"Fire from Hell," or "You are the Salt of the Earth." On the Interpretation of Matthew 5:13 Cover Image

"Fire from Hell," or "You are the Salt of the Earth." On the Interpretation of Matthew 5:13
"Fire from Hell," or "You are the Salt of the Earth." On the Interpretation of Matthew 5:13

Author(s): Dan Shapira
Subject(s): Christian Theology and Religion, Theology and Religion
Published by: Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Keywords: Matthew 5:13; Gehenna; fire of Hell; Babylonian Talmud; Judeo-Aramaic and Palestinian Arabic; Dead Sea; Salt Sea; Trito-Isaiah; Sermon on the mountain

Summary/Abstract: This essay is an attempt to explore different contexts of the phrase “you are the salt of the earth” found in Matt 5:13, one of the most confusing expressions used in the whole of the New Testament. The author deals with its original meaning, exposing in the process the earliest layers of transmission of Jesus’ sayings. Versed in the Hebrew scriptures, Jesus combined the meanings of MLḤ in Exod 30:35 (incense salted is potent/good/pure/holy) with that in Isa 51:6 and Jer 38:11–12 (something MLḤ might vanish away/wax old/become rotten) and put it in a new context. Jesus’ pun – loaded with multiple layers of meanings and shades of meanings – was lost in translation as simply “salt.”

  • Issue Year: 42/2024
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 493-502
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English
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