Reference: Usury, Interest, Increase
Hastings
At the date of our AV 'usury' had not acquired its modern connotation of exorbitant interest; hence it should be replaced in OT by 'interest,' as in Amer. RV, and as the English Revisers have done in NT (see below). The OT law-codes forbid the taking of interest on loans by one Hebrew from another, see Ex 22:25 (Book of the Covenant), De 23:19 f., Le 25:35-38 (Law of Holiness). Of the two terms constantly associated and in English Version rendered 'usury' (neshek) and 'increase' (tarb
See Verses Found in Dictionary
'If thou dost lend My poor people with thee money, thou art not to him as a usurer; thou dost not lay on him usury;
'And when thy brother is become poor, and his hand hath failed with thee, then thou hast kept hold on him, sojourner and settler, and he hath lived with thee; thou takest no usury from him, or increase; and thou hast been afraid of thy God; and thy brother hath lived with thee; read more. thy money thou givest not to him in usury, and for increase thou givest not thy food;
thy money thou givest not to him in usury, and for increase thou givest not thy food; I am Jehovah your God, who hath brought you out of the land of Egypt, to give to you the land of Canaan, to become your God.
And when the hand of a sojourner or settler with thee attaineth riches, and thy brother with him hath become poor, and he hath been sold to a sojourner, a settler with thee, or to the root of the family of a sojourner,
'Thou dost not lend in usury to thy brother; usury of money, usury of food, usury of anything which is lent on usury. To a stranger thou mayest lend in usury, and to thy brother thou dost not lend in usury, so that Jehovah thy God doth bless thee in every putting forth of thy hand on the land whither thou goest in to possess it.
it behoved thee then to put my money to the money-lenders, and having come I had received mine own with increase.
and wherefore didst thou not give my money to the bank, and I, having come, with interest might have received it?