Saturday, April 5, 2014

WHEN SALT GOES BAD! 4/6/14

(repeat)   WE WERE  wandering around an old antique store that had an old book section.  At the time we were celebrating our 39th anniversary.  I found an old book published in 1892, called; ‘The Everyday Cook Book’ by Miss E. Neil.  I begged Jim to buy it for me!  It could be my anniversary gift; it cost $15.00!  This book covered everything you could eat or drink and even cosmetics.  A section on miscellaneous stuff from how to make soap and to restore someone from a stroke of lightning.  It had instructions on how to clean house and to teach your children how to, also!  Dressmaking and the art on how to dress well, along with some of the secrets on looking beautiful.  There is even a section on laughter!  Miss Neil covered everything that had to do with every day living, in the latter part of the 1800's.  

HERE ARE a few of these treasurers.  ‘If your coal fire is low, throw on a tablespoon of salt, and it will help it very much.’  ‘To cleanse a sponge you rub fresh lemon thoroughly into a soured sponge and rinsing it several times in lukewarm water, it will become as sweet as when new’.  You know, that one is still being used and is probably classified as ‘an old wives tale’.  How about this one for a chest cold; ‘A flannel dipped in boiling water, and sprinkled with turpentine, laid on the chest as quickly as possible, it will relieve the most severe cold or hoarseness’.  I think I will keep my Hall’s Eucalyptus throat lozenges!   Instructions for how to dust a room is ingenious.  ‘Soft cloths make the best of dusters.  In dusting any piece of furniture begin at the top and dust down, wiping carefully with the cloth, which can be frequently shaken’.

I WAS reminded of this book when I met a lady at a big supermarket.  She was buying 3 generic boxes of baking soda.  I said; “boy, you must be going to do a lot of baking”!    She smiled and told me this story.  “I am cleaning my drain!   My grandmother did this and so I have always cleaned my plugged drain with 1 cup of baking soda, 1 cup of salt and 1 cup of white vinegar.  I pour each one in separately and after it finishes bubbling I run warm water down the drain and the clog is gone.  Works every time and it is cheap!”  She continued with; “My grandmother also used salt to exfoliate her skin....she would take a bath in it”.   I told her about my thinning hair and that I used  salt to unclog the pours on my scalp.  I don’t think she was particularly impressed with my story but I was with hers.

DID YOU KNOW that your taste buds are always changing and as we get older our taste buds begin to lose their properties that make them taste buds?   Thelma, a friend of mine, could hardly wait to die.  One of the reasons was that nothing tasted good to her anymore.  Even adding salt didn’t help any more.   I often wondered how much salt she used, trying to get some flavor in her food!

THE BIBLE says something interesting about salt;   “You are the salt of the earth, but if salt has lost is taste, how shall its saltiness be restored?   It is no longer good for anything except to be thrown out and trodden under foot by men.”    Matthew 5:13     It also says;  “How will you season salt again?  Have salt in yourselves and be at peace with one another.”   Mark 9:50     How about; “When salt goes bad it is neither fit for land or the dunghill.  Men throw it away.”  Luke 14:34-35 

GOD IS NOT talking about how we use salt as an abrasive to restore hair or remove a clog in our drains.  He is merely likening us to the salt we use at the table.  It brings flavor to our palate in such a way that we can’t help but delight in what we are eating.  Jesus says that when we season our world as salt seasons our food, those around us will want what we have.  However, if we lose this salt or flavor in us, it can’t be restored.  We are no good!  Men will pay no attention to us but instead throw us away.   Think about who you are in Christ!  

THINK ABOUT how the world sees you?  Ask yourself; “Am I full of tasty goodness or am I causing those around me to look for a cup of cool water or a breath of fresh air?”  Let us invite others to taste and see that God is good by what we offer them.   (Written 2/5/08)   Jane Ann Crenshaw 4/5/14

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