4, 5. before this--The practice of these mixed marriages, in open
neglect or violation of the law, had become so common, that even the
pontifical house, which ought to have set a better example, was
polluted by such an impure mixture.
Eliashib the priest . . . was allied unto Tobiah--This person was the
high priest
(Ne 13:28;
also
Ne 3:1),
who, by virtue of his dignified office, had the superintendence and
control of the apartments attached to the temple. The laxity of his
principles, as well as of his practice, is sufficiently apparent from
his contracting a family connection with so notorious an enemy of
Israel as Tobiah. But his obsequious attentions had carried him much
farther; for to accommodate so important a person as Tobiah on his
occasional visits to Jerusalem, Eliashib had provided him a splendid
apartment in the temple. The introduction of so gross an impropriety
can be accounted for in no other way than by supposing that in the
absence of the priests and the cessation of the services, the temple
was regarded as a common public building, which might, in the
circumstances, be appropriated as a palatial residence.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible