DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 520 KB)
The Misva to Lend Money

The Torah writes in the Book of Shemot (22:24), "If you lend money to my nation – to the poor among you…" The Sages derive from this verse that lending to a person in need of money constitutes a Misva. Although the verse states, "If you lend," suggesting that lending is optional, elsewhere the Torah speaks about lending in obligatory terms: "Should there be a destitute man among you… you shall surely open your hand to him and lend him that which he lacks…" (Devarim 7-8). In fact, lending money is looked upon as an even greater Misva than giving charity to the poor, as through lending one assists a man in need before he reaches the point where he must accept charity. By lending money, a person helps his fellow Jew in need without subjecting him to the shame and embarrassment associated with accepting charitable donations.

The Misva to lend money applies even to loans given to wealthy people in temporary need of cash. One who offers sound advice concerning investments and business dealings also fulfills this Misva.

If a man is approached by both a poor man and a wealthy man who request a loan, and he can afford to lend to only one of them, the poor man takes precedence. As we cited earlier, the Torah introduces the Misva of lending specifically in the context of lending to the poor, and thus although the Misva includes lending to wealthy people, the poor should nevertheless be granted precedence.

Summary: It is a Torah obligation to lend money to a person in need, even if he is generally wealthy but requires a temporary loan. If both a poor person and a wealthy person are in need of loan, one should afford preference to the poor man.

(Taken from Rabbi Moshe Halevi's "Milveh Hashem," 1:1-2)

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Is It Permissible to Spread a Talet Over the Children on Simhat Torah?
Is It Permissible On Shabbat To Walk On Grass Or To Have A Picnic On Grass
Reading Shir Hashirim on Ereb Shabbat
Peeling a Hardboiled Egg on Shabbat
Inflating a Ball on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Repair Eye Glasses on Shabbat
Walking in a Public Domain on Shabbat With Food in One's Mouth
Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Cut Tissue Paper; Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Turn on a Light for a Frightened Child
Mukse- If a Base for a Mukse Item Also Holds a Non-Mukse Item
Mukse- Handling a Corpse on Shabbat
If Part of A Utensil or A Button Becomes Detached on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Move Frozen Meat On Shabbat Or Is It Muktze
Mukse – the Status of Chicken Bones and Eggshells
Collecting Candies That Were Thrown in the Synagogue on Shabbat
Mukse: Placing Empty Shells on a Plate
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found