Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Kerry WeberMay 16, 2024
Photo by ligora, courtesy of iStock.

A Reflection for Thursday of the Seventh Week in Ordinary Time

Find today readings here.

In her cookbook “Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat” Samin Nosrat posits that any chef who masters the balance of the four titular elements in their cooking will be well on the way to making any meal taste good. Salt “has a greater impact on flavor than any other ingredient,” she argues. Indeed, its impact on the world (inspiring whole history books) and our health (including warnings about its excessive use) is well documented. A bit too much or too little salt can make the difference between a good or bad meal, a preserved food or a rotten one.

Salt’s purifying and preservative qualities also mean that it is a useful symbol in Scripture, as we see in today’s Gospel. “Keep salt in yourselves and you will have peace with one another,” Jesus says. To be a follower of Jesus means taking on a spiritual life that continually refines us, helps us become holier, more ourselves, more deeply in relationship with God and others.

We are offered a juxtaposition of small, simple actions and severe, extreme ones. Offering a cup of water can bind us to Christ, but a foot that causes us to sin must be cut off. While not all these actions are meant to be literal, they invite us to think deeply about the causes of sin. What parts of ourselves lead us into temptation? Are we leading others further from God through our words or actions? How do we find just that balance of words and actions, prayers and deeds, sacrifice and abundance so that we may more confidently follow the path Christ lays out for us?

More: Scripture

The latest from america

Frank Turnbull, S.J., a longtime editor at 'America' who died earlier this week, is remembered as a humble, quiet and yet forceful presence to those who knew him during his 85 years of life.
James T. KeaneJuly 18, 2025
A Reflection for Saturday of the Fifteenth Week in Ordinary Time, by Zac Davis
Zac DavisJuly 18, 2025
Trauma-informed spirituality knows better than to promise that prayer will take away all the pain. But it can offer the hope that, even in the midst of pain, there can be moments of feeling whole.
Nicole KirpalaniJuly 18, 2025
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu telephoned Pope Leo XIV, who urged Israel’s leader to revive negotiations and enact a ceasefire.