Biblia Todo Logo
Online nga Bibliya
- Mga paanunsiyo -





Exodus 22:26 - Christian Standard Bible Anglicised

26 ‘If you ever take your neighbour’s cloak as collateral, return it to him before sunset.

Tan-awa ang kapitulo Kopyaha


Dugang nga mga bersyon

King James Version (Oxford) 1769

26 If thou at all take thy neighbour's raiment to pledge, thou shalt deliver it unto him by that the sun goeth down:

Tan-awa ang kapitulo Kopyaha

Amplified Bible - Classic Edition

26 If you ever take your neighbor's garment in pledge, you shall give it back to him before the sun goes down;

Tan-awa ang kapitulo Kopyaha

American Standard Version (1901)

26 If thou at all take thy neighbor’s garment to pledge, thou shalt restore it unto him before the sun goeth down:

Tan-awa ang kapitulo Kopyaha

Common English Bible

26 If you take a piece of clothing from someone as a security deposit, you should return it before the sun goes down.

Tan-awa ang kapitulo Kopyaha

Catholic Public Domain Version

26 If you take a garment from your neighbor as a pledge, you shall return it to him again before the setting of the sun.

Tan-awa ang kapitulo Kopyaha




Exodus 22:26
16 Cross References  

For you took collateral  from your brothers without cause, stripping off their clothes and leaving them naked.


They drive away the donkeys owned by the fatherless and take the widow’s ox as collateral.


Without clothing, they spend the night naked, having no covering against the cold.


The fatherless infant is snatched from the breast; the nursing child of the poor is seized as collateral.


but caused the poor to cry out to him, and he heard the outcry of the needy.


Take his garment, for he has put up security for a stranger; get collateral if it is for foreigners.


If you have nothing with which to pay, even your bed will be taken from under you.


He doesn’t oppress anyone, hold collateral, or commit robbery. He gives his bread to the hungry and covers the naked with clothing.


He doesn’t oppress anyone  but returns his collateral to the debtor.  He does not commit robbery, but gives his bread to the hungry  and covers the naked with clothing.


he returns collateral, makes restitution for what he has stolen, and walks in the statutes of life  without committing injustice #– #he will certainly live; he will not die.


They stretch out beside every altar on garments taken as collateral, and in the house of their God they drink wine obtained through fines.


Do not deny justice to a resident foreigner or fatherless child, and do not take a widow’s garment as security.


‘Do not take a pair of grindstones or even the upper millstone as security for a debt, because that is like taking a life as security.


Sunda kami:

Mga paanunsiyo


Mga paanunsiyo