A Natural Preservative
Jesus called his followers “the salt of the earth,” but the Gospels do not explain the meaning of this famous saying. As is the case today, in the days of the Bible salt was used to season and preserve food from rotting in the warm climate of Israel. Jesus was telling his followers to behave morally in order to improve the quality and preserve the goodness of the world around them.
A covenant of salt
Because of its protective powers, salt became a symbol of integrity. Salt was added to all sacrifices in the Temple (Lev. 2:13), and it was also a central part of a ceremonial meal eaten to seal a pact, as seen in the covenant God made with David (2 Chr. 13:5). The Bible refers to this type of unbreakable covenant as a “everlasting covenant of salt”, brit melakh olam (בְּרִית מֶלַח עוֹלָם).
Retrieve the Real Biblical Meaning
To be the “salt of the earth” is be resolutely upstanding, unbreakable, like a covenant of salt. When Jesus spoke the Sermon on the Mount twenty centuries ago, he said the words “salt of the earth” in Hebrew – melakh ha-aretz – and everyone understood him. Today we read these words in translation and so much is lost. Enroll in our live online Biblical Hebrew courses and get back to the real meaning of Scripture.