After the reign
of Solomon, the twelve tribes divided into two kingdoms: Israel in the
north and Judah the south. Then Assyria came and conquered the northern
kingdom and scattered its ten tribes to the winds.
Among
those carried off into exile were Tobit, his wife Hannah, and their
only son Tobias. They came to the city of Nineveh and settled there
among their exiled countrymen. Although he was now living among strangers
with foreign ways, Tobit did not forsake the God of Israel or the Torah,
but continued to live righteously. He gave generously to the poor, acted
justly, and did not bow down to foreign gods. And whenever he saw the
abandoned corpse of a Jew lying in the street, he himself would bury
it.
Once Tobit traveled to the city of Ragae in Persia, now called Teheran,
where he meet a poor merchant. He lent the men a considerable sum of
money, and the man promised to repay him some day.
Then the king of Assyria died, and his son Sennaherib came to the throne.
Sennaherib hated the Jews, for they had shamefully defeated him in Jerusalem,
and he ordered many Jews executed. Against the king's orders, Tobit
buried the bodies. Then Sennaherib ordered Tobit killed and his property
confiscated. Tobit fled from the king's wrath and hid himself among
his kinsmen.
But a new misfortune soon struck Tobit. One day as he gazed into the
sky, a bird's droppings fell into his eyes, and he became blind. Always
a faithful man, he did not curse God but instead prayed for his own
death.
At the same time, in the distant city of Ecbatana in Persia, a young
kinswoman of Tobit's named Sara was also praying for death. For she
had married seven husbands, one after the other, and all seven had died
on their wedding night at the hands of Asmodeus, King of the Demons.
So she too longed to die to escape her shame.
Now that he could no loner support himself because he was blind, Tobit
decided to send his son Tobias to Ragae to reclaim the loan he had made
long ago. He instructed Tobias to find a trustworthy guide to accompany
him. Tobias went to the marketplace and hired a man named Azariah, who
was really the angel Raphael in disguise.
When the two reached the Tigris River, Tobias stopped to wash. As he
knelt on the bank, a great fish suddenly leapt out of the water and
frightened him. Raphael told Tobias to seize the fish by the fins, kills
it, and take out its heart, liver and gallbladder. He revealed to Tobias
that burning the heart and liver would drive away evil spirits and that
the gallbladder could cure blindness. So Tobias salted the organs and
wrapped them safely for the journey.
Next they journeyed to Ecbatana, where Tobias' kinsmen lived. Along
the way, Raphael urged Tobias to marry Sarah, since he was her only
eligible kinsman. Tobias, however, feared that he would meet the same
fate as all her other husbands. But his companion assured him that the
fish's heart and liver would protect him. So reluctantly, he agreed
to do what his companion suggested.
That night after the wedding ceremony, Sarah's father dug a new grave
beside the seven other graves behind their house, certain that he would
be laying the body of his daughter's latest bridegroom there the next
morning. Then he and his wife went to bed with heavy hearts.
When the newly married couple went into their bedroom that night, Tobias
unwrapped the fish's heart and liver and laid the upon the hot coals
in the fireplace. Then Asmodeus appeared, his great wings stirring up
a whirlwind in the room and his hairy body reeking of the grave. But
when Tobias fanned the bitter smoke toward him, he fled shrieking from
the room.
The next morning the couple emerged whole and smiling from their room.
When Sarah's parents saw them, they rejoiced and feasted with them for
the next fourteen days. During this time, Raphael traveled to Ragae
and returned with the sum of money owed to Tobit. Then Sarah's father
gave the newlyweds half of his property and promised them the other
half upon his death. Then they started home for Nineveh.
As
they approached Tobit's house, Tobias saw his blind old father stumbling
toward them in the road. Tobias ran forward and anointed his father's
eyes with the fish's gall, and Tobit regained his sight. He embraced
his son and his new bride and welcomed them joyously into his home.
When Tobias told his father how Azariah had helped him on his journey
and had cured Tobit's blindness, Tobit sent for the guide to reward
him. But when he stood before him, Raphael revealed to them who he really
was and then suddenly vanished from sight.
Tobit lived to a very old age, performing many deeds of charity and
goodness. Before he died, he warned Tobias and Sarah that Nineveh would
one day be destroyed, as Jonah had prophesied. And when Tobit died,
they moved to Ecbatana with their children and inherited Sarah's parents'
estate.
In their old age, Sarah and Tobias received word that mighty Nineveh
had fallen. And they were very pleased indeed.
About
the Book of Tobit
The Book of Tobit is an apocryphal book (not included in the Hebrew
Bible) of unknown authorship, from approximately the third century BCE.
It was probably written in Aramaic but is extant in its entirety only
in Greek translation (the Septuagint) and in later translations based
upon the Greek. (English translation may be found in standard versions
of the Apocrypha.)
The narrative is set in the ancient Assyrian capital of Nineveh, after
the defeat of the kingdom of Israel
by Assyria in 722 BCE, but before the destruction of Nineveh in 612
BCE. Most modern scholars agree that Tobit reflects little genuine history.
The story may reflect, however, two popular "precepts" known
from both the apocryphal and early talmudic literature: 1. one is in duty bound (even if he be a Nazarite or high priest)
to bury a corpse found at random (met mizvah
"the burial of the dead that is a precept"); 2. the special merit in marrying a kinswoman (there are many
stories in the Talmud of scholars who did so).
At the end of the Book of Tobit, Tobit foretells to his son Tobias the
restoration of Jerusalem, the ingathering of the exiles, and the coming
of the gentiles.
From
the Book of Tobit (Apocrypha). English language sources:
Micha Bin Gorion, Mimekor Yisrael: Classical Jewish Folktales,
Indian Univ. Press (pp. 179-187); Judah Nadich, Jewish Legends
of the Second Commonwealth, JPS (pp. 87-90). Retold in The
Classic Tales: 4,000 Years of Jewish Lore, Ed. Ellen Frankel,
Jason Aronson Inc., 1989.