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Summary: Some of the Anabaptists of the sixteenth century had a very literal take on the words of Jesus from the Sermon on the Mount, “if the salt loses its saltiness

Some of the Anabaptists of the sixteenth century had a very literal take on the words of Jesus from the Sermon on the Mount, “if the salt loses its saltiness, it is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled by men. At the end of the service they would have the Christians among them that lost their saltiness lay at the threshold of the door. The rest of the congregation as they were leaving the service would then walk on those who lost their saltiness. I don’t know how they decided who would trample and who would be trampled, but useless Christians who have lost their saltiness cause damage and Jesus used this imagery. They are: no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled by men. In short, Jesus calls us to be salt and light.

We often times find ourselves living one our two extremes of the Christian life. One extreme is to just be an example. This extreme does not see the need to tell people about Christ. But people need to know why you are different and how through Jesus Christ, they can experience the transformed life.

The second extreme is to tell others about Christ but have a poor testimony. This person gives a verbal witness, but their life is not attractive to those without Christ. We are called to both. We are to be an example and we are to give a verbal witness. We need to have both of these elements of example and verbal witness to make an impact.

It is a powerful combination when we live a Christian example and that is accompanied by a spoken witness. To make this point Jesus uses a couple of examples that all his hearers on the Sermon on the Mount will relate to. We are to be the salt of the earth and the light of the world.

The Salt of the earth

13"You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled by men.

I heard a Pastor tell the story about one of his church members who worked in a salt mine. He asked them if he could tour the mine. I would imagine Jesus words on being the salt of the earth gave him this interest in seeing the salt mine. After visiting the mine he drew out the qualities of salt to our duties as a Christian.

What did Jesus mean when he told us we are the salt of the earth? Did he mean that we are little cubes of sodium and chloride? It means we make an impact.

After the expansion of a company was opposed by people of a town the company wanted to demonstrate the difference it made. So people would see the impact they started paying its employees in silver dollars. Soon after that silver dollars began to flow all over the town. Since no one was using silver dollars before this people could see the impact that was not noticed before. Once the town saw influence of the company they did not oppose the expansion.

It may not be obvious at first and it may go unnoticed by many but when we are the salt of the earth we will have a profound impact.

Salt preserves food.

In the time that Jesus spoke there were no refrigerators to store the meat and it was very hot. The meat could spoil in the heat so salt was rubbed on the meat to preserve it. The salt prevented the meat from spoiling.

Society is bad, but if Christians were suddenly taken off the scene there would be decay. The church is the preservative. Christian is the salt preserving God’s moral standards. Even a small percentage of Christians can have a profound effect on keeping society from decaying just like a little salt can preserve meat.

Flavor

Salt makes food taste better and adds flavor. Without salt some food is bland and tasteless. We need to help people who are living a bland life without the joy of Christ. They need to know joy. They need to know truth and that God has a purpose for them. Their life needs to be flavored by God’s grace and mercy.

A king called for his three daughters and asked each one how much they loved him. Two of them answered that they cared for him more than all the gold and silver in the world but the youngest, said she loved him like salt. The king wasn’t pleased with her answer, for he considered salt to be of very little value. The cook, who overheard the conversation, knew that the child’s reply had more significance than the father imagined. She dared not speak to the king, but planned a subtle way to emphasize the true meaning of the young girl’s words. The next morning at breakfast she withheld the salt from everything she served, and the meal was so bland that the king didn’t enjoy it at all. Then he realized the full force of his daughter’s remark.

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