Excerpt Browser

This page displays the full text of excerpts.  When viewing a single excerpt, its “Share,” “Switch Article,” and “Comment” functions are accessible.

EXODUS — 22:23 your

EXOD684 Individual reward and punishment. The Torah also promises retribution on an individual basis. For instance, Israelites are prohibited from oppressing the widow and fatherless, lest the cry of the abused provoke God's rage, and God "will put you to the sword and your own wives shall become widows and your children orphans" [this verse]. Deuteronomy assures the Israelites that if he distributes the tithes of his produce to the widow, fatherless, stranger, and Levite (the priests), "the Lord your God may bless you and all the enterprises you undertake" (Deut 14:29). Generosity to the newly released slave similarly brings God's blessing (Deut 15:10) [?-AJL], and he who releases a mother bird and takes only her young is rewarded with an extended lifespan (Deut 22:7). Honoring parents and using honest weights and measures in commercial transactions is recompensed with "enduring long on the soil that the Lord your God is giving you (Exod 20:12, Deut 5:16, 25:15); here the reward may be individual or collective. Regarding the Decalogue's assertion that God visits "the guilt of the parents upon the children, upon the third and upon the fourth generation of those who reject Me" (Exodus 20:5, Deut 5:9), Deuteronomy warns the transgressor that he cannot hope to escape punishment himself (Deut 7:10). (Emphasis upon individual (rather than collective or transgenerational) punishment is found in Ezekiel 18:2-4; Jeremiah 31:29–30.) [For author's discussion of "Collective reward and punishment," see [[EXOD332]] Exodus 19:6 nation OXFORD 38] (By Elaine Adler Goodfriend, “Ethical Theory and Practice in the Hebrew Bible)

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

EXODUS — 22:24 act

EXOD685 "Do not act with him as a creditor" [this verse] -- the lender must not afflict the borrower, and he must not pass before the borrower knowing that he has nothing to pay him with (Bava Metzia 75b), for he causes him suffering thereby. We have been exhorted to remove the trait of cruelty from our souls, as it is written [Shemos 22:21): "Do not afflict any widow or orphan," and (Vayikra 25:17): "Let one man not afflict his friend, but fear Hashem." One must also return the poor man's pledge, as it is written (Shemos 22:25): "If you take the poor man's garment in pledge, return it to him before the sun goes down," after which it is stated (ibid.:26): And it shall be, if he cries out to me, that I will hear him, for I am merciful," and (ibid.:20): "and do not afflict or oppress a stranger."

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

EXODUS — 22:24 collector

EXOD686 It is a negative commandment not to demand of a borrower to pay his debt when one knows that he has not the means to pay as Scripture says, You shall not be to him as a collector [this verse]. It is forbidden for the lender to pass by before the borrower when he knows that the other has not the means to pay, so that he should not put him to shame. Yet just as a lender is forbidden to make demands, so is the borrower forbidden to suppress the money due his fellow man, to tell him, "Go and come back," when he has it. This is a prohibition from the words of the later parts of Scripture; for it states, Do not say to your fellow, "Go and come again, and tomorrow I will give"--when you have it with you (Mishley 3:28). It is likewise forbidden for the borrower to spend the borrowed money needlessly until he is unable to pay it; he is called wicked, as Scripture says, The wicked man borrows and does not pay (T'hillim 37:21).

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

EXODUS — 22:24 creditor

EXOD688 If a poor man borrows money from you and when the time for repayment comes you know that he is unable to repay, for he is destitute, refrain from claiming your money. Fulfillment of the mitzvah and implants in our hearts kindness and mercy. Having developed these traits we become worthy of Heaven's blessings. Hashem's desire to bestow good upon us in this world and in the next will be fulfilled.

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

EXODUS — 22:24 creditor

EXOD687 "You shall not act towards him as a creditor" [this verse]. We have herein been admonished not to distress the borrower -- the lender should not pass before him knowing that the borrower does not have the means to pay, for he harasses him and depresses him by doing so. Our Sages, z"l, said (Bava Metzia 75b) that this is the equivalent of his sentencing him twice over, as the pasuk says: (Tehillim 66:12), "You assigned a man over our head [i.e., this is the creditor. See Rashi, Bava Metzia 75b]; we went through fire and water [i.e., sentenced twice over]. It is appropriate to be zealous and reprove those oppressors of our nation who in some places incarcerate the borrower in chains even when he is in no position to pay.

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

EXODUS — 22:24 if

EXOD690 It is a positive commandment of the Torah to lend to the poor among our brothers, as it is said [this verse]. The Mechilta observes that all "if"s in the Torah express an option, except three, which introduce an obligation, and this is one of the three. The proof lies in the statement [Deuteronomy 15:8] "You shall surely lend to him," which is expressed as an imperative. This mitzvah is superior to charity, since here the poor is not put to shame by accepting gifts, and since here also his hand is strengthened; he is supported and protected from financial ruin. By such an act, the lender fulfills the mitzvah of the Torah (Leviticus 25:35): "And if your brother be waxen poor and his hand fail with you, you shall uphold him," so that he should not be ruined and become dependent on charity. This commandment is also fulfilled by giving loans to the rich for a certain period, when they are pressed for money, since chesed may be done both to rich and poor. The only difference is that the poor take priority, and for that reason scripture has made explicit mention of the poor and its reference to the mitzvah. If Scripture had not made us aware of our obligation, we would prefer to lend to the rich only, since one is likely to receive many favors in return, and, moreover, the rich person is a more reliable risk.

SHOW FULL EXCERPT

RSS
First8910111213141516182021222324252627Last
Back To Top