Reference: Coin
Easton
Before the Exile the Jews had no regularly stamped money. They made use of uncoined shekels or talents of silver, which they weighed out (Ge 23:16; Ex 38:24; 2Sa 18:12). Probably the silver ingots used in the time of Abraham may have been of a fixed weight, which was in some way indicated on them. The "pieces of silver" paid by Abimelech to Abraham (Ge 20:16), and those also for which Joseph was sold (Ge 37:28), were proably in the form of rings. The shekel was the common standard of weight and value among the Hebrews down to the time of the Captivity. Only once is a shekel of gold mentioned (1Ch 21:25). The "six thousand of gold" mentioned in the transaction between Naaman and Gehazi (2Ki 5:5) were probably so many shekels of gold. The "piece of money" mentioned in Job 42:11; Ge 33:19 (marg., "lambs") was the Hebrew kesitah, probably an uncoined piece of silver of a certain weight in the form of a sheep or lamb, or perhaps having on it such an impression. The same Hebrew word is used in Jos 24:32, which is rendered by Wickliffe "an hundred yonge scheep."