Tobiah in Wikipedia
Tobiah was an Ammonite official[1] (possibly a governor of
Ammon) who incited the Ammonites to hinder Ezra and
Nehemiah's efforts to rebuild Jerusalem.[2][3] He, along
with Sanballat and Geshem the Arab, resorted to a stratagem,
and, pretending to wish a conference with Nehemiah, invited
him to meet them at Ono, Benjamin. Four times they made the
request, and every time Nehemiah refused to come. Their
object was to frighten him from completing the restoration
of Jerusalem's walls and to do him some kind of harm.[4]
Tobiah also had married a daughter of Shecaniah, a Judahite
leader,[5] and had given his son, Jehohanan, in marriage to
the daughter of Meshullam, another Judahite leader,[6] for
ostensibly political purposes. Because of this, he somehow
gained enough of a Judahite coalition to use the Judahites
themselves to send letters to Nehemiah, telling him of
Tobiah's "good deeds" in an apparent attempt to weaken
Nehemiah's resolve to keep Tobiah out of the rebuilding
effort. Tobiah meanwhile sent intimidating letters directly
to Nehemiah.[7]
Additionally, Tobiah had established a close relationship
with Eliashib, the Israelite high priest, such that Eliashib
emptied a room of the temple filled with the Israelite's
grain offerings, incense, temple articles, and the tithes of
grain, new wine and oil meant for the work of the temple and
the temple workers themselves so that Tobiah could put his
own household goods in the newly constructed temple. Upon
hearing this, Nehemiah, who was then in Babylon serving
Artaxerxes II (as there was no work at the Temple during the
reigns of Darius the Great, Ahasuerus (probably Xerxes), or
Artaxerxes I,[8] ) requested permission to return to Judah.
After returning, he promptly threw all of Tobiah's
belongings out of the temple room, purified the room, and
put back all that had originally been there.[9]
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