It is fit neither for the soil nor for the manure pile. It is thrown out And these scientists would say How can salt lose its saltiness.
Natural salt without additives wont ever go bad.
Can salt lose its flavor. Thanks for putting these sources together. I had read most of what you sent in our computer program for Word Search. When I spoke with scientists however my sources claim that salt is salt and that it never loses its savour.
If that is true perhaps it diffuses due to heat and then is useless. Yes salt can actually lose its saltiness. When I was a child I heard adults talk about their salt losing flavor but I never saw it for myself.
Im in my fifties and I can now say that Ive finally seen it. Once salt loses its saltiness it doesnt matter how much one salts it flavors very little. Matthew 513 You are the salt of the earth.
But if the salt loses its flavor how shall it be seasoned. It is then good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot by men Salt is a substance that adds taste to the food eaten by us. Sodium chloride table salt will always taste like well salt.
There is no way it can loose that taste. But the filler theory may actually be a good shot at it. Salt is not a herb or a spice that loses its specific properties over time.
Its a mineral and is salty since millions of years. It will still be salty if youre already gone. No need to worry here.
It will be salty long enough. Edited Apr 24 16 at 2022. As it turns out the answer is noand yes.
Natural salt without additives wont ever go bad. Salt is good but if it loses its saltiness how can you make it salty again. Have salt among yourselves and be at peace with each other New Living Translation Salt is good for seasoning.
But if it loses its flavor how do you make it salty again. You must have the qualities of salt among yourselves and live in peace with each other. But if the salt loses its saltiness how can it be made salty again.
It is no longer good for anything except to be thrown out and trampled underfoot Matt. 513 NIV The salt in those days was not refined like the Morton Salt we have today but was a poor quality rock salt. Salt in Israel came from the rock salt.
Salt is a remedy for unsavoury meat but there is no remedy for unsavoury salt. Christianity will give a man a relish. But if a man can take up and continue the profession of it and yet remain flat and foolish and graceless and insipid no other doctrine no other means can.
Anciently people used salt as a preservative and flavoring as well. Salt then was symbolic of something that preserved or improved taste. But they understood some of the salt collected was not good.
We dont collect salt and therefore we dont come in contact with impure salt collections. However salt could indeed lose its flavor in the New Testament times. The primary reason for that was because often salt wasnt pure back then.
Salt might lose its flavor under certain conditions when it contains chemical impurities. In their day they must have used salt in some sense that in an impure state that it could lose its saltiness. We know that its impossible for salt to become unsalty and to lose its salty taste.
If it doesnt taste like salt its not salt. Since genuine salt by itself can never lose its flavor as its chemical properties do not change this saying in Matthew becomes difficult to understand. A saying in the Talmud b.
Bekhorot 8b attributed to R. Joshua ben Chananja ca. CE 90 when asked the question When salt loses its flavor how can it be made salty.
Salt losses its savour-its taste. Ask a chemist-salt can become so contaminiated that is no longer tastes as salt is known to taste Were talking sodium chloride here. Chemically it is still salt but its power to enhance the taste is gone.
Salt is good but if it loses its saltiness how can it be made salty again. It is fit neither for the soil nor for the manure pile. It is thrown out And these scientists would say How can salt lose its saltiness.
And saltiness its salty taste is a characteristic of salt. Hence the Bible must be wrong. - Salt is good.
But if the salt have lost his savour wherewith shall it be seasoned. It is neither fit for the land nor yet for the dunghill. But men cast it out.
Here salt stands for the spirit of. If playback doesnt begin shortly try restarting your device. Videos you watch may be added to the TVs watch history and influence TV recommendations.
To avoid this cancel and sign in to.