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Deuteronomy 15

The Israelites are instructed to observe a year of remission every seven years, during which they are not to request the return of debts from their fellow countrymen, but may still collect from foreigners. They are also commanded to lend to the poor and needy among them, and to not harden their hearts or turn away from those in need. Additionally, Hebrew slaves are to be set free after six years of service, and are to be given provisions for their journey. The Israelites are also instructed to sanctify the firstborn of their herds and sheep to the Lord, and to eat them in the place the Lord chooses, but not to sacrifice any that are blemished or deformed.

1"In the seventh year, you shall perform a remission2which shall be celebrated according to this order. Anyone to whom anything is owed, by his friend or neighbor or brother, will not be able to request its return, because it is the year of remission of the Lord3From the sojourner and the new arrival, you may require its return. From your fellow countryman and neighbor, you will not have the power to request its return4And there shall not be anyone indigent or begging among you, so that the Lord your God may bless you in the land which he will deliver to you as a possession5But only if you heed the voice of the Lord your God, and keep to all that he has ordered, that which I am entrusting to you this day, will he bless you, just as he has promised6You shall lend money to many nations, and you yourselves shall borrow in return from no one. You shall rule over very many nations, and no one shall rule over you7If one of your brothers, who dwells within the gates of your city, in the land which the Lord your God will give to you, falls into poverty, you shall not harden your heart, nor tighten your hand8Instead, you shall open your hand to the poor, and you shall lend to him whatever you perceive him to need9Take care, lest perhaps an impious thought might creep within you, and you might say in your heart: ‘The seventh year of remission approaches.’ And so you might turn your eyes away from your poor brother, unwilling to lend to him what he has asked. If so, then he may cry out against you to the Lord, and it will be a sin for you10Instead, you shall give to him. Neither shall you do anything craftily while assisting him in his needs, so that the Lord your God may bless you, at all times and in all things to which you will put your hand11The poor will not be absent from the land of your habitation. For this reason, I instruct you to open your hand to your indigent and poor brother, who lives among you in the land12When your brother, a Hebrew man or a Hebrew woman, has been sold to you, and has served you for six years, in the seventh year you shall set him free13And when you grant his freedom, you shall by no means permit him to go away empty14Instead, you shall give to him, for his journey, from your flocks and threshing floor and winepress, with which the Lord your God has blessed you15Remember that you yourself also served in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your God set you free. And therefore, I now command this of you16But if he will say, ‘I am not willing to depart,’ because he loves you and your household, and because he feels that it would be good for him to stay with you17then you shall take an awl and pierce his ear, at the door of your house. And he shall serve you even forever. You shall also act similarly toward your woman servant18You should not avert your eyes from them when you set them free, because he has served you for six years, in a manner deserving of the pay of a hired hand. So may the Lord your God bless you in all the works that you do19Of the firstborn, those born from your herds and sheep, you shall sanctify to the Lord your God whatever is of the male sex. You shall not put the firstborn of the oxen to work, nor shall you shear the firstborn of the sheep20In the sight of the Lord your God, you shall eat these, each year, in the place which the Lord will choose, you and your household21But if it has a blemish, or is lame, or is blind, or if it is in any part deformed or debilitated, it shall not be immolated to the Lord your God22Instead, you shall eat it within the gates of your city. The clean as well as the unclean alike shall feed on these, such as the roe deer and the stag23This alone shall you observe: that you do not eat their blood, but pour it upon the ground like water.
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