Today consumer debt is 2.5 trillion dollars
indicating how far we have moved from Gospel
traditions. In Scripture we are taught not to
enslave others through usury, contracts and interest,
but to give those in need without expectation of
return. On the other hand we are also not
encouraged to seek loans to support a lifestyle of
luxury beyond our current means to pay. But, in
today's culture, we find the poor being charged
exorbitant interest rates, and those with means
seeking to satisfy unconstrained desires for
material goods, taking on loans they often have
difficulty repaying. This is a tragedy of our times.
Saint Basil the Great wrote about this some
seventeen hundred years ago in his commentary on
Psalm 14.
He writes:
The Lord has laid a clear command on us, saying:
'And from him who would borrow of thee, do not
turn away" (Matt 5:42)... the avaricious person...
does not pity one who is suffering misfortune
beyond his desert; he takes no account of his
nature; he doe not yield to his supplications;
but, rigid and harsh he stands, yielding to no
entreaties, touched by no tears, preserving in
his refusal... But when he who is seeking the
loan makes mention of interest and names his
securities, then, pulling down his eyebrows, he
smiles and remembers somewhere or other a family
friendship, and calling him associate and fried,
he says, 'We shall see if we have any money at
all reserved.'.. he binds them with contracts.
As the poor in need of necessities seek to find
means to relieve their immediate difficulty, they
are faced with hard hearts, disdain, and numerous
money sharks willing to extract high interest rates
to capitalize on their plight, followed by
unscrupoulous credit collectors when their payments
falter.
Saint Basil writes:
If he had been able to make you richer, why
would he have sought your doors? Coming for
assistance he found hostility... It was your
duty to relieve the destitution of the man, but
you, seeing to drain the desert dry, increased
his need. Just as is some physician, visiting
sick, instead of restoring health to them would
take away even their little remnant of bodily
strength, so you also would make the misfortunes
of the wretched an opportunity of revenue... Do
you know that you are making an addition to your
sin greater that the increase to your wealth,
which you are planning from the interest?
Christ tells us, "do good, and lend, not hoping for
any return" (Luke 6:35). When we follow this
commandment we gain true interest, benefits in
heaven.
Saint Basil writes:
Whenever you have the intention of providing for
a poor man for the Lord's sake, the same thing
is both a gift and a loan, a gift because of the
expectation of no repayment, but a loan because
of the great gift of the Master who pay in his
place, and who, receiving trifling things
through a poor man, will give great things in
return for them. "He that hath mercy on the poor
length to God." (Prov. 19:17)... Give the money,...
without weighing it down with additional charges,
and it will be good for both of you.... The Lord
will pay the interest for the poor... The
interest, which you take, is full of extreme
inhumanity. You make a profit from misfortune,
you collect money from tears, you strangle the
naked, you beat the famished; nowhere is there
mercy, no thought of relationship with the
sufferer...
We expected are to give freely with love and
compassion to help those in need. The Lord has told
us, "And from him who would borrow of thee, do not
turn away" (Matt 5:42).
Saint Basil says,
...Do not give your money at interest, on order
that, having been taught what is good from the
Old and the New Testament, you may depart to the
Lord with good hope, receiving there the
interest from your good deeds, in Christ Jesus
our Lord, to whom be glory and power forever.
He also speaks to those who are not poor out of
necessities but seek to gain more out of their greed
or unchecked desires. Warns them about enslaving
theme selves with debt.
He writes:
'Drink water out of thy own cistern.' (Prov.
5:15) that is, examine your own resources...
Borrowing is the beginning of falsity; an
opportunity for ingratitude, for senseless pride...
When you have borrowed you will not be rich,
and you will be deprived of freedom. He who
borrows is the slave of his creditor, a slave
serving for pay...
He who owes is both poor and full of worries,
sleepless by night, sleepless by day, anxious at
all times; now he is putting a value on his own
possessions, now on the costly houses, the
fields of the rich, the clothing of chance
comers, the table furnishing of those
entertaining....
How many men, after building castles in the air
, have as their only benefit, a loss beyond
measure?
We should not seek to borrow just to acquire the
goods of those who are wealthier than we are as this
only puts us under slavery to those whom we borrow
from. This includes larger houses, fancy cars,
entertainment system, stylish clothes and so forth.
Can't we see the problem this causes in the current
mortgage crisis with the many foreclosures, people
losing their homes they bought that were beyond
their means, fulfilling unrealistic dreams, hoping
for a lifestyle of those who were much richer? Is
this not the sin of gluttony, of wanting more than
what we need. Why jeopardize our future, why put
such undue strains on our family fearing the payment
of our many creditors? This has become a common
problem adding to the anxiety of modern life and
separating us from God.
The clear teaching from Saint Basil the Great is
simple. Give to those in need without expectations
of return out of your heartfelt compassion for their
plight and you will gain interest and repayment in
heaven. Do not borrow from others to meet your
earthly desires, but instead adjust your
expectations to what you can afford and be satisfied
with securing the necessities of life based on what
you have saved, and not some fairytale ideal of what
it means to have the "good life," hoping that at
sometime in the future you will be able to pay for
it. This lifestyle that has become common in this
age only leads to a life biased on anxiety and ever
increasing desires.
The credit card is a relatively new phenomenon. The
visa card was established in 1966 which hosted in
the idea of a universal credit system with revolving
accounts. Before that loans were hard to come by
and were only taken out in large sums based on
collateral. But with the Banks invention of the
finical instrument of the credit card, anyone could
now purchase without having to repay. Initially the
early credit cards required payment within a month.
But with Visa consumers could buy beyond their
means and repay only a small amount each month, with,
of course, a hefty interest rate of 18%. Also, a
short time later, auto loans were created with
multiple year terms. Then came house mortgages with
smaller and smaller down payments required, and even
most recently with zero down patent! Beware of the
dangers of this system of loose credit which
permeates the modern way of life. It can trap you
relying on your pride, greed and unchecked desires.
It undermines your freedom and can lead to high
anxiety and stressful relationships when you are not
able to make the payments. Worst, it leads to
conditions where you are no longer connected with
God.
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