DEREK PRINCE
====The Salt of the Earth====
Our presence makes all the difference
“You are the salt of the earth” (Matthew 5:13). In this statement, Jesus is not only speaking to His disciples, but to all of us who acknowledge the authority of His teaching. Jesus compares our function on the earth to that of salt. His meaning becomes clear when we consider two
familiar uses of salt in relation to food: salt gives fl avor and salt restrains corruption.
Salt Gives Flavor
As Christians, our function as salt is to give flavor to the earth. God enjoys this flavor. Unappetizing food becomes tasty and acceptable when seasoned with salt. Job asks this rhetorical question:
“Can flavorless food be eaten without salt?” (Job 6:6). The presence of salt makes the difference, causing us to enjoy food we would otherwise refuse to eat.
Our presence makes the earth acceptable to God and commends the earth to His mercy. Because we are here, God continues to deal with the earth in grace and mercy rather than in wrath and judgment. Our presence makes
the difference.
This principle is vividly illustrated in the account of Abraham’s intercession on behalf of Sodom, as recorded in Genesis 18:16–33. The Lord told Abraham that He was going to Sodom to see if that city’s wickedness had come to the point where judgment could
no longer be withheld. Abraham then walked with the Lord on His way and reasoned with Him about the situation.
A Principle of Judgment
Abraham fi rst established a principle that was the basis for what followed: It is never the will of God that the judgment due to the wicked should come upon the righteous. “Would You also destroy the righteous with the
wicked?” Abraham asked (verse 23). “Far be it from You to do such a thing as this, to slay the righteous with the wicked, so that the righteous should be as the wicked; far be it from You! Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?” (verse
25).
The Lord the teaching legacy of derek prince | dpm archive
Volume XVII, Issue 1 this. Why? Because they fail to distinguish between two situations which outwardly may appear similar, but which in reality are completely different in nature and cause. On the one hand, there is persecution for the sake of righteousness. On the other hand,
there is God’s judgment upon the wicked.
The difference between these two situations is brought out by the following contrasted statements. Persecution comes from the wicked upon the righteous. But judgment comes from God, who is righteous, upon the wicked.
Thus, persecution for righteousness and judgment for wickedness are opposites in their origin, purpose and
result.
The Bible plainly warns that Christians must expect to suffer persecution. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said to His disciples, “Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven. Blessed are you when they revile and persecute you, and shall say all kinds of evil against you falsely for My sake”
(Matthew 5:10–11). Paul writes likewise to Timothy: “Yes, and all who desire
to live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution” (2 Timothy 3:12). Christians
must therefore be prepared to endure
persecution for their faith and their
way of life, and even to count this as
a privilege.
By the same token, Christians
should never be included in God’s
judgments upon the wicked. This
principle is stated many times in
Scrip ture. In 1 Corinthians 11:32 Paul
writes to his fellow believers, and says,
“But when we [Christians] are judged, we
are chastened by the Lord, that we may
not be condemned with the world.” This
demonstrates that there is a difference
between God’s dealings with believers
and His dealings with the world.
As
believers, we may expect to experience
God’s chastening. If we submit to the
chastening and set our lives in order,
then we are not subject to the judgments that come upon unbelievers or
the world in general. The end purpose
of God’s chastening us as believers is to
preserve us from undergoing His judgments on unbelievers.
Exodus chapters 7 through 12 record how God brought ten judgments
of ever-increasing severity upon the
Egyptians because they refused to listen to His prophets, Moses and Aaron.
Throughout all this, God’s people Israel dwelt in the midst of Egypt, but
not one of the ten judgments touched
them. In Exodus 11:7 the reason is
graphically stated: “But against none
of the children of Israel shall a dog move
his tongue, against man or beast, that
you may know that the LORD does make
a difference between the Egyptians and
Israel.” Judgment did not come upon
Israel because the Lord “made a difference” between His own people and
the people of Egypt. Even the dogs of
Egypt had to acknowledge this difference! And the difference is valid to this
day.
How Many Are Enough?
Continuing his conversation with
the Lord concerning Sodom, Abraham attempted to ascertain the least
number of righteous persons needed
to preserve the whole city from judgment. He began with fi fty. Then, with
a remarkable combination of reverence and perseverance, he worked his
way down to ten. The Lord fi nally assured Abraham that if He found only
ten righteous persons in Sodom, He
would spare the whole city for the sake
of those ten.
What was the population of Sodom? It would be diffi cult to arrive at
an exact estimate. However, fi gures are
available for certain other cities of ancient Palestine that provide a standard
of comparison. Taking these other cities into account, we could say that the
population of Sodom in Abraham’s day
was probably not less than ten thousand.
God assured Abraham that ten
righteous persons by their very presence could preserve a city of at least
ten thousand. This gives a ratio of one
to a thousand. The same ratio of “one
among a thousand” is given in Job 33:23
and in Ecclesiastes 7:28, and both of
these passages suggest that the one is
a person of outstanding righteousness,
while all the remainder fall below
God’s standards.
It is easy to extend this ratio indefi -
nitely. The presence of ten righteous
persons can preserve a community
of ten thousand. The presence of a
hundred righteous persons can preserve a community of one hundred
thousand. The presence of one thousand righteous persons can preserve a
community of one million. How many
righteous persons are needed to preserve a nation as large as the United
States, with its estimated population of
a little more than 300 million? About
300 thousand persons.
These fi gures are evocative. Does
Scripture give us grounds to believe
that, for example, just over a quarter of
a million truly righteous persons, scattered as grains of salt across the United
States, would suffi ce to preserve the
entire nation from God’s judgment
and to ensure the continuance of His
grace and mercy? It would be foolish
to claim that such estimates are exact.
Nevertheless, the Bible defi nitely establishes the general principle that the
day.
How Many Are Enough?
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Volume XVII, Issue 1
presence of righteous believers is the
decisive factor in God’s dealings with
a community.
This leads us to the second effect of
the presence of Christians as “the salt
of the earth.”
Salt Restrains
Corruption
In the days before artifi cial refrigeration, sailors who took meat on long
voyages used salt as a preservative.
The process of corruption was already
at work before the meat was salted.
Salting did not abolish the corruption,
but it held it in check for the duration
of the voyage so that the sailors could
continue to eat the meat long after it
would have become inedible.
Our presence on the earth as Christ’s
disciples operates like the salt in the
meat. The process of sin’s corruption
is already at work. This is manifested
in every area of human life—moral,
religious, social, political. We cannot
abolish the corruption that is already
present. But we can hold it in check
long enough for God’s purposes of
grace and mercy to be fully worked
out. Then, when our infl uence is no
longer felt, corruption will come to
its climax, and the result will be total
degradation.
This illustration from the power
of salt to restrain corruption explains
Paul’s teaching in 2 Thessalonians
2:3–12. Paul warns that human wickedness will come to its climax in the
person of a world ruler supernaturally
empowered and directed by Satan
himself. Paul calls this ruler “the man
of sin [or lawlessness]” and “the son of
perdition” (verse 3). In 1 John 2:18 he
is called “Antichrist,” and in Revelation
13:4 he is called “the beast.” This ruler
will actually claim to be God and demand universal worship.
Emergence of this satanic ruler is inevitable. Paul says with certainty, “Then
the lawless one will be revealed” (2 Thessalonians 2:8). Paul also declares in the
same verse that the true Christ Himself
will be the one to administer fi nal judgment upon this false Christ—“whom
the Lord will consume with the breath [or
spirit] of His mouth and destroy with the
brightness of His coming.”
Unfortunately some preachers have
used this teaching about Antichrist to
instill in Christians attitudes of passivity and fatalism. “Antichrist is coming,”
they have said. “Things are getting
worse and worse. There is nothing we
can do about it.” As a result, Christians have all too often sat back with
hands folded in pious dismay and
watched the ravages of Satan proceed
unchecked all around them.
The attitudes of passivity and fatalism are as tragic as they are unscriptural. It is true that Antichrist must
eventually emerge. But it is far from
true that there is nothing to be done
about him in the meanwhile.
The Restraining Force
To this present moment there is a
force at work in the world that challenges, resists and restrains the spirit
of antichrist.
This restraining power, which at
present holds back the full and final
emergence of Antichrist, is the personal presence of the Holy Spirit within
the Church. This becomes clear as
we follow the unfolding revelation of
Scripture concerning the Person and
the work of the Holy Spirit.
At the very beginning of the Bible,
in Genesis 1:2, we are told that “the
Spirit of God was hovering over the face of
the waters.” From then on throughout
the Old Testament there are frequent
references to the activity of the Holy
Spirit in the earth. However, at the
close of His earthly ministry, Jesus
promised His disciples that the Holy
Spirit would shortly come to them in a
new way, different from anything that
had ever taken place on earth up to
that time.
The Promised Helper
In John 14:16–17 Jesus gives this
promise: “And I will pray the Father, and
He will give you another Helper [Comforter], that He may abide with you
forever—the Spirit of truth [a title of the
Holy Spirit], ... for He dwells with you
and will be in you.” We may paraphrase
this promise of Jesus as follows: “I have
been with you in personal presence
three-and-a-half years, and I am now
about to leave you. After I have gone,
another Person will come to take My
place. This Person is the Holy Spirit.
When He comes, He will remain with
you forever.”
This exchange of persons promised
by Jesus was effected in two stages:
first, the ascension of Jesus into heaven;
then, ten days later, the descent of the
Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost.
At this point in history, the Holy Spirit
descended as a Person from heaven
and took up His residence on earth.
He is now the personal representative
of the Godhead resident on earth. His
actual dwelling place is the body of
true believers, called collectively “the
Church.” To this body of believers Paul
says in 1 Corinthians 3:16: “Do you not
know that you are the temple of God and
that the Spirit of God dwells in you?”
The great ministry of the Holy
Spirit within the Church is to prepare
a completed body for Christ. After
completion, this body will, in turn, be
about t e e
The Restraining Force
of the earth.
S l
that time.
The Promised Helper
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Volume XVII, Issue 1
presented to Christ as a bride is presented to a bridegroom. As soon as this
ministry of the Holy Spirit within the
Church is finished, He will again be
withdrawn from the earth, taking with
Him the completed body of Christ.
Thus, we may reword Paul’s statement
in 2 Thessalonians 2:7 as follows: “The
Holy Spirit who now holds the Antichrist in check will continue to do so
until He is withdrawn.”
In the world is the spirit of antichrist, working toward the emergence
of Antichrist himself. In the disciples of
Christ is the Holy Spirit, holding back
the emergence of Antichrist. Therefore
the disciples who are indwelled by
the Holy Spirit act as a barrier, holding back the climax of lawlessness
and the final emergence of Antichrist.
Only when the Holy Spirit, together
with the completed body of Christ’s
disciples, is withdrawn from the earth,
will the forces of lawlessness be able to
proceed without restraint to the culmination of their purposes in Antichrist.
Meanwhile, it is both the privilege and
the responsibility of Christ’s disciples,
by the power of the Holy Spirit, to
“overcome” the forces of Antichrist
and to hold them in check.
Successful Salt
As the salt of the earth, we who
are Christ’s disciples therefore have
two primary responsibilities. First, by
our presence we commend the earth
to God’s continuing grace and mercy.
Second, by the power of the Holy
Spirit within us we hold in check the
forces of corruption and lawlessness
until God’s appointed time.
In fulfilling these responsibilities,
the Church stands as the barrier to the
accomplishment of Satan’s supreme
ambition, which is to gain dominion
over the whole earth. This explains
why Paul says in 2 Thessalonians 2:3:
“the falling away comes fi rst, and the
man of sin [Antichrist] is revealed.” The
word translated “falling away” is literally apostasy, that is, a departure from
the faith.
So long as the Church stands firm
and uncompromising in its faith, it
has the power to hold back the final
manifestation of Antichrist. Satan
himself fully understands this, and
therefore his primary objective is to
undermine the faith and righteousness
of the Church. Once he achieves this,
the barrier to his purposes is removed,
and the way is open for him to gain
both spiritual and political control
over the whole earth.
Suppose that Satan succeeds, because we, as Christians, fail to fulfi ll
our responsibilities. What then? Jesus
Himself gives us the answer. We become “salt that has lost its savor.” He
warns us of the fate that awaits such
savorless salt: “It is then good for nothing
but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot by men” (Matthew 5:13).
“Good for nothing!” That is severe
condemnation indeed. What follows?
We are “thrown out”—rejected by God.
Then we are “trampled underfoot by
men.” Men become the instruments of
God’s judgment upon a saltless, apostate Church. If we in the Church fail
to hold back the forces of wickedness,
our judgment is to be handed over to
those very forces.
Paul clearly presents us two alternatives in Romans 12:21: “Do not be
overcome by evil, but overcome evil with
good.” There are only two choices: either to overcome or to be overcome.
There is no middle ground, no third
course open to us. We may use the
good that God has put at our disposal
to overcome the evil that confronts us.
But if we fail to do this, then that
very evil will in turn overcome us.
This message applies with special
urgency to those of us who live in
lands where we still enjoy liberty to
proclaim and to practice our Christian faith. In many lands today
Christians have lost this liberty. At
the same time, multiplied millions
of people in those lands have been
systematically indoctrinated to hate
and to despise Christianity and all
that it stands for. To people thus indoctrinated there could be no greater
satisfaction than to trample under
their feet those Christians who are
not already under their yoke.
If we heed the warning of Jesus
and fulfi ll our function as salt in the
earth, we have the power to prevent
this. If we default and suffer the
judgment that follows, the bitterest
refl ection will be: It need never have
happened.
Taken from a New Wine article,
April 1976
and to hold them in check.
Successful Salt
For further study, we recommend Derek Prince’s CD:
Strength through
Weakness
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Derek Prince Ministries
P.O. Box 19501
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[[Category:Christian]]