Tobit tells the story of a righteous Israelite living in exile who remains faithful to God despite suffering and blindness. Parallel to his trials, the young Tobias journeys to recover a family debt, guided by the archangel Raphael in disguise. Their intertwined stories culminate in healing, marriage, and restored sight. In Catholic interpretation, Tobit embodies divine providence in everyday life—showing how faith, charity, and prayer invite angelic assistance and bring hidden grace to completion.
| Testament | Old Testament | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Section | 2. Historical Books | ||
| Category | Field | Explanation | Tobit |
| Canonical Identity | Name | Official title of the book | Tobit |
| Testament | Old or New Testament | Old Testament | |
| Canonical Group | Section of Scripture | Deuterocanonical Historical Books | |
| Order in Canon | Position in Catholic sequence | 17 | |
| Authorship and Origin | Attributed Author | Traditional writer | Anonymous; possibly a northern Israelite during the diaspora |
| Approximate Date | Estimated time of composition | c. 300–200 BC | |
| Original Language | Primary written form | Aramaic (with Hebrew and Greek versions) | |
| Provenance | Cultural or geographic origin | Northern Israelite exile community, likely in Nineveh or Media | |
| Historical Context | Period Represented | Dates of events described | c. 722–700 BC |
| Dominant Powers | Civilizations or empires active | Assyrian Empire | |
| Social / Religious Setting | Cultural background | Life of Israelites exiled in Assyria; emphasis on fidelity to the Law amid diaspora life | |
| External Influences | Neighboring cultural echoes | Assyrian social customs and Persian folklore motifs | |
| Structure and Content | Chapters | Total number of canonical chapters | 14 |
| Genre | Literary type | Didactic religious narrative with wisdom and folklore elements | |
| Major Sections | Core divisions or movements | 1. Tobit’s Piety and Trial (1–3) 2. Tobias’s Journey and Marriage (4–12) 3. Thanksgiving and Death of Tobit (13–14) | |
| Key Figures | Central characters | Tobit, Tobias, Sarah, Raphael, Raguel | |
| Setting | Main geographic focus | Nineveh, Ecbatana, Media |
Tobit ends with thanksgiving and peace: Tobit’s sight is restored, Tobias begins a new family, and both generations bless the Lord who delivers His people. The book closes in joy and wisdom, affirming that fidelity is never forgotten by God. For Catholics, Tobit serves as a devotional model of family piety, almsgiving, and trust in providence. It reveals that holiness flourishes even in exile and that divine help, often unseen, guides the faithful toward healing and fulfillment.
The Book of Tobit is a wisdom narrative set among the Jewish exiles in Nineveh during the Assyrian captivity. In the NABRE (New American Bible, Revised Edition), Tobit is viewed as a devotional story emphasizing piety, charity, and divine providence. Though written centuries after the events it describes, the book presents a timeless lesson: those who act with faith and righteousness will see God’s deliverance, even in exile. Two families—Tobit’s in Nineveh and Sarah’s in Ecbatana—suffer loss and despair. Through the angel Raphael, God intertwines their stories in healing, marriage, and restored sight. Tobit blends humor, domestic life, and moral instruction into a single theology of everyday holiness.
| Section Name | Chapters | Summary | Key Figures | Notes (NABRE Style) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tobit’s Piety and Trials | 1–3 | Tobit remains faithful in exile, performing works of mercy but is blinded after burying the dead. Sarah, in distant Ecbatana, suffers the deaths of seven husbands by a demon. Both pray to God for deliverance. | Tobit, Anna, Sarah, Raphael (unnamed at first) | NABRE highlights faithful perseverance—suffering becomes the setting where divine help enters human life. |
| The Journey of Tobiah and the Angel | 4–6 | Tobit sends his son Tobiah to recover family funds in Media. The angel Raphael, disguised as a guide, accompanies him. Tobiah meets Sarah and is instructed how to drive away the demon. | Tobiah, Raphael, Sarah | NABRE reads the journey as a moral pilgrimage—trust, obedience, and divine companionship transform adversity into blessing. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | 7–14 | Tobiah marries Sarah; Raphael reveals his identity; Tobit’s sight is restored. The book ends in joy, prayer, and exhortation to righteousness and almsgiving. | Tobiah, Sarah, Raphael, Tobit | NABRE emphasizes divine providence and mercy—faithfulness brings healing and fulfillment; God’s care governs every human moment. |
The Book of Tobit ends with thanksgiving and praise. In NABRE interpretation, the story shows that God’s guidance is constant, even in exile or suffering. Faith, prayer, and acts of charity open the way to divine blessing. Tobit’s restoration mirrors Israel’s own hope of renewal: those who keep the law and show mercy will see God’s light. The angel Raphael’s revelation—“I was sent to test and heal you”—captures the book’s heart: life’s trials are God’s instruments of grace.
The Book of Tobit blends wisdom, devotion, and narrative, showing divine care within everyday trials. Set among the exiles of Assyria, it follows the parallel struggles of Tobit, a righteous Israelite who loses his sight while remaining steadfast in faith, and Sarah, a young woman plagued by a demon that kills her husbands. God answers their prayers through the archangel Raphael, who guides Tobit’s son Tobiah on a journey that brings healing, marriage, and restoration. Through faith, prayer, and almsgiving, Tobit reveals that divine providence governs all human circumstances.
| Section | Chapter | Title / Focus | Summary | Key Figures | Notes (NABRE Style) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tobit’s Piety and Trials | Tobit 1 | Tobit’s Faithful Life in Exile | Tobit serves the king of Assyria, remains devout, and buries the dead despite danger. | Tobit | NABRE emphasizes steadfast righteousness amid exile. |
| Tobit’s Piety and Trials | Tobit 2 | Tobit’s Blindness | Tobit performs works of mercy and becomes blind from bird droppings; his wife supports the family. | Tobit, Anna | NABRE shows virtue tested through suffering and humility. |
| Tobit’s Piety and Trials | Tobit 3 | Prayers of Tobit and Sarah | Tobit and Sarah, both in despair, pray for death; God sends Raphael to heal them. | Tobit, Sarah, Raphael | NABRE links prayer and divine mercy as instruments of deliverance. |
| The Journey of Tobiah and the Angel | Tobit 4 | Tobit’s Instructions | Tobit advises Tobiah to honor God, practice almsgiving, and marry within the family. | Tobit, Tobiah | NABRE stresses wisdom and virtue as guiding inheritance. |
| The Journey of Tobiah and the Angel | Tobit 5 | Raphael Joins Tobiah | The angel Raphael, in human form, accompanies Tobiah on his journey to Media. | Tobiah, Raphael | NABRE views divine guidance as companionship in disguise. |
| The Journey of Tobiah and the Angel | Tobit 6 | Tobiah Meets Sarah | Raphael instructs Tobiah how to use a fish’s organs to drive away a demon afflicting Sarah. | Tobiah, Raphael, Sarah | NABRE interprets faith and obedience as tools of healing. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | Tobit 7 | Tobiah and Sarah’s Marriage | Tobiah marries Sarah; Raphael drives away the demon; they pray for God’s mercy. | Tobiah, Sarah, Raphael | NABRE highlights purity and prayer at the center of covenant marriage. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | Tobit 8 | The Demon Defeated | Raphael binds the demon in Upper Egypt; Tobiah and Sarah return unharmed. | Tobiah, Raphael, Sarah | NABRE affirms triumph of faith and angelic protection. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | Tobit 9 | Recovery of Tobit’s Funds | Raphael retrieves the family’s money from Gabael and rejoins Tobiah and Sarah. | Raphael, Gabael, Tobiah | NABRE notes divine provision fulfilling both material and spiritual needs. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | Tobit 10 | Tobiah’s Return | Tobiah and Sarah return to Tobit; Anna sees them from afar and rejoices. | Tobiah, Sarah, Anna | NABRE sees reunion as symbol of restored joy and divine promise fulfilled. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | Tobit 11 | Tobit’s Anxiety | Tobit and Anna wait anxiously for Tobiah’s return, fearing for his safety. | Tobit, Anna | NABRE portrays faith tested through waiting and uncertainty. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | Tobit 12 | Raphael’s Revelation | Raphael reveals his angelic identity, blesses God, and returns to heaven. | Raphael, Tobit, Tobiah | NABRE highlights divine presence hidden in human form and revealed through thanksgiving. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | Tobit 13 | Tobit’s Hymn of Praise | Tobit offers a hymn glorifying God for His justice and mercy toward Israel and the nations. | Tobit | NABRE emphasizes gratitude and proclamation of faith after deliverance. |
| Healing, Marriage, and Restoration | Tobit 14 | Final Counsel and Death | Tobit counsels Tobiah to leave Nineveh; Tobit dies; Tobiah later buries him and lives faithfully. | Tobit, Tobiah | NABRE closes with the triumph of faith and righteousness enduring through generations. |
Tobit concludes as a tale of faith rewarded. The book closes with healing, joy, and gratitude as Tobit regains his sight, Tobiah’s marriage is blessed, and Raphael discloses God’s hidden guidance. Its moral thread—righteousness expressed through mercy, prayer, and fidelity—embodies the wisdom of living in covenant even in exile. NABRE interprets Tobit as a meditation on divine mercy: suffering and faith are never opposed but intertwined, revealing a God who restores both body and soul through steadfast trust.