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MONEY

- CHANGERS @ kjv@Matthew:21:12; kjv@Mark:11:15; kjv@John:2:15

MONEY @ kjv@Jeremiah:32:10; kjv@Matthew:22:19; kjv@Mark:12:41; kjv@Mark:14:11; kjv@1Timothy:6:10 SEE Riches - Love of. SEE Avarice, COVETOUSNESS & COVETOUSNESS Covetousness, COVETOUSNESS & COVETOUSNESS - Value of different pieces of. SEE Tables, 3536 & 3537

smith:



MONEY - M>@ - Uncointed money.
It is well known that ancient nations that were without a coinage weighed the precious metals, a practice represented on the Egyptian monuments, on which gold and silver are shown to have been kept in the form of rings. We have no evidence of the use of coined money before the return from the Babylonian captivity; but silver was used for money, in quantities determined by weight, at least as early as the time of Abraham; and its earliest mention is in the generic sense of the price paid for a slave. kjv@Genesis:17:13) The 1000 pieces of silver paid by Abimelech to Abraham, kjv@Genesis:20:16) and the 20 pieces of silver for which Joseph was sold to the Ishmaelites, kjv@Genesis:37:28) were probably rings such as we see on the Egyptian monuments in the act of being weighed. In the first recorded transaction of commerce, the cave of Machpelah is purchased by Abraham for 400 shekels of silver. The shekel weight of silver was the unit of value through the whole age of Hebrew history, down to the Babylonian captivity. Coined money.
After the captivity we have the earliest mention of coined money , in allusion, as might have been expected, to the Persian coinage, the gold daric (Authorized version dram). kjv@Ezra:2:69 kjv@Ezra:8:27; kjv@Nehemiah:7:70-71-72) DARIC No native Jewish coinage appears to have existed till Antiochus VII. Sidetes granted Simon Maccabaeus the license to coin money, B.C. 140; and it is now generally agreed that the oldest Jewish silver coins belong to this period. They are shekels and half-shekels, of the weight of 220 and 110 grains. With this silver there was associated a copper coinage. The abundant money of Herod the Great, which is of a thoroughly Greek character, and of copper only, seems to have been a continuation of the copper coinage of the Maccabees, with some adaptation to the Roman standard. In the money of the New Testament we see the native copper coinage side by side with the Graeco
- Roman copper, silver and gold. (The first coined money mentioned in the Bible refers to the Persian coinage, ( kjv@1Chronicles:29:7; kjv@Ezra:2:69) and translated dram . It is the Persian daric , a gold coin worth about .50. The coins mentioned by the evangelists, and first those of silver, are the following: The stater , kjv@Matthew:17:24-27) called piece of money , was a Roman coin equal to four drachmas. It was worth 55 to 60 cents, and is of about the same value as the Jewish stater , or coined shekel. The denarius , or Roman penny, as well as the Greek drachma , then of about the same weight, are spoken of as current coins. kjv@Matthew:22:15-21; kjv@Luke:20:19-25) They were worth about 15 cents. Of copper coins the farthing and its half, the mite , are spoken of, and these probably formed the chief native currency. (The Roman farthing (quadrans) was a brass coin worth .375 of a cent. The Greek farthing (as or assarion) was worth four Roman farthings, i.e. about one cent and a half. A mite was half a farthing, and therefore was worth about two-tenths of a cent if the half of the Roman farthing, and about 2 cents if the half of the Greek farthing.
See table of Jewish weights and measures.
ED.)

MONEYCHANGERS - M>@ - kjv@Matthew:21:12; kjv@Mark:11:15; kjv@John:2:15) According to kjv@Exodus:30:13-15) every Israelite who had reached or passed the age of twenty must pay into the sacred treasury, whenever the nation was numbered, a half-shekel as an offering to Jehovah. The money-changers whom Christ, for their impiety, avarice and fraudulent dealing, expelled from the temple were the dealers who supplied half-shekels, for such a premium as they might be able to exact, to the Jews from all parts of the world who assembled at Jerusalem during the great festivals, and were required to pay their tribute or ransom money in the Hebrew coin.

easton:



Money @ Of uncoined money the first notice we have is in the history of Abraham kjv@Genesis:13:2 kjv@Genesis:20:16 kjv@Genesis:24:35 ). Next, this word is used in connection with the purchase of the cave of Machpelah (23:16), and again in connection with Jacob's purchase of a field at Shalem kjv@Genesis:33:18-19) for "an hundred pieces of money"=an hundred Hebrew kesitahs (q.v.), i.e., probably pieces of money, as is supposed, bearing the figure of a lamb. The history of Joseph affords evidence of the constant use of money, silver of a fixed weight. This appears also in all the subsequent history of the Jewish people, in all their internal as well as foreign transactions. There were in common use in trade silver pieces of a definite weight, shekels, half-shekels, and quarter-shekels. But these were not properly coins, which are pieces of metal authoritatively issued, and bearing a stamp. Of the use of coined money we have no early notice among the Hebrews. The first mentioned is of Persian coinage, the daric kjv@Ezra:2:69; kjv@Nehemiah:7:70) and the 'adarkon kjv@Ezra:8:27). The daric (q.v.) was a gold piece current in Palestine in the time of Cyrus. As long as the Jews, after the Exile, lived under Persian rule, they used Persian coins. These gave place to Greek coins when Palestine came under the dominion of the Greeks (B.C. 331), the coins consisting of gold, silver, and copper pieces. The usual gold pieces were staters (q.v.), and the silver coins tetradrachms and drachms. In the year B.C. 140, Antiochus VII. gave permission to Simon the Maccabee to coin Jewish money. Shekels (q.v.) were then coined bearing the figure of the almond rod and the pot of manna.

Money-changer @ kjv@Matthew:21:12; kjv@Mark:11:15; kjv@John:2:15). Every Israelite from twenty years and upwards had to pay kjv@Exodus:30:13-15) into the sacred treasury half a shekel every year as an offering to Jehovah, and that in the exact Hebrew half-shekel piece. There was a class of men, who frequented the temple courts, who exchanged at a certain premium foreign moneys for these half-shekels to the Jews who came up to Jerusalem from all parts of the world. (
See PASSOVER.) When our Lord drove the traffickers out of the temple, these money-changers fared worst. Their tables were overturned and they themselves were expelled.

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torrey:



Money @ Gold and silver used as kjv@Genesis:13:2 kjv@Numbers:22:18
Brass introduced as, by the Romans kjv@Matthew:10:9
Originally stamped with the image of a lamb kjv@Genesis:23:15 kjv@Genesis:33:19
Of the Romans, stamped with the image of Caesar kjv@Matthew:22:20 kjv@Matthew:22:21
Usually taken by weight kjv@Genesis:23:16 kjv@Jeremiah:32:10
Pieces of mentioned
Talent of gold kjv@1Kings:9:14 kjv@2Kings:23:23
Talent of silver kjv@1Kings:16:24 kjv@2Kings:5:22 kjv@2Kings:5:23
Shekel of silver kjv@Judges:17:10 kjv@2Kings:15:20
Half shekel or bekah kjv@Exodus:30:15
Third of a shekel kjv@Nehemiah:10:32
Fourth of a shekel kjv@1Samuel:9:8
Gerah the twentieth of a shekel kjv@Numbers:3:47
Pound kjv@Luke:19:13
Penny kjv@Matthew:20:2 kjv@Mark:6:37
Farthing kjv@Matthew:5:26 kjv@Luke:12:6
Mite kjv@Mark:12:42 kjv@Luke:21:2
Of the Jews regulated by the standard of sanctuary kjv@Leviticus:5:15 kjv@Numbers:3:47
Was current with the merchants kjv@Genesis:23:16
Jews forbidden to take usury for kjv@Leviticus:25:37
Changing of, a trade kjv@Matthew:21:12 kjv@John:2:15
Was given
For lands kjv@Genesis:23:9 kjv@Acts:4:37
For slaves kjv@Genesis:37:28 kjv@Exodus:21:21
For merchandise kjv@Genesis:43:12 kjv@Deuteronomy:2:6
For tribute kjv@2Kings:23:33 kjv@Matthew:22:19
As wages kjv@Ezra:3:7 kjv@Matthew:20:2 kjv@James:5:4
As offerings kjv@2Kings:12:7-9 kjv@Nehemiah:10:32
As alms kjv@1Samuel:2:36 kjv@Acts:3:3 kjv@Acts:3:6
Custom of presenting a piece of kjv@Job:42:11
Power and usefulness of kjv@Ecclesiastes:7:12 kjv@Ecclesiastes:10:19
Love of, the root of all evil kjv@1Timothy:6:10

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naves:



MONEY @
- Silver used as kjv@Genesis:17:12-13 kjv@Genesis:17:23 kjv@Genesis:17:27; kjv@Genesis:20:16; kjv@Genesis:23:9 kjv@Genesis:23:13 kjv@Genesis:31:15; kjv@Genesis:37:28; kjv@Genesis:42:25-35; kjv@Genesis:43:12-23; kjv@Genesis:44:1-8; kjv@Genesis:47:14-18; kjv@Genesis:21:11-21 kjv@Genesis:21:Exodus:12:44; 34, 35; kjv@Exodus:22:7 kjv@Exodus:22:17, 25; kjv@Exodus:30:16; kjv@Leviticus:22:11; kjv@Leviticus:25:37 kjv@Leviticus:25:51 kjv@Leviticus:27:15 kjv@Leviticus:27:18 kjv@Numbers:3:48-51; kjv@Numbers:18:16; kjv@Deuteronomy:2:6 kjv@Deuteronomy:2:28 kjv@Deuteronomy:14:25-26; kjv@Deuteronomy:21:14; kjv@Deuteronomy:23:19; kjv@Judges:5:19; kjv@Judges:16:18; kjv@1Kings:21:2 kjv@1Kings:21:1Kings:17:4; 6, 15; kjv@2Kings:5:26; kjv@2Kings:12:4 kjv@2Kings:12:7-16 kjv@2Kings:15:20; kjv@2Kings:22:7-9; kjv@2Chronicles:24:5 kjv@2Chronicles:24:2Chronicles:23:35; kjv@2Chronicles:34:9-11 kjv@2Chronicles:34:14; 14, 17; kjv@Ezra:3:7; kjv@Ezra:7:17; kjv@Nehemiah:5:4 kjv@Nehemiah:5:10, 11; kjv@Esther:4:7; kjv@Job:31:39; kjv@Psalms:15:5; kjv@Proverbs:7:20; kjv@Ecclesiastes:7:12; kjv@Ecclesiastes:10:19; kjv@Isaiah:43:24; kjv@Isaiah:52:3; kjv@Jeremiah:32:9-10 kjv@Jeremiah:32:Jeremiah:55:1-2; 25, 44; kjv@Lamentations:5:4; kjv@Micah:3:11; kjv@Matthew:25:18 kjv@Matthew:25:27 kjv@Matthew:28:12 kjv@Matthew:28:15 kjv@Mark:14:11; kjv@Luke:9:3; kjv@Luke:19:15 kjv@Luke:19:23 kjv@Luke:22:5; kjv@Acts:7:16; kjv@Acts:8:20
- Gold used as kjv@Genesis:13:2; kjv@Genesis:24:35; kjv@Genesis:44:8 with kjv@Genesis:44:1; kjv@1Chronicles:21:25; kjv@Ezra:8:25-27; kjv@Isaiah:13:17; kjv@Isaiah:46:6; kjv@Isaiah:60:9; kjv@Ezekiel:7:19; kjv@Ezekiel:28:4; kjv@Matthew:2:11; kjv@Matthew:10:9; kjv@Acts:3:6; kjv@Acts:20:33; kjv@1Peter:1:18
- Copper used as kjv@Mark:6:8; kjv@Mark:12:41
- Weighed kjv@Genesis:23:16; kjv@Genesis:43:21; kjv@Job:28:15; kjv@Jeremiah:32:9-10; kjv@Zechariah:11:12
- Image on kjv@Matthew:22:20-21
- Conscience kjv@Judges:17:2; kjv@Matthew:27:3-5
- Atonement kjv@Exodus:30:12-16; kjv@Leviticus:5:15-16
- Sin kjv@2Kings:12:16
- Value of, varied corruptly kjv@Amos:8:5
- Love of, the root of evil kjv@1Timothy:6:10
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See FARTHING
-
See GERAH
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See MITE
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See PENNY
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See POUND
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See SHEKEL
-
See SILVER
-
See TALENT

MONEY CHANGERS @
- General scriptures concerning kjv@Matthew:21:12; kjv@Mark:11:15; kjv@John:2:15

filter-bible-link.pl:



hitchcock:



kjv@STRING:Casiphia <HITCHCOCK>@ money; covetousness - HITCHCOCK-C


kjv@STRING:Shitrai <HITCHCOCK>@ gatherer of money - HITCHCOCK-S


tcr:



MONEY

- CHANGERS @ kjv@Matthew:21:12; kjv@Mark:11:15; kjv@John:2:15

MONEY @ kjv@Jeremiah:32:10; kjv@Matthew:22:19; kjv@Mark:12:41; kjv@Mark:14:11; kjv@1Timothy:6:10 SEE Riches - Love of. SEE Avarice, COVETOUSNESS & COVETOUSNESS Covetousness, COVETOUSNESS & COVETOUSNESS - Value of different pieces of. SEE Tables, 3536 & 3537

strongs:



H3599 <STRHEB>@ כּיס kîys keece A form for H3563; a cup; also a bag for money or weights: - {bag} {cup} purse.


H3701 <STRHEB>@ כּסף keseph keh'-sef From H3700; silver (from its pale color); by implication money: - {money} {price} silver (-ling).


H3702 <STRHEB>@ כּסף kesaph kes-af' (Chaldee); corresponding to H3701: - {money} silver.


H3724 <STRHEB>@ כּפר kôpher ko'-fer From H3722; properly a {cover} that {is} (literally) a village (as covered in); (specifically) bitumen (as used for {coating}) and the henna plant (as used for dyeing); figuratively a redemption price: - {bribe} {camphire} {pitch} {ransom} {satisfaction} sum of {money} village.


H4061 <STRHEB>@ מנדּה מדּה middâh mindâh {mid-daw'} min-daw' (Chaldee); corresponding to H4060; tribute in money: - {toll} tribute.


H4301 <STRHEB>@ מטמן מטמן מטמון maţmôn maţmôn maţmûn {mat-mone'} {mat-mone'} mat-moon' From H2934; a secret storehouse; hence a secreted valuable (buried); generally money: - {hidden} {riches} (hid) treasure (-s).


H5078 <STRHEB>@ נדה nêdeh nay'-deh From H5077 in the sense of freely flinging money; a bounty (for prostitution): - gifts.


H7075 <STRHEB>@ קנין qinyân kin-yawn' From H7069; {creation} that {is} (concretely) creatures; also {acquisition} {purchase} wealth: - {getting} {goods} X with {money} {riches} substance.


H7192 <STRHEB>@ קשׂיטה qeώîyţâh kes-ee-taw' From an unused root (probably meaning to weigh out); an ingot (as definitely estimated and stamped for a coin): - piece of money (silver).


H8210 <STRHEB>@ שׁפך shâphak shaw-fak' A primitive root; to spill forth ({blood} a {libation} liquid metal; or even a {solid} that {is} to mound up); also (figuratively) to expend ({life} {soul} {complaint} {money} etc.); intensively to sprawl out: - cast ({up}) gush {out} pour ({out}) shed ({-der} {out}) slip.


G2772 <STRGRK>@ κέρμα kerma ker'-mah From G2751; a clipping (bit) that is (specifically) a coin: - money.


G2773 <STRGRK>@ κερματιστής kermatistēs ker-mat-is-tace' From a derivative of G2772; a handler of coins that is money broker: - changer of money.


G2774 <STRGRK>@ κεφάλαιον kephalaion kef-al'-ah-yon Neuter of a derivative of G2776; a principal thing that is main point; specifically an amount (of money): - sum.


G2855 <STRGRK>@ κολλυβιστής kollubistēs kol-loo-bis-tace' From a presumed derivative of κόλλυβος kollubos (a small coin; probably akin to G2854); a coin dealer: - (money-) changer.


G3546 <STRGRK>@ νόμισμα nomisma nom'-is-mah From G3543; what is reckoned as of value (after the Latin numisma) that is current coin: - money.


G4149 <STRGRK>@ πλοῦτος ploutos ploo'-tos From the base of G4130; wealth (as fulness) that is (literally) money possessions or (figuratively) abundance richness (specifically) valuable bestowment: - riches.


G4200 <STRGRK>@ πορισμός porismos por-is-mos' From a derivative of πόρος poros (a way that is means); furnishing (procuring) that is (by implication) money getting (acquisition): - gain.


G4715 <STRGRK>@ στατήρ statēr stat-air' From the base of G2746; a stander (standard of value) that is (specifically) a stater or certain coin: - piece of money.


G5007 <STRGRK>@ τάλαντον talanton tal'-an-ton Neuter of a presumed derivative of the original form of τλάω tlao (to bear; equivalent to G5342); a balance (as supporting weights) that is (by implication) a certain weight (and thence a coin or rather sum of money) or talent: - talent.


G5092 <STRGRK>@ τιμή timē tee-may' From G5099; a value that is money paid or (concretely and collectively) valuables; by analogy esteem (especially of the highest degree) or the dignity itself: - honour precious price some.


G5110 <STRGRK>@ τόκος tokos tok'-os From the base of G5088; interest on money loaned (as a produce): - usury.


G5132 <STRGRK>@ τράπεζα trapeza trap'-ed-zah Probably contracted from G5064 and G3979; a table or stool (as being four legged) usually for food (figuratively a meal); also a counter for money (figuratively a broker´ s office for loans at interest): - bank meat table.


G5133 <STRGRK>@ τραπεζίτης trapezitēs trap-ed-zee'-tace From G5132; a money broker or banker: - exchanger.


G5365 <STRGRK>@ φιλαργυρία philarguria fil-ar-goo-ree'-ah From G5366; avarice: - love of money.


G5366 <STRGRK>@ φιλάργυρος philarguros fil-ar'-goo-ros From G5384 and G696; fond of silver (money) that is avaricious: - covetous.


G5475 <STRGRK>@ χαλκός chalkos khal-kos' Perhaps from G5465 through the idea of hollowing out as a vessel (this metal being chiefly used for that purpose); copper (the substance or some implement or coin made of it): - brass money.


G5536 <STRGRK>@ χρῆμα chrēma khray'-mah Something useful or needed that is wealth price: - money riches.


G694 <STRGRK>@ ἀργύριον argurion ar-goo'-ree-on Neuter of a presumed derivative of G696; silvery that is (by implication) cash; specifically a silverling (that is drachma or shekel): - money (piece of) silver (piece).


G728 <STRGRK>@ ἀῤῥαβών arrhabōn ar-hrab-ohn' Of Hebrew origin [H6162]; a pledge that is part of the purchase money or property given in advance as security for the rest: - earnest.


G905 <STRGRK>@ βαλάντιον balantion bal-an'-tee-on Probably remotely from G906 (as a depository); a pouch (for money): - bag purse.