International Standard Bible Encyclopedia: Lend; Loan

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International Standard Bible Encyclopedia: Lend; Loan


Subjects in this Topic:

lon: The translation of 7 Hebrew and 2 Greek vbs.:

1. Lexical Usages:

In the Old Testament: לוה, lāwāh, “to join,” “cause to join,” “lend” (; , ; ; ); נשׁה, nāshāh, “to bite,” “lend” (; ); נשׁה, nāshāh (same root as last, though different verb stem, Hiphil), “to cause to bite,” “lend on usury” (; ); נשׁך, nāshakh, “to bite,” “lend” “(cause to lend) on usury” (, ); נתן, nāthan, “to give” (, the Revised Version (British and American) “to give”); עבט, ‛ābhat (Hiphil), “to cause to borrow,” “to lend” (, ); שׁאל, shā'al (Hiphil), “to cause to ask,” “to lend” (, the Revised Version (British and American) “ask”; ). In Septuagint δανείζω, daneı́zō, δανιζω, danı́zō, “to lend,” translates לוה, עבט, and שׁאל in above passages and in ; , and ; κιχράω, kichráo, also translations לוה and שׁאל (; ); δάνειον(-ιον), dáneion(-ion), “loan,” occurs in , ; ; 4 Macc 2:8. In the New Testament “lend” translations two Greek verbs, daneizō, “to lend money” (, , usually in commercial sense); κίχρημι, kı́chrēmi, “to lend (as a friendly act)” ().The substantive “loan,” שׁאלה, she'ēlāh, occurs only once in the Old Testament ( the King James Version and the English Revised Version), not at all in the New Testament.

2. History of Lending in the Bible and Apocrypha:

(1) Lending on interest to the poor is prohibited in the code in . (2) In the code in -6; , ; , ; , , borrowing and lending are taken for granted as existing in Israel, but the creditor is required to release his Hebrew brother as debtor in the 7th year (either the cancellation of the loan (so in Jewish literature and early Christian scholars) or suspension of payment that year (so most modern scholars)), though he may exact payment from a foreigner. Israel may lend, and will be able to lend, because of Yahweh's blessing, to other nations, but must not borrow from them. A pledge, or security, must not be taken in person by the creditor from the house of the debtor, nor kept overnight, if the debtor be poor. (3) The code in -38 requires that the Israelite receive no interest from his poor brother, because of the goodness of Yahweh to Israel. (4) Notwithstanding the prohibition of the early laws against lending on interest or usury, the same seems to have become common in Israel before the exile (; ), was practiced on the return, and was an evil to be corrected by Nehemiah (, ). (5) According to ; ; , lending to the needy was regarded as a mark of the pious Hebrew, but no interest is to be charged. (6) According to Apocrypha (The Wisdom of Solomon 15:16; Sirach 8:12; 18:33; 20:15, 29; 4 Macc 2:8), borrowing is discouraged, and lending is exalted as a mark of the merciful man. (7) Jesus teaches that His followers should lend, even to enemies, to men from whom they have no reasonable hope of expecting anything in return, because thus to do is to be like the Most High (, ). He did not discuss lending for commercial purposes, and so does not necessarily forbid it.

Literature.

See Driver on -6; Benzinger, Hebrew Archaeology, (1894), 350 f; Oehler, Old Testament Theology, 150, 10; Plummer on , .