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La Biblia Reina-Valera Gomez

San Mateo 5:13

Vosotros sois la sal de la tierra; pero si la sal pierde su sabor, ¿con qué será salada? No sirve más para nada, sino para ser echada fuera y ser hollada por los hombres.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Agency;   Backsliders;   Church;   Influence;   Instruction;   Readings, Select;   Religion;   Righteous;   Salt;   Zeal, Religious;   Scofield Reference Index - Parables;   Thompson Chain Reference - Association-Separation;   Contact;   Good;   Good and Evil Adjacent;   Influence;   Names;   Personal Contact;   Salt, the;   Seven;   Salt, Christians as, the;   Titles and Names;   The Topic Concordance - Disciples/apostles;   Glory;   Light;   Salt;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Saints, Compared to;   Salt;   Titles and Names of Saints;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Salt;   Savor;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Ethics;   Government;   Justice;   Matthew, gospel of;   Salt;   Sermon on the mount;   World;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Christians, Names of;   Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Constancy;   Hutchinsonians;   Love, Brotherly;   Means of Grace;   Quakers;   Reconciliation;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Man;   Salt;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Imagery;   Matthew, the Gospel of;   Minerals and Metals;   Parables;   Sermon on the Mount;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Christianity;   Election;   Ethics;   Love, Lover, Lovely, Beloved;   Mss;   Nature;   Salt;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Ambition;   Consciousness;   Discipleship;   Eternal Punishment;   Example;   Feet (2);   Fool (2);   Foot;   Husbandman ;   Indolence;   Metaphors;   Missions;   Nature and Natural Phenomena;   Organization (2);   Palestine;   Perfection (Human);   Personality;   Questions and Answers;   Right (2);   Salt ;   Salt (2);   Sanctify, Sanctification;   Sermon on the Mount;   Social Life;   Winter ;   World ;   Worldliness (2);   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Salt;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Church;   Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types - Salt;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Salt;   Savor;   Sermon on the Mount, the;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Athenians in Talmud and Midrash;  

Devotionals:

- Daily Light on the Daily Path - Devotion for September 13;  

Parallel Translations

La Biblia de las Americas
Vosotros sois la sal de la tierra; pero si la sal se ha vuelto insípida, ¿con qué se hará salada otra vez? Ya para nada sirve, sino para ser echada fuera y pisoteada por los hombres.
La Biblia Reina-Valera
Vosotros sois la sal de la tierra: y si la sal se desvaneciere �con qu� ser� salada? no vale m�s para nada, sino para ser echada fuera y hollada de los hombres.
Sagradas Escrituras (1569)
Vosotros sois la sal de la tierra; y si la sal se perdiere su sabor �con qu� ser� salada? No vale m�s para nada, sino para ser echada fuera y hollada por los hombres.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

the salt: Leviticus 2:13, Colossians 4:6

if: Mark 9:49, Mark 9:50, Luke 14:34, Luke 14:35, Hebrews 6:4-6, 2 Peter 2:20, 2 Peter 2:21

Reciprocal: 2 Kings 9:33 - and he trode Ecclesiastes 10:1 - a little Jeremiah 6:30 - Reprobate silver Jeremiah 24:2 - naughty Ezekiel 15:3 - General Ezekiel 16:6 - polluted Ezekiel 43:24 - cast salt Matthew 25:30 - cast Luke 8:5 - it Acts 8:1 - and they Revelation 11:2 - tread

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Ye are the salt of the earth,.... This is to be understood of the disciples and apostles of Christ; who might be compared to "salt", because of the savoury doctrines they preached; as all such are, which are agreeable to the Scriptures, and are of the evangelic kind, which are full of Christ, serve to exalt him, and to magnify the grace of God; and are suitable to the experiences of the saints, and are according to godliness, and tend to promote it: also because of their savoury lives and conversations; whereby they recommended, and gave sanction to the doctrines they preached, were examples to the saints, and checks upon wicked men. These were the salt "of the earth"; that is, of the inhabitants of the earth, not of the land of Judea only, where they first lived and preached, but of the whole world, into which they were afterwards sent to preach the Gospel.

But if the salt have lost its savour, wherewith shall it be salted? The "savour" here supposed that it may be lost, cannot mean the savour of grace, or true grace itself, which cannot be lost, being an incorruptible seed; but either gifts qualifying men for the ministry, which may cease; or the savoury doctrines of the Gospel, which may be departed from; or a seeming savoury conversation, which may be neglected; or that seeming savour, zeal, and affection, with which the Gospel is preached, which may be dropped: and particular respect seems to be had to Judas, whom Christ had chosen to the apostleship, and was a devil; and who he knew would lose his usefulness and place, and become an unprofitable wretch, and at last be rejected of God and men; and this case is proposed to them all, in order to engage them to take heed to themselves, their doctrine and ministry. Moreover, this is but a supposition;

if the salt, c. and proves no matter of fact and the Jews have a saying k, that all that season lose their savour "hmej hgypm hnya

ומלח, but salt does not lose its savour". Should it do so,

it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out and to be trodden under foot. Salt is good for nothing, but to make things savoury, and preserve from putrefacation; and when it has lost its savour, it is of no use, neither to men nor beasts, as some things are when corrupted; nor is it of any use to the land, or dunghill, for it makes barren, and not fruitful: so ministers of the word, when they have dropped the savoury doctrines of the Gospel, or have quitted their former seeming savoury and exemplary conversations; as their usefulness is gone, so, generally speaking, it is never retrieved; they are cast out of the churches of Christ, and are treated with contempt by everyone.

k T. Bab. Betzah, fol. 14. 1.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Ye are the salt of the earth - Salt renders food pleasant and palatable, and preserves from putrefaction. So Christians, by their lives and instructions, are to keep the world from entire moral corruption. By bringing down the blessing of God in answer to their prayers, and by their influence and example, they save the world from universal vice and crime.

Salt have lost its savour - That is, if it has become tasteless, or has lost its preserving properties. The salt used in this country is a chemical compound - chloride of sodium - and if the saltness were lost, or it were to lose its savor, there would be nothing remaining. It enters into the very nature of the substance. In eastern countries, however, the salt used was impure, or mingled with vegetable or earthy substances, so that it might lose the whole of its saltness, and a considerable quantity of earthy matter remain. This was good for nothing, except that it was used to place in paths, or walks, as we use gravel. This kind of salt is common still in that country. It is found in the earth in veins or layers, and when exposed to the sun and rain, loses its saltness entirely. Maundrell says, “I broke a piece of it, of which that part that was exposed to the rain, sun, and air, though it had the sparks and particles of salt, yet it had perfectly lost its savor. The inner part, which was connected to the rock, retained its savor, as I found by proof. So Dr. Thomson (The Land and the Book, vol. ii. pp. 43, 44) says, “I have often seen just such salt, and the identical disposition of it that our Lord has mentioned. A merchant of Sidon having farmed of the government the revenue from the importation of salt, brought over an immense quantity from the marshes of Cyprus - enough, in fact, to supply the whole province for at least 20 years. This he had transferred to the mountains, to cheat the government out of some small percentage. Sixty-five houses in June - Lady Stanhope’s village were rented and filled with salt. These houses have merely earthen floors, and the salt next the ground, in a few years, entirely spoiled. I saw large quantities of it literally thrown into the street, to be trodden underfoot by people and beasts. It was ‘good for nothing.’

“It should be stated in this connection that the salt used in this country is not manufactured by boiling clean salt water, nor quarried from mines, but is obtained from marshes along the seashore, as in Cyprus, or from salt lakes in the interior, which dry up in summer, as the one in the desert north of Palmyra, and the great lake of Jebbul, southeast of Aleppo.

“Maundrell, who visited the lake at Jebbul, tells us that he found salt there which had entirely ‘lost its savor,’ and the same abounds among the debris at Usdum, and in other localities of rocksalt at the south end of the Dead Sea. Indeed, it is a well-known fact that the salt of this country, when in contact with the ground, or exposed to rain and sun, does become insipid and useless. From the manner in which it is gathered, much earth and other impurities are necessarily collected with it. Not a little of it is so impure that it cannot be used at all, and such salt soon effloresces and turns to dust - not to fruitful soil, however. It is not only good for nothing itself, but it actually destroys all fertility wherever it is thrown; and this is the reason why it is cast into the street. There is a sort of verbal verisimilitude in the manner in which our Lord alludes to the act: ‘it is cast out’ and ‘trodden under foot;’ so troublesome is this corrupted salt, that it is carefully swept up, carried forth, and thrown into the street. There is no place about the house, yard, or garden where it can be tolerated. No man will allow it to be thrown on to his field, and the only place for it is the street, and there it is cast to be trodden underfoot of men.”

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Matthew 5:13. Ye are the salt of the earth — Our Lord shows here what the preachers of the Gospel, and what all who profess to follow him, should be; the salt of the earth, to preserve the world from putrefaction and destruction. Leviticus 2:13; Leviticus 2:13.

But if the salt have lost his savour — That this is possible in the land of Judea, we have proof from Mr. Maundrell, who, describing the Valley of Salt, speaks thus: "Along, on one side of the valley, toward Gibul, there is a small precipice about two men's lengths, occasioned by the continual taking away of the salt; and, in this, you may see how the veins of it lie. I broke a piece of it, of which that part that was exposed to the rain, sun, and air, though it had the sparks and particles of salt, YET IT HAD PERFECTLY LOST ITS SAVOUR: the inner part, which was connected to the rock, retained its savour, as I found by proof." See his Trav., 5th edit., last page. A preacher, or private Christian, who has lost the life of Christ, and the witness of his Spirit, out of his soul, may be likened to this salt. He may have the sparks and glittering particles of true wisdom, but without its unction or comfort. Only that which is connected with the rock, the soul that is in union with Christ Jesus by the Holy Spirit, can preserve its savour, and be instrumental of good to others.

To be trodden underfoot — There was a species of salt in Judea, which was generated at the lake Asphaltites, and hence called bituminous salt, easily rendered vapid, and of no other use but to be spread in a part of the temple, to prevent slipping in wet weather. This is probably what our Lord alludes to in this place. The existence of such a salt, and its application to such a use, Schoettgenius has largely proved in his Horae Hebraicae, vol. i. p. 18, &c.


 
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