsty for God. Think
about it. Jesus didn’t call us just “salt”; He called us “salt of the EARTH”.
Or we can say salt of the WORLD. From biblical point of view, we know that the
“World” refers to unbelievers. There it is. Jesus says we are to reach out to
unbelievers, purposefully or not, and cause them to be thirsty. That is, cause
them to seek water to satisfy their thirst; cause them to seek the LORD. Let
your words, your deeds, and your life be a testament of God’s mercy, grace, and
love; something that they’ll seek to experience.
A question or two you may ask here may be, “how do I quench their
thirst?” or “where do they get the water from?” John 7:38-39 tells us that the
Holy Spirit is that Living Water that quenches people’s thirst – John 4:10, 14.
Be careful to note that no where have you been called “the water
of the earth.” You do not have the ability or power to quench anyone’s thirst.
No no no. You are the salt who will make them thirsty and then lead them to
that Living Water. Even the Bible says Jesus (our perfect example), leads
people to that Living Water – Revelation 7:17; John 4:10, 14. You cannot be
both salt and water. But as salt of the earth, be faithful to do what you’ve
been called to do. Don’t try to do God’s job for Him. Don’t let people give
glory to you that you do not deserve. No. Be the salt. Lead them to that Living
Water. You can be certain that He’s more than capable of satisfying their
thirsts.
Number three thing that salt does is something almost all of us
use salt for these days – to add taste; to sweeten. When I cook a pot of soup
and I do not add salt to it, it is tasteless, and very unappealing to normal tongues
like mine. So here are my questions to you:
Are you tasteless as a believer? Are you an unappealing new
creation individual? Do you add sweetening to the lives of people – believers and
non-believers? Do you brighten up the faces of people when you get into a room?
Or do people tend to “not notice” when you’re somewhere? Can people come to you
for counsel and find Jesus’ love, peace and joy as soon as you begin speaking?
Or do they go away even more troubled than they were before they came to you?
Or are they even careful to tell you anything too private about themselves
because of your well-known medical condition – LMS, aka the leaking-mouth
syndrome? Are you the salt of the earth around you – your church, your
workplace, your community, your nation?
Are you still salt of the earth or have you lost your savor? Jesus
said when salt is poured on the ground, it is useless, and gets trodden under
foot of men. Are you careful enough to ensure that every pinch of your salt
reaches out to people – to tell them/preserve the truth, to create a thirst, and/or to
sweeten their lives? Or have you carelessly allowed your jar of salt slip off
your hand, causing it to be useless, and insulted beneath the feet of men? Have
you been mixed with water or fluid of the world making you tasteless and
unusable?
You are the salt of the earth. How much of your salt is still in
the jar? How much has been poured away?
Ye are the salt
of the earth:
but if the salt have lost his savor,
wherewith shall it be salted?
It is thenceforth good for nothing,
but to be cast out, and to be
trodden under foot of men
but if the salt have lost his savor,
wherewith shall it be salted?
It is thenceforth good for nothing,
but to be cast out, and to be
trodden under foot of men
- Matthew 5:13
How salty is your salt?
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