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Tobit’s Prayer for Death

“You are righteous, Lord,
    and all your deeds are just;
All your ways are mercy and fidelity;
    you are judge of the world.(A)
And now, Lord, be mindful of me
    and look with favor upon me.
Do not punish me for my sins,
    or for my inadvertent offenses,
    or for those of my ancestors.(B)

“They sinned against you,
    and disobeyed your commandments.
So you handed us over to plunder, captivity, and death,
    to become an object lesson, a byword, and a reproach
    in all the nations among whom you scattered us.(C)

“Yes, your many judgments are right
    in dealing with me as my sins,
    and those of my ancestors, deserve.
For we have neither kept your commandments,
    nor walked in fidelity before you.

“So now, deal with me as you please;
    command my life breath to be taken from me,
    that I may depart from the face of the earth and become dust.
It is better for me to die than to live,[a]
    because I have listened to undeserved reproaches,
    and great is the grief within me.(D)

“Lord, command that I be released from such anguish;
    let me go to my everlasting abode;
    Do not turn your face away from me, Lord.
For it is better for me to die
    than to endure so much misery in life,
    and to listen to such reproaches!”

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Footnotes

  1. 3:6 It is better for me to die than to live: in his distress Tobit uses the words of the petulant Jonah (Jon 4:3, 8), who wished to die because God did not destroy the hated Ninevites. In similar circumstances, Moses (Nm 11:15), Elijah (1 Kgs 19:4), and Job (Jb 7:15) also prayed for death. Everlasting abode: a reference to Sheol, the dismal abode of the dead from which no one returns (Jb 7:9–10; 14:12; Is 26:14). See note on Tb 4:6.