Job 22:6 Cross References
Job 22:6
6: "For example, you must have lent money to your friend and then kept the clothing he gave you as a pledge. Yes, you stripped him to the bone.
Exodus 22:26
- If you take your neighbor's cloak as a pledge of repayment, you must return it by nightfall.
Ezekiel 18:16
- and does not exploit the poor, but instead is fair to debtors and does not rob them. And suppose this son feeds the hungry, provides clothes for the needy,
Ezekiel 18:12
- oppresses the poor and helpless, steals from debtors by refusing to let them redeem what they have given in pledge, worships idols and takes part in loathsome practices,
Job 24:3
- and they even take donkeys from the poor and fatherless. A poor widow must surrender her valuable ox as collateral for a loan.
Deuteronomy 24:10
- "If you lend anything to your neighbor, do not enter your neighbor's house to claim the security.
- Stand outside and the owner will bring it out to you.
- If your neighbor is poor and has only a cloak to give as security, do not keep the cloak overnight.
- Return the cloak to its owner by sunset so your neighbor can sleep in it and bless you. And the LORD your God will count it as a righteous act.
- "Never take advantage of poor laborers, whether fellow Israelites or foreigners living in your towns.
Deuteronomy 24:6
- "It is wrong to take a pair of millstones, or even just the upper millstone, as a pledge, for the owner uses it to make a living.
Job 24:9
- "The wicked snatch a widow's child from her breast; they take the baby as a pledge for a loan.
- The poor must go about naked, without any clothing. They are forced to carry food while they themselves are starving.
Job 31:19
- Whenever I saw someone who was homeless and without clothes,
- did they not praise me for providing wool clothing to keep them warm?
Ezekiel 18:7
- Suppose he is a merciful creditor, not keeping the items given in pledge by poor debtors, and does not rob the poor but instead gives food to the hungry and provides clothes for people in need.
Amos 2:8
- At their religious festivals, they lounge around in clothing stolen from their debtors. In the house of their god, they present offerings of wine purchased with stolen money.