Usury

<http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15235c.htm>http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15235c.htm

In the article INTEREST we have reserved the 
question of the lawfulness of taking interest on 
money lent; we have here to consider first, usury 
as condemned by all honest men.

Plato (Laws, v. 742) and 
<../cathen/01713a.htm>Aristotle (Politics, I, x, 
xi) considered interest as contrary to the nature 
of things; Aristophanes expressed his disapproval 
of it, in the "Clouds" (1283 sqq.); Cato 
condemned it (see Cicero, "De officiis, II, xxv), 
comparing it to <../cathen/07441a.htm>homicide, 
as also did Seneca (De beneficiis, VII, x) and 
Plutarch in his treatise against incurring 
<../cathen/04663b.htm>debts. So much for Greek 
and Roman writers, who, it is 
<../cathen/15073a.htm>true, 
<../cathen/08673a.htm>knew little of 
<../cathen/12213b.htm>economic 
<../cathen/13598b.htm>science. 
<../cathen/01713a.htm>Aristotle disapproved of 
the money trader's profit; and the ruinous rates 
at which money was lent explain his severity. On 
the other hand, the Roman and Greek 
<../cathen/09053a.htm>laws while considering the 
mutuum, or loan for consumption, as a contract 
gratuitous in principle, allowed a clause, 
stipulating for the payment of interest, to be 
added to the bond. The Law of the Twelve Tables 
allowed only unciarium fenus, probably 
one-twelfth of the capital, or 8.33 per cent. A 
plebiscitum, lex Ganucia, 412 a.u.c. went so far 
as to forbid all interest whatever, but, at a 
later period, the <../cathen/09079a.htm>Roman law 
allowed interest at 1 per cent monthly, or 12 per 
cent per annum. Justinian laid down as a general 
rule that this maximum should be reduced by half 
(L. 26, I, c. De usuris, IV, 32). Chaldea allowed 
interest on loans (cf. Law of 
<../cathen/07125a.htm>Hammurabi, 48 sqq.). No 
absolute prohibition can be found in the 
<../cathen/14526a.htm>Old Testament; at most, 
Exod., xxii, 25, and Deut., xxiii, 19, 20, forbid 
the taking of interest by one <../cathen/08399a.htm>Jew from another.

In the <../cathen/03712a.htm>Christian era, the 
<../cathen/14530a.htm>New Testament is silent on 
the subject; the passage in St. Luke (vi, 34, 
35), which some <../cathen/11726a.htm>persons 
interpret as a condemnation of interest, is only 
an exhortation to general and disinterested 
benevolence. A certain number of authors, among 
them <../cathen/02432a.htm>Benedict XIV (De 
synodo diocesana, X., iv, n. 6), believed in the 
existence of a Patristic tradition which regarded 
the prohibitory passages of <..htm>Holy Scripture 
as of universal application. Examination of the 
texts, however, leads us to the following 
conclusions: Until the fourth century all that 
can be inferred from the Fathers and 
<../cathen/03744a.htm>ecclesiastical writers is 
that it is contrary to mercy and humanity to 
demand interest from a poor and needy man. The 
vehement denunciation of the Fathers of the 
fourth and fifth centuries were called forth by 
the moral decadence and 
<../cathen/02148b.htm>avarice of the time, and we 
cannot find in them any expression of a general 
<../cathen/05075b.htm>doctrine on this point; nor 
do the Fathers of the following centuries say 
anything remarkable on usury; they simply protest 
against the exploitation of misfortune, and such 
transactions as, under the pretence of rendering 
service to the borrower, really threw him into 
great distress. The question of moderate rates of 
interest seems scarcely to have presented itself 
to their minds as a matter of discussion. The 
texts bearing on the question are collected in 
Vermeersch, "Questiones morales de justitia" II, 
n. 359. The councils condemned in the first place 
<../cathen/04049b.htm>clerics who lent money at 
interest. This is the purpose of the 44th of the 
<../cathen/03279a.htm>Apostolic Canons; of the 
<../cathen/01727b.htm>Council of Arles (314), and 
of the 17th canon the <../cathen/11044a.htm>First 
Council of Nicæa (325). It is 
<../cathen/15073a.htm>true that a text of the 
Council of Elvira (305 or 306) is quoted which, 
while ordering the degradation of 
<../cathen/04049b.htm>clerics, would also have 
punishment inflicted on 
<../cathen/08748a.htm>laymen, who obstinately 
persisted in usurious practices; but the mention 
of <../cathen/08748a.htm>layman is of extremely 
<../cathen/05141a.htm>doubtful authenticity. It 
may then be said that until the ninth century 
canonical decrees forbade this profit, shameful 
as it was considered, only to <../cathen/04049b.htm>clerics.

Nevertheless, the 12th canon of the First 
<../cathen/01199a.htm>Council of Carthage (345) 
and the 36th canon of the Council of Aix (789) 
have declared it to be reprehensible even for 
<../cathen/08748a.htm>laymen to make money by 
lending at interest. The canonical 
<../cathen/09053a.htm>laws of the 
<../cathen/10285c.htm>Middle Ages absolutely 
forbade the practice. This prohibition is 
contained in the <../cathen/04670a.htm>Decree of 
Gratian, q. 3, C. IV, at the beginning, and c. 4, 
q. 4, C. IV; and in 1. 5, t. 19 of the 
<../cathen/04670b.htm>Decretals, for example in 
chapters 2, 5, 7, 9, 10, and 13. These chapters 
order the profit so obtained to be restored; and 
<../cathen/01287a.htm>Alexander III (c. 4, "Super 
eo", eodem) declares that he has no power to 
dispense from the 
<../cathen/11189a.htm>obligation. Chapters 1, 2, 
and 6, eodem, condemns the strategems to which 
even <../cathen/04049b.htm>clerics resorted to 
evade the <../cathen/09053a.htm>law of the 
general councils, and the Third of the Lateran 
(1179) and the Second of Lyons (1274) condemn 
usurers. In the Council of Vienne (1311) it was 
declared that if any <../cathen/11726a.htm>person 
obstinately maintained that there was no 
<../cathen/14004b.htm>sin in the practice of 
demanding interest, he should be punished as a 
<../cathen/07256b.htm>heretic (see c. "Ex gravi", 
unic. Clem., "De usuris", V, 5).

It is a curious fact that for a long time 
impunity in such matters was granted to 
<../cathen/08399a.htm>Jews. The Fourth Council of 
the Lateran (1215), c. 27, only forbids them to 
exact excessive interest. 
<../cathen/15211a.htm>Urban III, c. 12, "De 
usuris" (V. 19) and St. Louis in twenty-three of 
his regulations extended the prohibition to the 
<../cathen/08399a.htm>Jews. With the exception of 
c. 27 of the Fourth Council of the Lateran, we 
know of no canon law which takes into 
consideration the question of moderate interest; 
and canon law nowhere states distinctly that 
interest is, under any circumstances whatsoever, 
contrary to <../cathen/08571c.htm>justice.

<../cathen/14580a.htm>Theologians and canonists 
of the <../cathen/10285c.htm>Middle Ages 
constructed a rational theory of the loan for 
consumption, which contains this fundamental 
statement: The mutuum, or loan of things meant 
for immediate consumption, does not legalize, as 
such, any stipulation to pay interest; and 
interest exacted on such a loan must be returned, 
as having been <../cathen/08010c.htm>unjustly 
claimed. This was the 
<../cathen/05075b.htm>doctrine of St. Thomas and 
<../cathen/05194a.htm>Scotus; of Molina, 
<../cathen/09192a.htm>Lessius, and de Lugo. 
Canonists adopted it as well as the 
<../cathen/14580a.htm>theologians; and 
<../cathen/02432a.htm>Benedict XIV made it his 
own in his famous 
<../cathen/05413a.htm>Encyclical 
<../library/docs_be14vp.htm>"Vix pervenit" of 1 
November, 1745, which was 
<../cathen/12454b.htm>promulgated after thorough 
examination, but addressed only to the 
<../cathen/02581b.htm>bishops of 
<../cathen/08208a.htm>Italy, and therefore not an 
<../cathen/07790a.htm>infallible 
<../cathen/04670a.htm>Decree. On 29, July, 1836, 
the Holy Office incidentally declared that this 
<../cathen/05413a.htm>Encyclical applied to the 
whole Church; but such a declaration could not 
give to a document an 
<../cathen/07790a.htm>infallible character which 
it did not otherwise possess. The 
<../cathen/11329a.htm>schismatic Greeks, at least 
since the sixteenth century, do not consider the 
taking of interest on loans as intrinsically bad.

While <../cathen/09438b.htm>Luther, 
<../cathen/10151a.htm>Melanchthon, and 
<../cathen/15772a.htm>Zwingli condemned loaning 
for interest, <../cathen/03195b.htm>Calvin 
permitted interest on money advanced to rich 
<../cathen/11726a.htm>persons; his disciple 
Salmasius gave effect to this opinion by a 
systematic code of rules. By degrees a certain 
number of <../cathen/03449a.htm>Catholic writers 
relaxed their severity. 
<../cathen/16058b.htm>Scipio Maffei, a friend of 
<../cathen/02432a.htm>Benedict XIV, wrote a 
celebrated treatise, "Dell' impiego del danaro", 
to justify an opinion which in this matter 
resembles that of <../cathen/03195b.htm>Calvin. 
Economists generally uphold the theoretical 
lawfulness of interest on loans. For a long time 
<../cathen/09066a.htm>civil law was in agreement 
with canon law; but as early as the sixteenth 
century, <../cathen/06484b.htm>Germany allowed 
interest at 5 percent; in 
<../cathen/06166a.htm>France, on the contrary, 
interest on loans was forbidden until the 
<../cathen/04670a.htm>Decree of 2 and 3 October, 
1789. Contemporary <../cathen/09053a.htm>laws 
always consider the loan for consumption as 
gratuitous in principle, but allow a stipulation 
for the payment of interest to be added. In 
modern legislation two questions remain to be decided:
    * whether it is desirable to establish a maximum legal rate; and
    * by what means usurious exactions may be prevented.
The <../cathen/07424b.htm>Holy See admits 
practically the lawfulness of interest on loans, 
even for <../cathen/12466a.htm>ecclesiastical 
property, though it has not 
<../cathen/12454b.htm>promulgated any 
<../cathen/05075b.htm>doctrinal 
<../cathen/04670a.htm>decree on the subject. See 
the replies of the Holy Office dated 18 August, 
1830, 31 August, 1831, 17 January, 1838, 26 
March, 1840, and 28 February, 1871; and that of 
the Sacred Penitentiary of 11 February, 1832. 
These replies will be found collected in 
"Collectio Lacensis" (Acta et decreta s. 
conciliorum recentiorum), VI, col. 677, Appendix 
to the Council of Pondicherry; and in the "Enchiridion" of Father Bucceroni.

Everyone admits that a <../cathen/05215a.htm>duty 
of charity may command us to lend gratuitously, 
just as it commands us to give freely. The point 
in question is one of 
<../cathen/08571c.htm>justice: Is it contrary to 
the equity required in mutual contracts to ask 
from the borrower interest in addition to the 
money lent? It may be remarked that the best 
authors have long since recognized the lawfulness 
of interest to compensate a lender for the risk 
of losing his capital, or for positive loss, such 
as the privation of the profit which he might 
otherwise have made, if he had not advanced the 
loan. They also admit that the lender is 
justified in exacting a fine of some kind (a 
conventional penalty) in case of any delay in 
payment arising from the fault of the borrower. 
These are what are called extrinsic grounds, 
admitted without dispute since the end of the 
sixteenth century, and justifying the stipulation 
for reasonable interest, proportionate to the 
risk involved in the loan. Another discussion, 
which has not been closed, but only suspended, 
relates to the question whether the 
<../cathen/09066a.htm>civil law creates a new and 
real title, whether the State can, in order to 
extend and promote credit for the good of the 
community, permit interest on loans. We think it 
can. But there will scarcely be any need for such 
a law except in circumstance which already 
justify the general practice of lending for 
interest. (On these extrinsic 
<../cathen/13055c.htm>rights see: Funk, 
"Geschichte des kirchlichen Zinsverbotes"; 
Lehmkuhl, "Theologia moralis", I, n. 1306 sqq., 11th ed.)

The precise question then is this: if we consider 
<../cathen/08571c.htm>justice only, without 
reference to extrinsic circumstances, can the 
loan of money, or any chattel which is not 
destroyed by use, entitle the lender to a gain or 
profit which is called interest? To this question 
some <../cathen/11726a.htm>persons, namely the 
economists of the classic 
<../cathen/13554b.htm>school, and some 
<../cathen/03449a.htm>Catholic writers, answer 
"yes, and always"; others, namely Socialists and 
some <../cathen/03449a.htm>Catholic writers, 
answer, "no, never"; and lastly some 
<../cathen/03449a.htm>Catholics give a less 
unconditional answer, "sometimes, but not 
always"; and they explain the different attitudes 
of he Church in condemning at one time, and at 
another authorizing, the practice of taking 
interest on loans, by the difference of 
circumstances and the state of <../cathen/14074a.htm>society.

The principal argument in favour of the first 
opinion is that the lender does the borrower a 
service which should be paid for. This is, of 
course, a materialistic view of human service, 
which when rendered in a spirit of active 
benevolence is repaid by gratitude: only onerous 
service, which costs or represents some trouble 
or privation, is sold or hired for money. Now, at 
times when opportunities for investing money in 
commercial undertakings or converting it into 
revenue-producing <../cathen/12462a.htm>property 
were comparatively rare, a loan made to a solvent 
<../cathen/11726a.htm>person, instead of being 
onerous to the lender, was rather an advantage, 
in giving him full security for his money, for 
the borrower insured him against its accidental 
loss. And we have just shown that the loan of 
things for immediate consumption was not, as 
such, a source of revenue. Father Ballarini, 
(Opus morale, III, pt. III, ii) thought that the 
<../cathen/08571c.htm>justice or 
<../cathen/08010c.htm>injustice of taking 
interest depends on one's intention; thus, we may 
give credit gratuitously, or we may give the use 
of our money for a consideration. In the first 
case the contract is essentially gratuitous; and 
as formerly this gratuitous contract was the 
ordinary practice, the 
<../cathen/03744a.htm>Church was opposed to all 
claim of interest. However, as the use of money 
has its value, like the use of anything else, the 
<../cathen/03744a.htm>Church on this ground at 
the present day permits the lending of money for 
interest. In spite of the assent of many authors 
to this explanation, we do not approve it. In 
<../cathen/09079a.htm>Roman Law, gratuitousness 
was not essential to the mutuum, but only 
presumed in the absence of any stipulation to the 
contrary. Persons who openly or secretly demanded 
interest <../cathen/12454c.htm>proved 
conclusively that they were not actuated by 
motives of benevolence; and the 
<../cathen/03744a.htm>Church, in condemning them, 
did not raise the question of their intention. 
The answer to Ballerini is that rent is a price 
paid for the use of a thing not destroyed by use. 
The expenditure of money may be productive, and 
the <../cathen/11726a.htm>person lending money 
and so depriving himself of profit may claim a 
compensation for that privation; but this is a 
question of extrinsic circumstances, not of 
<../cathen/08571c.htm>justice itself.

Others with Claudio-Jannet (Le capital, la 
spéculation et la finance, iii, II and III) 
distinguish between the loan for consumption and 
the loan for production: we may ask interest from 
the borrower who takes money or credit in order 
to produce or gain money; but not from one who 
borrows under pressure of necessity, or for some 
unproductive expenditure. The increased frequency 
of loans for production considered in the 
connection with the different extrinsic 
circumstances would seem to justify the demand 
for interest on such loans at the present day. In 
a spirit that is not irreconcilable with the 
rulings of the Fathers in the matter, this system 
contains this element of 
<../cathen/15073a.htm>truth, that the lender of a 
sum of money which is intended for productive use 
may refuse to lend except on condition of being 
made a partner in the undertaking, and may claim 
a fixed interest which represents that share of 
the profit, which he might reasonably expect to 
receive. The system, nevertheless, is formally 
condemned by the <../cathen/05413a.htm>Encyclical 
"Vix pervenit", and contradicts the principle of 
the just value; it tends in fact to make the 
borrower pay the special advantage, while the 
compensation is regulated by the general 
advantage procured by the possession of a thing, 
not by the special circumstances of the borrower. 
Others justify the existing practice by a 
presumption of extrinsic circumstances, which is 
confirmed, according to some 
<../cathen/11726a.htm>persons, by the permission 
of the <../cathen/09066a.htm>civil law. This 
explanation appears to us to be unsatisfactory. 
The extrinsic circumstances do not always exist, 
while we can always lend at interest, without any 
scruple on the score of 
<../cathen/08571c.htm>justice. And what is there 
to show that modern legislators pass 
<../cathen/09053a.htm>laws merely to quiet men's consciences?

But we may correct this last opinion by the aid 
of the general principles of 
<../cathen/04332a.htm>contractual 
<../cathen/08571c.htm>justice; and we shall then 
more fully understand the strictness of the 
<../cathen/09053a.htm>laws of earlier times, and 
the greater liberty allowed at the present day. 
The just price of a thing is based on the general 
estimate, which depends not in all cases on 
universal utility, but on general utility. Since 
the possession of an object is generally useful, 
I may require the price of that general utility, 
even when the object is of no use to me. There is 
much greater facility nowadays for making 
profitable investment of savings, and a 
<../cathen/15073a.htm>true value, therefore, is 
always attached to the possession of money, as 
also to credit itself. A lender, during the whole 
time that the loan continues, deprives himself of 
a valuable thing, for the price of which he is 
compensated by the interest. It is right at the 
present day to permit interest on money lent, as 
it was not wrong to condemn the practice at a 
time when it was more difficult to find 
profitable investments for money. So long as no 
objection was made to the profitable investment 
of capital in industrial undertakings, 
discouragement of interest on loans acted as an 
encouragement of legitimate trade; it also led to 
the creation of new 
<../cathen/04332a.htm>contractual associations, 
such as insurance companies, which give a 
reasonable hope of gain without risk. The action 
of the <../cathen/03744a.htm>Church has found 
distinguished defenders, even outside her own 
pale, among the representatives of contemporary 
<../cathen/12213b.htm>economic 
<../cathen/13598b.htm>science. We may mention 
three English authors: Marshall, professor of 
political economy at the 
<../cathen/03211a.htm>University of Cambridge 
(Principles of Economics, I, I, ii, secs. 8 
etc.); Ashley, professor at the new 
<../cathen/15188a.htm>University of Birmingham 
(An Introduction to English Economic History and 
Theory, I, I, i, sec. 17); and the celebrated 
historian of political economy, Professor 
Cunningham (Growth of English Industry and 
Commerce, I, II, vi, sec. 85, third edition). 
Even at the present day, a small number of French 
catholics (Abbé Morel, "Du prêt à intéret"; 
Modeste, "Le prêt à intérêt, dernière forme de 
l'esclavage") see in the attitude of the 
<../cathen/03744a.htm>Church only a tolerance 
justified by the fear of greater evils. This is 
not so. The change in the attitude of the 
<../cathen/03744a.htm>Church is due entirely to a 
change in <../cathen/12213b.htm>economic matters 
that require the present system. The 
<../cathen/07424b.htm>Holy See itself puts its 
funds out at interest, and requires 
<../cathen/03744a.htm>ecclesiastical 
administrators to do the same. One writer, Father 
Belliot of the <../cathen/06280b.htm>friars 
minor, denounces in loans for interest "the 
principal economic scourge of civilization", 
though the accumulation of wealth in the hands of 
a few capitalists, which he deplores so much, 
does not arise so much from lending money at 
proper interest as from industrial investments, 
banking operations, and speculations, which have 
never been condemned as 
<../cathen/08010c.htm>unjust in principle. There 
has never been at any time any prohibition 
against the investment of capital in commercial 
or industrial undertakings or in the public funds.

Lending money at interest gives us the 
opportunity to exploit the passions or 
necessities of other men by compelling them to 
submit to ruinous conditions; men are robbed and 
left destitute under the pretext of charity. Such 
is the usury against which the 
<../cathen/06001a.htm>Fathers of the Church have 
always protested, and which is universally 
condemned at the present day. Dr. Funk defined it 
as the abuse of a certain superiority at the 
expense of another man's necessity; but in this 
description he points to the opportunity and the 
means which enable a man to commit the 
<../cathen/14004b.htm>sin of usury, rather than 
the formal malice of the 
<../cathen/14004b.htm>sin itself. It is in itself 
<../cathen/08010c.htm>unjust extortion, or 
<../cathen/14564b.htm>robbery. The 
<../cathen/14004b.htm>sin is frequently 
committed. In some countries are found the 
exaction of interest at 30, 50, 100 percent and 
more. The <../cathen/05649a.htm>evil is so great 
in <../cathen/07722a.htm>India that we might 
expect legal provisions to fight against such 
ruinous abuse. The exorbitant charges of 
pawnbrokers for money lent on pledge, and, in 
some instances, of <../cathen/11726a.htm>persons 
selling goods to be paid for by installments, are 
also instances of usury disguised under another 
name. As a remedy for the 
<../cathen/05649a.htm>evil, respectable 
associations for mutual lending have been 
instituted, such as the banks known by the name 
of their founder, Raiffeisen, and help has been 
sought from legislators; but there is no general 
agreement as to the form which legislation on this subject should take.


About this page

APA citation. Vermeersch, A. (1912). Usury. In 
The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert 
Appleton Company. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15235c.htm

MLA citation. Vermeersch, Arthur. "Usury." The 
Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 15. New York: Robert 
Appleton Company, 1912. <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15235c.htm>.

Transcription. This article was transcribed for New Advent by Brendan Byrne.

Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil Obstat. October 
1, 1912. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. 
+John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.

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