Salt by Pat Nordman
"You are
the salt. . .of the world." (Matthew 5:13) |
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Salt is both a seasoning and a
preservative. We sprinkle spiritual salt on our anger to turn it into meekness; on our
bitterness to change it into forgiveness; on our doubts to change them into faith; on our
inclination to gossip so we may change this malignant habit into acceptance of others; on
our restlessness so we may become content with life. The seasoning and preservative is
found in God's Word, for it is here and here only that we find the code of conduct for our
lives.
Jesus told His disciples--and us--in His Sermon on the Mount that His people are
savors--and saviors--of others. Salt, to be effective, works quietly and unobtrusively. We
go out into the world and act and speak with grace seasoned with the salt of compassion
and encouragement. A wise word is spoken in reason as well as in season. Jesus also
lamented saltless salt: "It is no longer good for anything. . ." Matthew 5:13.
How it must grieve Him when we don't live up to the potential, the nobility, He has given
us. "How the gold has lost its luster, the fine gold become dull!" Lamentations
4:1.
Therold gives an excellent description of one who has lost the flavor of Christianity:
"The bane of the Church of God, the dishonour of Christ, the laughing-stock of the
world, is in that far too numerous body of half-alive Christians who choose their own
cross, and shape their own standard, and regulate their own sacrifices, and measure their
own devotions; whose sacrifices do not deprive them of a single comfort from one year's
end to another, and whose devotions never make their dull hearts burn with the love of
Christ."
Pat Nordman
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