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The Covenant of Salt / As Based on the Significance and Symbolism of Salt in Primitive Thought

Chapter 2 A COVENANT OF SALT

Word Count: 325    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

nd superstition, civilization and barbarism, alike deal with it as a bond or rite, yet without making clear the reasons for its use. The precise significance and symbolism of salt as the

n our Western world there are various folk-lore customs and sayings that show familiarity with it as a vestige of primitive thought. Amon

d by students and specialists, is that in its nature it is a preservative and essential, and therefore its presence adds value to an offering or to a sacramental rite.[10] But the mind cannot be satisfied with so superficial an interpretation as this, in view of many things in text and tradition

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The Covenant of Salt / As Based on the Significance and Symbolism of Salt in Primitive Thought
The Covenant of Salt / As Based on the Significance and Symbolism of Salt in Primitive Thought
“This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1899 edition. Excerpt: ...days of old it was plain spelt, and the sparkling grain of unadulterated salt that had efficacy to render the gods propitious to man.\" 3 There is good reason for believing that it was much the same with the Greeks as with the Romans, although the fact that this is not distinctly declared in the classic texts has led some modern scholars to call it in question. Barley-meal cakes, with or without salt, were certainly employed by the Greeks in their sacrifices.4 And Homer speaks of salt as \"divine.\" 5 When, therefore, it is considered that salt was counted 1 Harper's Latin Dictionary, s. vv. \" Immolate,\" \" Mola.\" 2 Pliny's Hist. Nat., Bostock and Riley's trans., XXXI., 41. 3 Ovid's Fasti, I., 337. See, also, Cooper's Virgil, notes on Aeneid, Books II. and XII. Homer's Iliad, I., 449, 458; II., 410, 421; Odyssey, III., 425, 441; Philo's Opera, 2: 240. 5 Iliad, IX., 214. See Eustathius's Commentary, I., 748-750, ed. Basle (p. 648, ed. Rome). It has indeed been suggested that the very name \"salt\" was derived (through saltus, \"to leap\") from the tendency of this substance \"to leap and explode when thrown upon fire.\" 1 If there be any probability in this suggestion, or in another, and more natural one, that'sallus was from the same root as sal, \"salt,\" it is easy to see that the primitive mind might infer that such was the affinity of salt with the divine, that, when offered by fire, it leaped toward heaven, and so was understood to be peculiarly acceptable to God or to the gods, in sacrifice. The Latin verb salis has the twofold meaning \"to salt\" or \"to sprinkle before sacrifice,\" and \"to leap, spring, bound, jump;\" and the root sal would...”
1 Chapter 1 CHARACTERISTICS OF A COVENANT2 Chapter 2 A COVENANT OF SALT3 Chapter 3 BIBLE REFERENCES TO THE RITE4 Chapter 4 BREAD AND SALT5 Chapter 5 SALT REPRESENTING BLOOD6 Chapter 6 SALT REPRESENTING LIFE7 Chapter 7 SALT AND SUN, LIFE AND LIGHT8 Chapter 8 SIGNIFICANCE OF BREAD9 Chapter 9 SALT IN SACRIFICES10 Chapter 10 SALT IN EXORCISM AND DIVINATION11 Chapter 11 FAITHLESSNESS TO SALT12 Chapter 12 SUBSTITUTE TOGETHER WITH REALITY13 Chapter 13 ADDED TRACES OF THE RITE14 Chapter 14 A SAVOR OF LIFE OR OF DEATH15 Chapter 15 MEANS OF A MERGED LIFE