Matthew 5:13
Context5:13 “You are the salt 1 of the earth. But if salt loses its flavor, 2 how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything except to be thrown out and trampled on by people.
Mark 9:49-50
Context9:49 Everyone will be salted with fire. 3 9:50 Salt 4 is good, but if it loses its saltiness, 5 how can you make it salty again? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with each other.”
Colossians 4:6
Context4:6 Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you should answer everyone.
Hebrews 2:4-8
Context2:4 while God confirmed their witness 6 with signs and wonders and various miracles and gifts of the Holy Spirit distributed 7 according to his will.
2:5 For he did not put the world to come, 8 about which we are speaking, 9 under the control of angels. 2:6 Instead someone testified somewhere:
“What is man that you think of him 10 or the son of man that you care for him?
2:7 You made him lower than the angels for a little while.
You crowned him with glory and honor. 11
2:8 You put all things under his control.” 12
For when he put all things under his control, he left nothing outside of his control. At present we do not yet see all things under his control, 13
[5:13] 1 sn Salt was used as seasoning or fertilizer (BDAG 41 s.v. ἅλας a), or as a preservative. If salt ceased to be useful, it was thrown away. With this illustration Jesus warned about a disciple who ceased to follow him.
[5:13] 2 sn The difficulty of this saying is understanding how salt could lose its flavor since its chemical properties cannot change. It is thus often assumed that Jesus was referring to chemically impure salt, perhaps a natural salt which, when exposed to the elements, had all the genuine salt leached out, leaving only the sediment or impurities behind. Others have suggested that the background of the saying is the use of salt blocks by Arab bakers to line the floor of their ovens; under the intense heat these blocks would eventually crystallize and undergo a change in chemical composition, finally being thrown out as unserviceable. A saying in the Talmud (b. Bekhorot 8b) attributed to R. Joshua ben Chananja (ca.
[9:49] 3 tc The earliest
[9:50] 4 sn Salt was used as seasoning or fertilizer (BDAG 41 s.v. ἅλας a), or as a preservative. If salt ceased to be useful, it was thrown away. With this illustration Jesus warned about a disciple who ceased to follow him.
[9:50] 5 sn The difficulty of this saying is understanding how salt could lose its saltiness since its chemical properties cannot change. It is thus often assumed that Jesus was referring to chemically impure salt, perhaps a natural salt which, when exposed to the elements, had all the genuine salt leached out, leaving only the sediment or impurities behind. Others have suggested the background of the saying is the use of salt blocks by Arab bakers to line the floor of their ovens: Under the intense heat these blocks would eventually crystallize and undergo a change in chemical composition, finally being thrown out as unserviceable. A saying in the Talmud (b. Bekhorot 8b) attributed to R. Joshua ben Chananja (ca.
[2:4] 6 tn Grk “God bearing witness together” (the phrase “with them” is implied).
[2:4] 7 tn Grk “and distributions of the Holy Spirit.”
[2:5] 8 sn The phrase the world to come means “the coming inhabited earth,” using the Greek term which describes the world of people and their civilizations.
[2:5] 9 sn See the previous reference to the world in Heb 1:6.
[2:6] 10 tn Grk “remember him.”
[2:7] 11 tc Several witnesses, many of them early and important (א A C D* P Ψ 0243 0278 33 1739 1881 al lat co), have at the end of v 7, “You have given him dominion over the works of your hands.” Other
[2:8] 12 tn Grk “you subjected all things under his feet.”
[2:8] 13 sn The expression all things under his control occurs three times in 2:8. The latter two occurrences are not exactly identical to the Greek text of Ps 8:6 quoted at the beginning of the verse, but have been adapted by the writer of Hebrews to fit his argument.