8Nevertheless, be patient with a man in humble circumstances, 
and do not make him wait for your alms.
 9Help a poor man for the commandment's sake, 
and because of his need do not send him away empty.
 10Lose your silver for the sake of a brother or a friend, 
and do not let it rust under a stone and be lost.
 11Lay up your treasure according to the commandments of the Most High, 
and it will profit you more than gold.
 12Store up almsgiving in your treasury, 
and it will rescue you from all affliction;
 13more than a mighty shield and more than a heavy spear, 
it will fight on your behalf against your enemy.
 
14A good man will be surety for his neighbour, 
but a man who has lost his sense of shame will fail him.
 15Do not forget all the kindness of your surety, 
for he has given his life for you.
 16A sinner will overthrow the prosperity of his surety,
 17and one who does not feel grateful will abandon his rescuer.
 18Being surety has ruined many men who were prosperous, 
and has shaken them like a wave of the sea; 
it has driven men of power into exile, 
and they have wandered among foreign nations.
 19The sinner who has fallen into suretyship 
and pursues gain will fall into lawsuits.
 20Assist your neighbour according to your ability, 
but take heed to yourself lest you fall.
 
21The essentials for life are water and bread 
and clothing and a house to cover one's nakedness.
 22Better is the life of a poor man under the shelter of his roof 
than sumptuous food in another man's house.
 23Be content with little or much.
 24It is a miserable life to go from house to house, 
and where you are a stranger you may not open your mouth;
 25you will play the host and provide drink without being thanked, 
and besides this you will hear bitter words:
 26"Come here, stranger, prepare the table, 
and if you have anything at hand, let me have it to eat."
 27"Give place, stranger, to an honoured person; 
my brother has come to stay with me; 
I need my house."
 28These things are hard to bear for a man who has feeling: 
scolding about lodging and the reproach of the moneylender. 
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