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Collecting a Pledge
24: 10-13

Collecting a pledge DIG: What was the purpose of this mitzvah? What is a pledge? Why return it quickly? What happened if the loan was not repaid? Who was this mitzvah supposed to protect?

REFLECT: How relevant is this mitzvah to you three-thousand years later? Do you think the answer to exploitation in the world is charity? What is more important than material help?

The dignity of the borrower was preserved by prohibiting the lender to enter his house and take anything he might want as a pledge.

Deuteronomy 19:1 to 26:15 (to see link click DlThe Social and Family Mitzvot) deals with individual mitzvot, and to today’s readers they might appear irrelevant at first, but the very principles behind these commandments were the ones that have brought dignity to mankind. We need to examine these mitzvot in depth to discover the spirit in which they were given, so that we can still live in obedience to God’s Word today. For example, in Numbers 18, the Israelites were to bring their tithes to the Tabernacle because the priests and Levites had no inheritance. But today we have no Temple and no priesthood; however, we bring our tithes to our place of worship. That is the spirit of the mitzvah.

From 23:15 to 26:15, Moses deals with twenty real life situations that the nation would need to function in a godly manner, and valuable lessons for us today as well: number eleven.

The concern for the poor continues here, picking up a similar theme found earlier (see EkTake No Millstone as Collateral). Deuteronomy is determined to protect the poor, not only from commercial exploitation (see EfDon’t Gouge Your Brother), not only from life-threatening pressures from lenders, but even from the invasion of their personal property. Poverty robs a person of so much, but the poor should be allowed to control what they still own, and should be given respect in their own homes. These verses are typical of Deuteronomy’s blend of realism and challenge. They accept the reality of poverty and debt, and necessity of loans. But they seek to lessen the harshness of that reality by instilling a heart of compassion and respect. While not enforceable, it insisted on preserving the humanity and dignity of every member of the covenant community.525

While loans with interest were forbidden to fellow Israelites, it was permitted to take some kind of pledge, held as security as a promise to repay the loan. If the loan was not repaid, the lender would keep the pledge. However, the lender was to honor the privacy of the borrower. His property was still his property and worthy of respect. When you make any kind of loan to your neighbor, you are not to go into his house to get his pledge. You are to stand outside, and the man to whom you are making the loan is to bring the pledge outside to you (24:10-11). The fact that a person was owed something didn’t give him the right to go into his house. The lender should allow the debtor to bring the pledge out to him rather than himself digging through the man’s possessions in search of something he might find adequate.526 The lender was compelled to accept it, whether pleased with it or not.

 It seems that an article of clothing was the most common thing used as a pledge. If he is a poor man, and gives you his coat as a pledge, you are not to hold on to it. You must certainly restore the pledge to him when the sun sets, so that he may sleep in his coat and bless you. If the borrower was so poor that all he could offer as a pledge was his coat, which served as a blanket at night, then the lender was to return it to him before nightfall. This is an expansion of a mitzvah found earlier, “If you take your neighbor’s coat as a pledge, return it to him before the sun goes down, because his coat is the only covering he has for his body. What else will he sleep in? When he cries out to Me, I will hear, for I am gracious (Exodus 22:25-26).

Not only would the poor man thank him for the compassionate treatment, but also ADONAI, his God, would regard such conduct as righteous (24:12-13).527 The effect was to extend the concept of being blameless in a court of law. YHVH Himself was the Judge, and the lender who respected the spirit of the mitzvah, received a verdict of innocence. God was, and is, watching. How we treat each other means something to Him, because He cares for us.

Dear Heavenly Father, How loving and kind You are! You are extremely powerful and can conquer anyone You want. Someday You will wipe out with the sword of Your mouth all the kings of the earth and their armies that come to make war against you (Revelation 19:11-21). Though You have all power, yet You use Your power only in fair and righteous ways and You have concern for the poor. Praise Your heart attitude of being loving and kind is more important than getting a ton of money by unkind ways. Pure and undefiled religion before our God and Father is this: to care for orphans and widows in their distress, and to keep oneself unstained by the world (James 1:27). We worship You and look forward to praising Your great name forever in heaven. In Yeshua’s holy name and His power of resurrection. Amen