The Supreme Court recently heard a case that turns on the meaning of “money”: What counts as “money compensation” for the purpose of a particular kind of taxation? The case seems abstruse and the write-up at Scotus Blog is a bit tongue-in-cheek, but the issue – or at least the real heart of the issue – goes back to antiquity.
The Hebrew Bible prohibits the charging of interest. There are a few versions of this prohibition (Exodus 22:25, Leviticus 25:36-37), each of which defines its scope differently. The version in Deuteronomy 23:19 reads:
You shall not charge interest on loans to another Israelite, interest on money, interest on provisions, interest on anything that is lent. (Translation NRSV)
This verse seems to clear up a problem that pops up in the other versions, which is what the prohibition of interest actually applies to. According to Deuteronomy, not only am I prohibited from charging interest on monetary loans that I make, but even on food. I am to get back exactly what I lent, with no profit or recompense for the opportunity cost that I pay for the time during which I cannot use the money or stuff I lent. So far so good, but this opens another question: What, exactly, is “interest”? Is it only money?
In a complicated chapter in the Mishnah, the rabbis of antiquity sought to answer this question. Mishnah Bava Metzia, chapter 5, begins with a straightforward case of what we would consider monetary interest: I lend you money on condition that you return to me more money than I lent you. It is not sufficient, though, to stop there. The Mishnah goes on to discuss cases in which a lender may benefit in other ways from the loan. Can a lender, for example, live for free in the house of the borrower while the loan is outstanding? (No.) Can I take a down payment from you on a field but continue to use it until you bring the balance of the payment? (No.) Can one set a price for a future delivery of a commodity? (No – because the market price might rise prior to delivery of the goods and thus the seller has profited in a way that the rabbis consider to be “interest.”) They even consider the case of a loaf of bread:
And Hillel would say thus: A woman may not lend a loaf to her friend until she sets a price for it, lest wheat become more expensive [in the interim], and it turns out they have come to [transgress] usury. (Mishnah Bava Metzia 5:9)
To the rabbis, there are many forms of “compensation” and the law demands for an accounting of each. Next to their discussion, the one recorded by Scotus Blog looks almost quaint.

Biblical Archaeology Review just published this new, tiny find from the excavations at the Temple Mount in Jerusalem: a clay seal (or bulla) that seems to contain the name Isaiah with (a little more doubtfully) the word “prophet” written underneath. The top register of the seal seems to depict an animal, perhaps a doe. The article, “Isaiah’s Signature Uncovered in Jerusalem: Evidence of the Prophet Isaiah” can be accessed
Those who know me are aware that I don’t have much of a sense of fashion. Before I met my wife, in fact, the very idea that there were clothes with colors that “match,” or that certain colors look better on me than others, was unfathomable. I would simply be unable to parse those considerations, no less know how to act on them. Today I feel that dressing in a minimally acceptable way is within my reach and it is what I strive for most days.