To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 58:7-10; 1 Cor 2:1-5; Mt 5:13-16
Besides
making foods delicious, it is believed that there are more than 14,000 uses of
salt. Many of these uses were for simple things around the home before the
advent of modern chemicals and cleaners. However, many uses are still valid
today and a lot cheaper than using more sophisticated products.
What
could Jesus have meant when he used the metaphor of salt and invited his
disciples to be the salt of the earth? It must first be noted that this
identification is unparalleled in contemporary literature and that salt is
never identified with people anywhere in the Old Testament. At the time of
Jesus, salt was used as a preservative, in sacrifices, in food to add taste and
to purify. Jesus does not refer to any specific function of salt and so some
have interpreted this metaphor as a call to the disciples to be preservatives
of all that is good and not allow it to decay, to be an example of purity since
offerings were offered with salt and also to add flavour or taste to the world
and make it palatable for others or in other words to give meaning to life.
This
last use is brought out well in a story that is told of a merchant who had
several daughters. One day he asked them: “How much do you love me?” They all
said various poetic and abstract things, but the youngest replied: “I love you
like salt loves food.” This seemingly silly and disrespectful answer angered
the merchant who expelled her from the house to wander as a beggar. In time the
young woman became married to a very wealthy and influential man. When many
years had passed it happened that her father was invited to her house. She
directed the cook to prepare all the food without salt. As they were eating the
merchant began to weep violently. “I had a daughter who told me she loved me as
salt loves food. Now I realize that she loved me most of all!” Those who suffer
from high blood pressure and are advised by doctors to avoid salt in their food
will know how the merchant will have felt.
However,
from the context and the following sayings about salt losing its saltiness, it
seems that Jesus is saying something more fundamental than that. Jesus, in
using the salt-metaphor to describe his followers, is suggesting that just as
salt has a certain intrinsic property--its saltiness--without which it would be
of no value, Christians also have certain intrinsic characteristics that are
definitive, and without which they would cease to be “Christian.”
Anyone
who is asked what salt tastes like will almost certainly say, “Salty.” There
seems to be no other way to describe it. The saltiness of salt is its
definitive property. Although it has other properties--white, granular--these
are not definitive. Saltiness, on the other hand, is so very definitive of salt
that we would have trouble even imagining “unsalty salt”. Salt without its
definitive property would be of no value. Salt is defined by, and valued for,
its saltiness. Christians, as salt must be salty or Christians as Christians
must be Christian and the only example that we need to explain what this means
is the person of Jesus Christ. There must be something about us as Christians,
something shared by all believers and followers of Jesus, which is definitive.
There must be something that marks us, sets us apart not in the sense of being
parochial or exclusive, but in the sense of being an example to others so that
others will want to know what makes us tick. A Christian without these special
characteristics would simply not be “Christian.” The challenge is not to become
what we are not already, but to show forth what we are, what God has already
made us. This is not something that we can muster up, not something that comes
with training, with effort, with learning, with erudition (though these are all
helpful), but something that is a natural concomitant of what we have received:
our new being in Christ. We will not need to proclaim in words our saltiness
but it will have to be experienced by others, just as no one tells the chef
after a good meal that there was great salt used in the meal. Salt brings out
the flavour and the food gets noticed.
Jesus
also challenges his disciples to be “the light of the world”. This metaphor
seems to be used here as an expression of the saving presence of God. Disciples
of Jesus must radiate through their loving and healing actions this saving
presence. This is further explained by the two sayings on the city on the hill
top which is visible to all and the lamp on the lamp stand. Just as these cannot be hidden from view, so
also the disciples must be visible. They must not try to hide the light which
God has lit in their lives. The martyred German theologian, Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, criticizing the Church for cowering under Nazism, once wrote,
“Flight into the invisible is a denial of the call. A community of Jesus which seeks to hide
itself has ceased to follow him.” This visibility according to Isaiah is not
shown in private acts of devotion like fasting, but through an integration of
personal devotion and social action. His action is expressed in the tangible
manner of sharing bread with the hungry; sheltering the homeless poor and
clothing the naked. This kind of a “doer” of good deeds is according to the
psalmist the one who is a light in the darkness.
The
crucified Christ is according to Paul, the best example of this light. To be a
light is to follow this God, struggling to bring about social justice in our
society, to safeguard human rights and to work for peace and reconciliation.
Our witness must consist of both deeds and words that point to God the Father
and bring glory to him. What a privilege we have to be the agents of evoking
praise to our Father in heaven!
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