They Who Give from Evil: The Response of the Eastern Church to Moneylending in the Early Christian Era


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About The Book

Description: They Who Give from Evil: The Response of the Eastern Church to Moneylending in the Early Christian Era considers St. Basil the Great and St. Gregory of Nyssas fourth-century sermons against usury. Both brothers were concerned with the economic and theological implications of destructive and corrosive practices of lending at high rates of interest and implications for both on the community and the individual soul of lender and debtor. Analysis of their sermons is placed within the context of early Greek Christian responses to lending and borrowing which were informed by Jewish Greek and Roman attitudes toward debt. Endorsements: Focusing on the Greek patristic tradition Ihssen shows how a millennium of reflection on the problem of usury codified in ancient Greek philosophy the Hebrew Scriptures Roman law and the New Testament was used to elaborate a nuanced and consistently critical attitude towards the practice of taking interest on a loan culminating in the brilliant writings of Gregory of Nyssa. Witty and engaging this book will interest a wide readership. --T. Allan Smith Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies Ihssens patient study describes Basil of Caesarea and Gregory of Nyssas teachings on usury against the backdrop of the ancient world of biblical teaching and of other Christian voices in late antiquity. The result is a book that is both timely in its warnings against economic injustice and illuminating in its elucidation of early Christian teachings on usury. Most importantly Ihssen shows that Nyssas approach to usury has its own unique emphases. --Hans Boersma Regent College They Who Give from Evil attempts something quite bold: to ask the modern world to rethink its passive acceptance of buying and selling interest-earning loans with the moral and ethical insights of two writers who died sixteen centuries ago. . . . By the end readers will have enjoyed learning something about moneylending in late antiquity as much as they will have enjoyed Ihssens subtle questioning of ourselves. --Brian Matz Carroll College Loans and debts have a timeless power to foster shame moral silence and dehumanizing injustices that cripple individuals societies and nation-states. Ihssens welcomed scholarly overview of early Greek and Christian voices about this evil gift tells stories that are painfully familiar even today. Her book will appeal to anyone interested in the problem of poverty and ethical responses to economic rights. --Susan R. Holman Harvard School of Public Health About the Contributor(s): Brenda Llewellyn Ihssen is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Religion at Pacific Lutheran University where she teaches courses in the early and medieval history of Christianity and Islam and Eastern Orthodox theology.
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