Strata: The Bible in the News: Exactly Who Are the Salt of the Earth?

When, in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus spoke of his audience as “the salt of the earth” (Matthew 5:13), he was obviously paying them a high compliment. Salt preserves; it also adds taste and flavor. Even today, being called “the salt of the earth” is frequently a good thing—but not always.
Let’s start by accentuating the positive: “I don’t mean to name drop,” confides a columnist for The Irish Sun, “but I have interviewed Angelina Jolie three times now.” The reporter’s verdict, as displayed in the feature’s title: “Angelina Is Salt of the Earth.” Elsewhere in the starry heights, Clint Eastwood’s character in the movie Gran Torino, Walt Kowalski, is favorably described by The Australian as “a salt-of-the-earth kind of guy.”
Several notches down (or, for some, a number of notches up) is the world of sports. A reporter for Montreal’s Gazette is emphatic in his praise for one of Team Canada’s players in the 2010 Winter Olympics: Brenden Morrow is a “salt-of-the-earth person, salt-of-the-earth player … [He] embodies nearly all the characteristics Canadians so admire in hockey players: bravery, unselfishness, resilience, toughness and honesty.” Come to think of it, those are traits that we all admire, and not only in hockey players.
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