This Week’s Feature Article by Jack Kelley
A simple line in
Mark 9:50 says so much. It’s
almost a throw-away and yet when taken in light of the surrounding passage
it speaks volumes. “Have salt in
yourselves, and be at peace with each other.”
In Mark 9-10,
the Lord spent a lot of time summarizing God’s standards for behavior, and
believe me, they are impossible. So much so that the disciples were amazed
and exclaimed, “Who then can be saved?” Jesus replied,” With man this is impossible, but not with God. All things are possible
with God (Mark 10:26-27)”
And right in the middle of this two chapter teaching
is that simple little line, “have salt
in yourselves and be at peace with each other” (Mark
9:50). What big lessons spring from the little things in
Scripture.
Worth His Salt
Salt was used in that era as a preservative to
retard the spoiling process. Of course there were no refrigerators back
then, and therefore salt was a valuable commodity. In fact Roman soldiers
were sometimes paid in salt. (This is where the saying, “worth his salt”
originated.) They could easily trade the salt for the things they needed and
sometimes they even made a small profit in the bargain.
When searching for “salt” in the Bible, you find 27
references in the Old Testament and 8 in the New. For example, salt was one
of the ingredients in the sacred incense, for use in the Holy of Holies (Exodus
30:34-35).
Covenant of Salt
In Leviticus
2:13 the Lord commanded the Israelites to use the “salt of the covenant”
in the grain offering, a voluntary act of worship. There is also a
reference in Numbers 18:19to a
“covenant of salt” in connection with the portion of the sacrificial
offerings that went to the Levites for their consumption. This
covenant of salt is mentioned for the third time in
2 Chron. 13:5 referring to the
Lord’s promise of an everlasting kingdom for David.
Traditionally the covenant of salt symbolized
endurance, preservation, and freedom from corruption. Although the Bible
never explains this in so many words, the three Old Testament references to
this covenant seem to say the Lord was preserving forever something He has
ordained and wants it to remain free of corruption.
The Priests and Levites were set apart for Him,
given no land, and supported (preserved) through the offerings Israel made
to the Lord. When certain of them became corrupt, He banned them from
His presence forever, and in the Millennium will allow only the family of
Zadok, who remained faithful, to perform the most important Temple duties in
His presence (Ezekiel 44:10-16).
Similarly, the Davidic line was established to
preserve the throne of Israel for the coming Messiah. But when the
kings of Judah became corrupt, the Lord cursed the royal line of David
suspending the office of king until the Messiah Himself comes to sit on
David’s throne (Jeremiah 22:28-30,
Ezekiel 21:25-27, Luke 1:32). Sidestepping this curse required
nothing less than a virgin birth to qualify the Messiah to become Israel’s
King. These examples tell us only God can make a Covenant of Salt and
only God can keep it.
As I’ve written before, things that are external and
physical in the Old Testament often become internal and spiritual in the
New. So if New Testament believers are supposed to have salt in
ourselves, it must symbolize a spiritual preservative that gives us
endurance and is free of corruption. And please note that the admonition is
not to salt ourselves, but to have salt
in ourselves. In other
words, it’s not something we do, it’s something that’s done for us.
The Salt Of The Earth
Romans 8:29-
30 says those who believe have been conformed to the likeness of his
Son, and because of that we’ve been justified by God. The Greek word
translated “justified” is dikaioo. It means to render righteous.
Because of our faith God has declared us to be righteous. When He
looks upon us, He sees a new creation (2
Cor. 5:17) created to be like Him in true righteousness and holiness (Ephes
4:24). When we sin He attributes our behavior to the old sin nature that
still dwells within us (Romans
7:18-20) and since He’s going to destroy our sin nature and retain only
the part of us that conforms to the likeness of His Son, that’s the part He
chooses to see.
“For the
trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be
changed. For the perishable must clothe itself with the imperishable,
and the mortal with immortality “ (1 Cor. 15:52-53).
On that day we will become in fact that which we
already are by faith, receiving new bodies that will never decay. Until
then our faith preserves our life in His presence. And because our
faith is based on what the Lord has done, and not something we do, it
endures forever and cannot be corrupted like the Kings and Priests of old
were corrupted. By one sacrifice He has perfected forever we who are
sanctified (Hebr. 10:14)
But there’s more. Because of our faith, God put His
spirit in our hearts as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come (2 Cor. 1:21-22). As a result, our presence on Earth has helped
preserve the fallen world around us by retarding the spoiling process.
Jesus even called us the salt of the Earth (Matt. 5:13). But it won’t be this way forever. One day
soon, we’ll be removed from the Earth to Heaven, the place of our
citizenship (Phil. 3:20), and the
salt of the Earth will no longer be here.
This was Paul’s point in
2 Thes. 2:7-8. He said the secret
power of lawlessness is already at work but someone’s holding it back.
That someone is the Holy Spirit resident in the Church (Ephes.
1:13-14). After our departure the spoiling process will accelerate
and the world we leave behind will be destroyed in judgment. Then,
just as He will have made a new incorruptible body for us, God will make a
new Creation, liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the
glorious freedom of the children of God (Romans
8:19-21).
Act Justly, Love
Mercy, Walk Humbly with Your God
And that’s why the rest of
Mark 9:50 is also important … “and
be at peace with each other.“ Earlier in
Mark 9 we can read about an argument among the disciples over which
one of them was the greatest (Mark
9:33-37). Then there was the incident where the disciples made a
man stop driving out demons in the Lord’s name because he wasn’t one of them
(Mark 9:38-41), and finally the
warning not to be the cause of another person’s sin (Mark 9:42-48). Part of being the salt of the Earth is to
be a source of peace in your sphere of influence. You can’t very well
preserve something while you’re tearing it down. Paul said if it’s
possible, as far as it depends on us, we should live at peace with everyone
(Romans 12:18).
So there you have it. A little sentence with a
big meaning. The Bible’s full of them. Selah 07-07-12