Friday, September 10, 2010

salt and grace

When it comes to snack foods, there is nothing more undesirable to me than unsalted peanuts. Really, who likes them anyway? I know they cause high blood pressure and other health issues, but seriously salt is a wonderful thing!

“5 Be wise in the way you act toward outsiders; make the most of every opportunity. 6 Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.” Colossians 4:5-6 NIV
What does it mean to have conversation seasoned with salt? In the 21st century it is a weird thing to say.
Jesus said we are the salt of the earth. That is also a weird thing to say. But in the 1st century it made sense.

In the Bible salt has several different meanings. In Number 18:19, salt represents promise, the commitment between man and God. It also represents purity, goodness, and flavor. We also know that in ancient times salt was used as a preservative, it would help food last longer.
Words like grace and salt used in the same verse made sense to the early Christians at Collosse. First century people saw both words as transforming words. Salt changes bland food into food that is desirable and tasty. Grace by definition was the changing of ordinary things into things that are beautiful and extraordinary. So when the early Christians read Colossians 4, they knew what Paul was calling them to do, that their words should be transforming, turning this bland, loveless, and graceless world into a world filled with God’s love, grace, and hope.
It is as simple as saying “these peanuts needs some salt”, we can also say “this world needs Christians that transform the people and community around them.” So today I am going to commit to speaking words that encourage grace, to highlight God’s love working in my life, so that the people around me can learn about God’s wonderful love and grace.

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