Sermons:
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Salt of the earth, Matthew
5:13-20
(see below)
HW in HI
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Law and
Faith--Two Guardrails to Guide us!
Matthew 5: 17-20,
by Rev. Frank Schaefer
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Doing the Right Thing,
Matthew 5:13-20,
by Dr. David Rogne
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Taste and See,
Matthew 5:13-20,
by Rev. Randy Quinn
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Zesty Christians, Matthew
5:13-20,
by Rev. Frank Schaefer
-
This
little light of mine, Matthew 5:13-20,
anonymous
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Touching the King, Isaiah
58:1-12, Nail-Bender in NC
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Salt of the earth
Matthew 17:1-9
HW in HI
Salt of the earth. If someone says you are the salt of the earth, it
means you are a good person, probably without a lot of pretense.
Probably a lot of people here would not mind being called the salt of
the earth.
Now salt can be good or bad. We use it for our food, mostly, but too
much salt can give people heart problems. You can find "salt substitute"
in a lot of our homes. Salt was a different thing for people 2,000 years
ago than it is today. Salt in older days was good for preserving food,
for healing, for enhancing the taste of food.
So it is time to travel back a couple of thousand years to a time
very different than our own. Ovens were made of earth. Jesus spoke
Aramaic, and in Armaic, the same word is used for oven as for earth. So
when Jesus said "You are the salt of the earth", he could very well have
been saying "You are the salt of the oven."
Nowadays, when we light an oven we generally push a switch or turn
a dial. If it is an older gas oven we might just light a match. Or maybe
we cook on an outdoor grill, again, we light a match. But those earthen
ovens of thousands of years ago did not use electricity or gas or
charcoal. And in most homes they did not use wood. They burnt dried
manure. And they used salt to ignite it. Salt accumulated by the sea in
big piles. The pure salt would ignite the ovens. The old salt would not.
So when Jesus says to us, "You are the salt of the earth." He is
saying that we are what is used to ignite something. To make something
burn. To get something going.
What is really interesting is that he doesn't say, "Go and be the
salt of the earth." He doesn't say, "You are called to be the salt of
the earth." He says, "You Are. " Moses asked God who he was, and God
said, "I am that I am". And Jesus told us "You are the salt of the
earth."
What's really interesting is that he didn't say, "You are and you are
and you are." He used the plural. You folks are the salt of the earth.
Together. Go ignite something!
And in case we don't get it, in case the culture of 2,000 years ago
has gotten a bit distant for us, he told us again: You are the light of
the world. Not I want you to be the light of the world. But you folks
are. Let your light shine.
Episcopalians don't really want to let our lights shine. Well, maybe,
a small and appropriate light. Most of us really don't respond well to
someone insisting on telling us about the kingdom. Most of us aren't
anxious to shout our faith from the roof tops. [continue]
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