I have been appreciating salt recently on my
food. Actually, I have been using salt in the many cobs of corn which I have
been consuming. I generally don’t add salt to my food as it is not
recommended for people who deal with high blood pressure. In any case, I
find it essential for eating corn on the cob and here at the cottage we have a
great local source for this food group – Keddy’s Corn.
With that as context, the bible passage came to
mind about salt losing its saltiness: “For everyone will be salted with
fire. Salt is good; but if salt has lost its saltiness, how can you season it?
Have salt in yourselves and be at peace with one another.” —Mark 9:49–50
That led me to wonder if it is actually possible
for salt to lose its saltiness? With this kind of question, I turn to AI
for an answer:
Pure salt (sodium
chloride) cannot lose its saltiness because its taste is an inherent
property of its stable chemical compound. However, impure or ancient salts mixed with other
minerals could lose their taste if exposed to water, causing the actual sodium
chloride to dissolve and wash away, leaving behind flavorless
fillers. Additionally, if someone has a taste disorder, they
might perceive salt as not being salty, even if the salt itself remains
unchanged.
That, in turn, left me with the question of what
was the point of this parable that Jesus was trying to give us? Jesus
used many common situations and real-life examples in his parables, so this
must have been a common experience for the people listening to him. What
was the spiritual message that Jesus was giving to his audience two thousand
years ago and us today? Well, fortunately I was given an answer to that
question in one the Daily Meditations from Richard Rhor:
Jesus connects using
our power to honor and protect others with being a transforming presence or
“salt” in the world.
When we keep in mind
the context of this whole passage in which the disciples have been jostling for
power and Jesus gives stark warnings to those who misuse their power (Mark
9:33–48), we discover a piercing challenge. Here, the gathering together of imagery
of being “salted with fire,” ideas of sacrifice and the challenge to live
peaceably together, may reflect ideas about being purified and refined for
peace. That is, in the process of allowing our lives to become a salty
offering, no longer driven by power plays, but instead focused upon honouring
and protecting others, especially the “little ones,” our ego-driven agendas are
burned away. Like the fighting disciples, this will be a costly process of
having our assumptions about power deconstructed, so that we may actually be
able to embody God’s peace together…. Australian theologian Sally Douglas
As it happens, today I was not really feeling
like producing another edition of this blog. I was convincing myself that
I didn’t really need o do it and probably it wouldn’t be missed if I
didn’t. I had the topic on salt as a topic and decided to buck up and put
the computer version of pen to paper. I think that feeling of why bother
and not feeling up to a task and what does it matter anyway is an aspect of
losing my saltiness and especially being salted with fire. So, for what it’s
worth - here it is my effort to get in touch with my saltiness.
May you be blessed to be the salt of the earth on
your journey.
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