Tobiah in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
TOBIAH or TOBIJAH ("goodness of Jehovah".)
1. A Levite employed by Jehoshaphat to teach the law
in the cities of Judah (2 Chronicles 17:8).
2. "The slave, the Ammonite." With Sanballat and
Geshem tried by fair means and foul to thwart Nehemiah
(Nehemiah 2:10; Nehemiah 2:19; Nehemiah 6:17-18; Nehemiah
13:1-8). He had the greater power of mischief, being married
into a Jewish family (the daughter of Shechaniah), and
having his son Johanan married to the daughter of Meshullam,
thus he had a Jewish party on his side. As Sanballat
represented Moab's hereditary grudge against Israel, so
Tobiah represented Ammon's. Eliashib was allied to Tobiah;
possibly Sanballat, Eliashib's son in law, was related to
Tobiah, and so Tobiah was connected with Eliashib (Nehemiah
13:4). Hence, it was deemed necessary to read before the
people the law that "the Ammonite and the Moabite should not
come into the congregation of God forever" (Nehemiah 13:1).
Tobiah was notorious for contemptuous sarcasm (Nehemiah 4:3-
5), "even that which they build, if a fox go up, he shall
even break down their stone wall."
Nehemiah winced under his scorn and appealed to God
for vindication: "hear, O God, for we are despised, and turn
their reproach upon their own head." The psalmist of Psalm
123 (possibly Nehemiah) speaks in the person of Israel
similarly of Moab's, Ammon's, and Samaria's contempt:
"behold as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their
masters (glancing in contrast at 'Tobiah the servant' or
slave) so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God ... Have mercy
upon us, for we are exceedingly filled with contempt; our
soul is exceedingly filled with the scorning of those that
are at ease, and with the contempt of the proud." An
undesigned coincidence between the psalm and the history.
So also Psalm 79:4; Psalm 79:12, written at the same
date (see Psalm 79:1) when the "holy temple" lay "defiled":
"we are become a reproach to our neighbours, a scorn and
derision to them that are round about us ... Render unto our
neighbours sevenfold into their bosom their reproach
wherewith they have reproached Thee." Tobiah corresponded
with the nobles of Judah of his party, many of whom were
"sworn to him" because of affinity. These reported his good
deeds before Nehemiah to win him over, and then reported
Nehemiah's words to Tobiah, and wrote intimidating letters
to Nehemiah (Nehemiah 6:17-19). His crowning impudence was
residing in a chamber of the temple, of which the proper use
was to be a store for the vessels, the tithes, and offerings
for the Levites, priests, etc., Eliashib having dared, in
defiance of the law, to prepare it for him. Nehemiah was
sorely grieved, and cast all Tobiah's stuff out, and
commanded the cleansing of the chambers (Nehemiah 13:1-9).
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