| 1 | The merciful lend to their neighbors; by holding out a helping hand they keep the commandments. |
| 2 | Lend to your neighbor in his time of need; repay your neighbor when a loan falls due. |
| 3 | Keep your promise and be honest with him, and on every occasion you will find what you need. |
| 4 | Many regard a loan as a windfall, and cause trouble to those who help them. |
| 5 | One kisses another’s hands until he gets a loan, and is deferential in speaking of his neighbor’s money; but at the time for repayment he delays, and pays back with empty promises, and finds fault with the time. |
| 6 | If he can pay, his creditor will hardly get back half, and will regard that as a windfall. If he cannot pay, the borrower has robbed the other of his money, and he has needlessly made him an enemy; he will repay him with curses and reproaches, and instead of glory will repay him with dishonor. |
| 7 | Many refuse to lend, not because of meanness, but from fear of being defrauded needlessly. |
| 8 | Nevertheless, be patient with someone in humble circumstances, and do not keep him waiting for your alms. |
| 9 | Help the poor for the commandment’s sake, and in their need do not send them away empty-handed. |
| 10 | Lose your silver for the sake of a brother or a friend, and do not let it rust under a stone and be lost. |
| 11 | Lay up your treasure according to the commandments of the Most High, and it will profit you more than gold. |
| 12 | Store up almsgiving in your treasury, and it will rescue you from every disaster; |
| 13 | better than a stout shield and a sturdy spear, it will fight for you against the enemy. |
| 14 | A good person will be surety for his neighbor, but the one who has lost all sense of shame will fail him. |
| 15 | Do not forget the kindness of your guarantor, for he has given his life for you. |
| 16 | A sinner wastes the property of his guarantor, |
| 17 | and the ungrateful person abandons his rescuer. |
| 18 | Being surety has ruined many who were prosperous, and has tossed them about like waves of the sea; it has driven the influential into exile, and they have wandered among foreign nations. |
| 19 | The sinner comes to grief through surety; his pursuit of gain involves him in lawsuits. |
| 20 | Assist your neighbor to the best of your ability, but be careful not to fall yourself. |
| 21 | The necessities of life are water, bread, and clothing, and also a house to assure privacy. |
| 22 | Better is the life of the poor under their own crude roof than sumptuous food in the house of others. |
| 23 | Be content with little or much, and you will hear no reproach for being a guest. |
| 24 | It is a miserable life to go from house to house; as a guest you should not open your mouth; |
| 25 | you will play the host and provide drink without being thanked, and besides this you will hear rude words like these: |
| 26 | “Come here, stranger, prepare the table; let me eat what you have there.” |
| 27 | “Be off, stranger, for an honored guest is here; my brother has come for a visit, and I need the guest-room.” |
| 28 | It is hard for a sensible person to bear scolding about lodging and the insults of the moneylender. |