In the Sermon on the Mount . . .
In the Sermon on the Mount, immediately following the
Beatitudes, Jesus issues two emphatic statements. “You are the salt of the earth” and “You are
the light of the world.” Both statements
contain an implied imperative, almost as if Jesus was commanding us, “Be
salt. Be light. Be who you have been called to be; and
indeed, who you are more than capable of being, through the grace and power of
God!”
But of these two, it’s the first one that I find the most
intriguing. What exactly does Jesus mean
by “the salt of the earth”? Is he
referring to salt’s ability to add flavor?
Is he reminding us of how salt can be used to preserve food (and of
course, in Jesus’ day, this would have been absolutely essential, since there
was no refrigeration)? Is he pointing
out that salt has various medicinal attributes and is necessary for one’s
overall health and well-being? Or is it
“all of the above”?
Evidently, until about a hundred years ago, salt was rather
scarce. So scarce, in fact, that at
different points in history, wars have been fought over who controlled the
stores of salt. It was even used as
currency. Hence, the expression “worth
one’s salt.” Our word “salary” has its
Latin roots in the sense that a worker was paid in order to be able to purchase
salt.
According to Mark Kurlansky’s book Salt: A World History,
there are literally thousands of practical uses for salt. Moreover, it is very stable, non-reactive
compound. This is why scholars have been
somewhat puzzled over Jesus’ question, “But if salt has lost its taste, how can
its saltiness be restored?”—because, technically speaking, salt can never
actually lose its saltiness.
However, salt can become diluted with water, and this may
have been what Jesus had in mind. Notice
that Jesus’ statement “You are the salt of the earth” comes directly on the
heels of his exhortation that we are to rejoice when people revile us, and
persecute us, and utter all kinds of evil against us. In other words, Jesus may have been
cautioning us, as disciples, not to lose our ardor—not to have our passion
diluted—when the world mocks, maligns, or mistreats us.
Regardless of what exactly Jesus meant when he called us
“salt,” one thing is clear. Our
influence is supposed to be broad rather than narrow. We are not asked merely to be a shaker of
salt for our next-door neighbor or the local community. Jesus is asking us to flavor, preserve, and
ensure the well-being of the whole wide world—to be “the salt of the earth.”