Prayerfully meditate upon Matthew 5:16. Be light and shine out. A godly life gives convincing testimony of the saving power of God. That brings Him glory. Cf. 1 Pet. 2:12.
God wants Believers to be good witnesses and to give verbal witness at times those who are open to hear. So He spoke to his disciples about, salt and light (Matt 5:13–16)
Two pictures here regarding salt and light. Salt speaks of godly inward character that influences a decaying world; light speaks of the outward nonverbal testimony of good works that points to God.
Our task is to keep our lives so pure as we cooperate with the Holy Spirit that we might “salt” this earth and hold back the corruption here, so that the Gospel can get out (nonverbally and verbally). Our good works must accompany our dedicated lives and verbal witness as we let our lights shine In the dark.
Prayerfully Meditate Some More Upon Matthew 5:13...
You are the salt, Jesus said — not sugar, not such a substance that pleases every tongue, not such soft and dissolving sweetness that many people crave when life feels young or sour.
Sugary-talk is very vulnerable to being dishonest.
Genuine compliments are very specific (e.g., "I admired how you remained kind under heat and handled that difficult client"). Sugary-sweet talk is often vague and hyperbolic (e.g., "You’re just the most amazing handsome person in the world!"), which triggers one's "dishonesty" radar (they must be seeking a favor, raise or promotion). If every interaction is coated in extreme positivity, the value of the person’s words depreciates. If everything is "wonderful" and "perfect," then nothing actually is. Some sugary folk are hiding their passive-aggression and genuine dislike. Here in the South (USA) sugary-speak is used as a social lubricant to maintain politeness and "save face," even if the underlying feeling is neutral or negative. Blunt is valued more in New York, Germany or the Netherlands cuz sugary-talk is often viewed as suspicious and inefficient.
Salt was the wage paid back in the day. Yep, it once was in Rome's empire. Worth its weight in a soldier's honest pay. And salt preserved the meat through summer's rotting — it kept the value when death and heat would take that away.
Salt draws out the blood from flesh it touches. It might irritate a burn or a wound before one's wound heals clean. Truth does this too — it might sting a bit before it steadies the personal situation, and names the thing that comfort cannot see.
God did not say: Seek to be liked among the nations. He did not say: Seek to make every table glad instead of sad, but Jesus basically said: "Be salt" — and live flavorful, it divides the dinner: The grateful might wince, and some might leave furious, mad.
If sinners get upset at you, let it never be due to you missing the will of God. Let it not be due to you acting or speaking poorly -- being obnoxious. Let God's word and love empower you to behave and speak consistently right.
The warning is good for us -- it cuts the deepest, brother: If the salt has lost its savor — what then? It's neither punished nor highly useful. It's simply thrown out. It's simply useless. It's to be trampled underneath the feet of men.
The danger is not that the world will reject you. The danger is in becoming nothing useful for the Lord's hand — so bland. A believer that laughs at every joke told, soft clay that's reshaped by every culture's hand instead of the Potter's.
So irritate so to speak, but not in some selfish or fleshly sort of way. If it happens, then let it be from the Spirit working (while using your deeds, good attitude and words). Preserve. Draw out. Sting rightly, not wrongly. Not merely for the sake of stinging — but for the saving and the healing that can happen. Flavor the earth well, with what the earth cannot make for itself. Let the Lord bring His holiness in that does not dull or fade away.
The Scriptures uses sweet and sour not merely as flavor descriptors but as moral and spiritual diagnostics. The sweetness of honey indeed represents God's worderful Word, His holy character, His wisdom, and His gospel of grace. Sourness, bitterness, gall, and wormwood all represent sin's true wages, divine judgment, and the suffering that accompanies faithful obedience, and or a heart poisoned by wickedness.
Christ's Cross is the max-convergence: that cup Jesus refused up at Golgotha was literally sour wine mixed with bitter gall, and His dying in our place for us there was also the bitter cup of God's wrath that he chose to drink spiritually in full at Gethsemane (while praying. See Luke 22:42). The sourness of sin's penalty absorbed by Christ produces the eternal sweetness of our redemption if we opt to repent and believe in Jesus. That is not sentiment. That's very solid like that bloody wood, and rolled away stone from His empty grave.
What Jesus Actually Meant
Matthew 5:13 — "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 underfoot."
Jesus did not say become real physical salt. He said you are salt. It is a declaration of identity, not an aspiration.
I Love the Three Functions of Salt in the Ancient World
1. Preservation. There were no refrigerators. Salt kept meat from rotting. The Christian's role in culture is not to celebrate decay, not to accommodate it, and not to merely document it. You slow the rot. You hold back corruption through holy living, truthful speech, and righteous presence. When you remove Christians from a culture, it does not stay neutral. It rots faster.
2. Flavor. Salt does not call attention to itself. It calls attention to what it seasons. When you are genuinely salt, people taste something different in your words, your work, your marriage, your conduct at the Ritz-Carlton desk. They cannot always name it. But they notice it. Salt never announces itself. It just changes everything around it.
3. Irritation. This is the part the modern church has fled. Salt in a wound burns. Truth in a comfortable lie stings. A genuine Christian presence in a fallen world will produce friction. Not because Christians are harsh or rude, but because holiness creates contrast, and contrast creates discomfort. Jesus himself was called a troublemaker (Luke 23:2). Paul was called a plague (Acts 24:5). If no one around you is ever even slightly uncomfortable with what you believe, you are probably sugar.
I Love This Warning
Salt that has lost its saltiness is good for nothing. Back in the day, in first-century Palestine, salt was sometimes mixed with other minerals too, and the sodium chloride could basically leach out, leaving a white powder that looked like salt but it sadly preserved nothing and it sadly flavored nothing. We all like good flavor. It was ceremonially useless for anything. One would throw it out on the road.
The warning is not about a Christian becoming pure evil. The warning is about a Christian becoming totally irrelevant. A church that cannot be distinguished from the unholy culture around it has tragically already lost its savor. It looks like the real deal, but it NOT. It sits in the same building. It uses the same Christianese vocabulary. But it changes nothing. God wants to use you and me, and we need to get out of our own way. We need to quit impeding Him and His Spirit.
I Love a Wise Application
You do not need everyone to like you. Really? Why? Are you a man-pleaser or out to please your Lord?
You and I need to be useful to God every day. Sugar can make people comfortable, but it's sort of addictive and very unhealthy. Salt makes people different. Jesus was not crucified for being pleasant or for being liked by all. He was crucified for living all salt in a world that preferred its rot to remain undisturbed.
Be salt. Sting when you must. Preserve what is worth preserving. Season every person in every room you enter with something the world cannot manufacture on its own. We don't point people to ourselves. Why seek attention, or have such a deficit inside?
What are some Bible verses about health?
Does the Bible say anything about political correctness?
What are some Bible verses about speech?
What are some Bible verses about words?
And never, ever let the culture leach the sodium right out of you. Be all in for Jesus and let Him live BIG in and through you.
On Salty Living — Christian Distinctiveness with Courage
Charles Spurgeon:
"The worst thing that can happen to a Christian is to become agreeable to the world. When the church and the world can jog along comfortably together, you may be sure there is something wrong."
Martyn Lloyd-Jones:
"The glory of the gospel is that when the Church is absolutely different from the world, she invariably attracts it."
A.W. Tozer:
"It is doubtful whether God can bless a man greatly until He has hurt him deeply."
Dietrich Bonhoeffer:
"Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline. Cheap grace is grace without discipleship."
On Light — Reflecting Christ
C.S. Lewis:
"I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else."
Augustine of Hippo:
"Our heart is restless until it finds its rest in Thee."
John Calvin:
"There is not one blade of grass, there is no color in this world that is not intended to make men rejoice."
John Piper:
"God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him."
On the Name of Jesus -- His name is the sweetest name I know.
Bernard of Clairvaux
"Jesus, the very thought of Thee with sweetness fills my breast; but sweeter far Thy face to see, and in Thy presence rest."
Samuel Rutherford
"Jesus Christ came into my prison cell last night, and every stone flashed like a ruby."
E.M. Bounds:
"Prayer is not preparation for the battle. Prayer is the battle."
Can I do a poem on Salt and Light (see Matthew 5:13-14 and John 8:12)?
His name is sweet upon my tongue,
Sweeter than I've words to say,
Jesus, light before the morning,
Burning darkness clean away.
I could spend my whole life singing
Every mercy He has shown,
And still find some new wonder waiting
At the foot of His holy throne.
Jesus, You are light — and I will carry it,
Into every darkened room and every broken street.
Jesus, You are life — and I will share it,
Salt and shine together, Lord, until the two worlds meet.
Not sugar — I was made for something stronger,
Not comfort — I was made to hold the flame.
Jesus, let me burn a little longer,
Let the darkness know Your name.
There is sweetness in Your presence,
Fellowship that nothing else can give,
In the quiet of the morning,
In the breath by which I live.
But You did not make me for the sanctuary only,
You have sent me where the shadows run deep,
So I carry what is holy into what is lonely,
Salt for what is rotting, light for those asleep.
I will not dissolve into the culture,
I will not dim my lamp to make friends here,
The world does not need sweetness without substance,
It needs the One whose name the darkness fears.
So let me be the sting before the healing,
Let me be the flame that costs me something real,
Let me be the salt that does its work in silence,
And point to You — the only One who heals
Jesus, You are light — and I will carry it,
All the way to where the comfortable dare not go.
Jesus, You are life — I will declare it,
In the places where the broken need to know.
Not sugar — this was never meant to be easy,
Not softness — You were crucified for love.
Jesus, keep me salty, keep me shining,
Until I see Your face above
There is healing in Your name.
There is freedom in Your name.
There is nothing in this darkness
That can swallow up Your flame.
Always, only — Jesus.
Literal Sweet Things
Manna in the wilderness tasted like wafers made with honey (Exodus 16:31). Jonathan tasted honey in the forest and his eyes were brightened (1 Samuel 14:29). Samson's riddle was built on sweetness coming from the strong: "Out of the eater came something to eat, and out of the strong came something sweet" (Judges 14:14). Proverbs 24:13 counsels eating honey because it is good, connecting wisdom of the soul to sweetness of taste.
Symbolic Sweet Things
So rich in Scripture. God's Word and Law:
- Psalm 119:103: "How sweet are Your words to my taste, sweeter than honey in my mouth."
- Psalm 19:10: God's ordinances are sweeter than honey and the dripping of the honeycomb.
- Jeremiah 15:16: "Your words were found and I ate them, and Your words became for me a joy and the delight of my heart."
- Ezekiel 3:3: Ezekiel ate the scroll of God's word and it tasted sweet as honey.
God Himself:
- Psalm 34:8: "O taste and see that the Lord is good."
- Song of Solomon 2:3: "I sat down under his shadow with great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my taste." (Christ as the beloved)
- Song of Solomon 5:16: "His mouth is most sweet; he is altogether lovely."
Wisdom:
- Proverbs 24:13-14: Wisdom for the soul is like honey for the body. Find it and there is a future and a hope.
Godly Words and Fellowship:
- Proverbs 16:24: "Pleasant words are a honeycomb, sweet to the soul and healing to the bones."
Gospel Revelation:
- Revelation 10:9-10: John ate the scroll and it was sweet as honey in his mouth, though it turned bitter in the stomach. The message of reconciliation and forgiveness is sweet. BibleRef.com
Sup with the Literal Sour and Bitter Things
Gall (Hebrew: rosh) was a bitter, likely narcotic plant substance, possibly poppy or hemlock. Wormwood (Hebrew: la'anah; Greek: apsinthos) was a bitterly toxic plant. Both appear across the Old Testament as the most extreme images of bitter suffering.
Symbolic Bitter and Sour Things. Sin and Idolatry:
- Deuteronomy 29:18: Moses warned Israel against idolatry, saying the pursuit of other gods would produce "a root that beareth gall and wormwood" — whatever attraction idolatry holds, it will have bitter, unsavory consequences.
- Proverbs 5:3-4: The adulteress's lips drip honey, but her end is bitter as wormwood. Sweet sin becomes sour consequence.
The Suffering of the Righteous:
- Lamentations 3:15,19: Jeremiah writes that God "has filled me with bitter herbs and given me gall to drink," and "I remember my affliction and my wandering, the bitterness and the gall."
The Cross:
- Psalm 69:21 (prophetic): "They gave me also gall for my meat; and in my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink." Matthew 27:34 records this fulfilled at Calvary when the soldiers offered Jesus wine mixed with gall, which he tasted but refused to drink.
- Jesus refused the drink to fully embrace the suffering of the crucifixion, demonstrating his commitment to endure pain and humiliation without seeking relief.
Moral Corruption:
- Acts 8:23: Peter rebuked Simon the sorcerer: "I perceive that you are in the gall of bitterness and the bond of iniquity." Here gall denotes extreme wickedness and a heart hardened against God's grace.
Judgment and Apostasy:
- Revelation 8:11: A star named Wormwood falls and makes a third of the waters bitter, killing many. Many scholars consider this a symbolic representation of the bitterness that fills the earth in times of judgment.
- Jeremiah 9:15: God says He will feed a disobedient people with wormwood and give them poisonous water to drink.
- Amos 6:12: Israel had turned justice into gall and the fruit of righteousness into hemlock.
Discipline That Transforms:
- Proverbs 27:7: "One who is full loathes honey, but to one who is hungry everything bitter is sweet." Spiritual hunger reframes hardship.
- Hebrews 12:11: No discipline seems pleasant at the time but painful; yet afterward it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness.
The Grand Paradox of Sweet and Sour Together
The scroll of Revelation 10 carried both: sweet as honey in the mouth, bitter in the stomach. The message of God's Word contains both a sweet message of reconciliation and a bitter message of condemnation. The gospel is sweet to those who embrace it, bitter to those who reject it.
This matches Ezekiel's identical experience (Ezekiel 3:3,14): he ate the Word and it was sweet as honey, yet he walked away from God's commissioning in bitterness and anger of spirit.
ON SWEET AND SOUR
Augustine of Hippo
"How sweet all at once it was for me to be rid of those fruitless joys which I had once feared to lose. You drove them from me, You who are the true, the sovereign joy. You drove them from me and took their place, you who are sweeter than all pleasure."
"Out of love of your love I do this, recalling my most wicked ways, in the bitterness of my thought, so that you may become sweet to me, a sweetness that is not deceptive, a happy and secure sweetness."
"My God, my God of mercy, how good you were to me, for you mixed much bitterness in that cup of pleasure!"
Charles Haddon Spurgeon said,
"Your sorrow itself shall be turned into joy. Not the sorrow to be taken away, and joy to be put in its place, but the very sorrow which now grieves you shall be turned into joy. God not only takes away the bitterness and gives sweetness in its place, but turns the bitterness into sweetness itself."
"Better to be taught by suffering than to be taught by sin! Better to lie in God's dungeon than to revel in the devil's palace."
Augustine on Grace: "What grace is meant to do is to help good people, not to escape their sufferings, but to bear them with a stout heart, with a fortitude that finds its strength in faith."
