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"You Are The Salt Of The Earth"
by Barbara E. Reid, OP | February 4, 2011
Scripture Reflection for the Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time (February 6, 2011)
Scripture Readings:
Isaiah 58:7-10
Psalm 112:4-5, 6-7, 8-9
1 Corinthians 2:1-5
Matthew 5:13-16
Today if we say someone is “the salt of the earth,” we understand that person to be solid and dependable, someone you can count on through thick and thin. We might also say that someone’s speech is salty to mean that their language is coarse, such as that of a sailor who has been out to sea for a long time, and who has not had to be concerned about using polite expressions in refined company. But when Jesus said to his disciples that they were the salt of the earth, they might have understood the metaphor in light of several biblical connotations.
First, salt was a critical necessity for human life, along with water, fire, and iron, as Sirach 39:26 states. Salt was important for seasoning and preserving food. Job questions, “Can a thing insipid be eaten without salt?” (Job 6:6). A second way in which salt was important was for liturgical functions. It was included with cereal offerings (Lev 2:13) and burnt offerings (Ezek 43:24). Blending salt with incense kept the fragrant powder pure and sacred (Exod 30:35). Salt was what Elisha used to purify a polluted spring of water (2 Kgs 2:19-22).
In Catholic liturgical tradition, the baptismal ritual included putting salt on the infant’s tongue, as a symbol of incorruptibility. Another way in which salt was used was to ratify covenants (Num 18:19; 2 Chr 13:5). As a preservative, salt symbolized the lasting nature of the agreement. Finally, different kinds of salts are necessary for the soil to be fruitful, but soil that is “nothing but sulphur and salt” is a desert wasteland (Deut 29:22; Ps 107:34; Job 39:6). As a symbol of permanent destruction, conquerors would spread salt on a city they had razed (Judg 9:45). As Jesus called his disciples “salt,” they may have understood any of these meanings: they season and purify the world with God’s love, giving witness to divine fidelity that preserves life for all eternity.
Jesus then queries, “but if salt loses its taste, with what can it be seasoned?” It seems like a trick question. Salt can be diluted, but could it ever lose its taste entirely? It is possible that Jesus was quoting an ancient proverb to which his disciples would respond, “Impossible!” In the Talmud there is an account of Rabbi Joshua ben Hananya (ca. 80-120 C.E.) who was asked by philosophers in the Atheneum at Rome, “If salt becomes savorless, with what can it be salted?” He responded, “With an after-birth of a mule” (b. Bek. 8b). The point is that just as it is impossible for a mule to give birth, or for salt to become insipid, so disciples cannot cease to be who they are and to season the world with the good news.
The accompanying image of disciples as light reinforces the message. As impossible as it is for a city set on a mountain to be hidden, and as unthinkable as wasting fuel to light a lamp only to immediately extinguish it, so inconceivable is it that disciples would cease to let their light shine before others. Although trials and tribulations may threaten to dilute disciples’ “saltiness” or dim their light, nothing is ever able to take away their capacity to illumine God’s love for others.
A final note is that salt and light are most effective when they do not call attention to themselves. Just as in well seasoned food, the salt is not noticeable, and in a properly lit room, the lamps are not the focus of attention, so disciples’ good deeds do not redound to themselves, but lead others to glorify God.
PRAYING WITH SCRIPTURE:
- Talk to Jesus about things that threaten to dilute your “saltiness” as his disciple.
- How does Jesus help you keep your light burning brightly?
- How do your good deeds point to the Source of light and not feed your own glory?
This article appears in the Jan. 24-31 issue of America.
Image: Jesus teaching on the seashore, from The Life of Jesus Christ by J.J.Tissot, 1899: BiblePictureGallery.com
Barbara E. Reid, OP
Vice President and Academic Dean and Professor of New Testament Studies
M.A., Aquinas College; Ph.D., The Catholic University of America
Barbara Reid is a Dominican Sister of Grand Rapids, Michigan. She holds a Masters from Aquinas College in Religious Studies and a Ph.D. in Biblical Studies from The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. She is the author of Abiding Word: Sunday Reflections for Year B (Liturgical Press, 2011; Year C, 2012, Year A, 2013), Taking Up the Cross: New Testament Interpretations Through Latina and Feminist Eyes (Fortress Press, 2007; Spanish translation: Reconsiderar la Cruz, Editorial Verbo Divino, 2009), The Gospel According to Matthew, New Collegeville Bible Commentary Series (Liturgical Press, 2005), Parables for Preachers (3 volumes; Liturgical Press, 1999, 2000, 2001; Spanish translation: Las Parábolas: Predicándolas y Viviéndolas (Ciclo A, B, 2008, 2009), Choosing the Better Part? Women in the Gospel of Luke (Liturgical Press, 1996), A Retreat With St. Luke (St. Anthony Messenger Press, 2000), and many journal articles. Her latest book is Wisdom's Feast: An Invitation to Feminist Interpretation of the Scriptures (Eerdman’s Press, 2016). She is General Editor for Wisdom Commentary Series, a new 58-volume feminist commentary on the Bible (Liturgical Press). Her introduction to the series can be downloaded for free at www.wisdomcommentary.org.
Books written by Barbara Reid




