PART I.ANGLO-ISRAELISM EXAMINED.
PART II.THE TRUE HISTORY OF THE TEN "LOST" TRIBES.
PART III.NOTES AND EXPLANATIONS.
APPENDIX.
PREFACE
A
few words of explanation are needed by way of preface to this
little
book. More than twenty years ago, being often appealed to by
friends
for my judgment on Anglo-Israelism, or to answer questions which
were
addressed to me on this subject, I finally, after making myself
acquainted with the positions and arguments by which the theory is
supported, drew up a statement in the form of "A Letter to an
Inquirer." This "Letter," somewhat amplified, was
printed in the form of an appendix in my book, "The Ancient
Scriptures and the Modern Jew," whence by special request it was
subsequently reprinted in pamphlet form under the title,
"Anglo-Israelism, and the True History of the Ten Lost Tribes"—a
separate edition of it having also been published in America. This
pamphlet is now out of print, and, being appealed to by prominent
Christian friends to bring out a new edition, I felt constrained
before doing so to re-examine the whole question anew, and more
thoroughly than before. To this end I have read through, with much
inward pain I must confess, a number of the more recent Anglo-(or
"British")-Israel publications, which for the most part are
mere repetitions of one another. The result is the treatise now in
the reader's hands, which will be found to consist of three
Parts.In
Part I. I have dealt with Anglo-Israel assertions and claims, and
the
arguments by which they are supported; in Part II., which is
constructive in its character, and in which the greater part of my
original "Letter to an Inquirer" will be found embodied, I
have tried briefly to trace the true history of the supposed Lost
Tribes; and in Part III., which is altogether new, I have further
analysed some of the scriptural "proofs" of a separate fate
and destiny of the Ten Tribes from that of "Judah," and
have added notes and explanations on some of the more plausible
points brought up by all Anglo-Israelite writers.The
epistolary form, which is retained in Parts I. and II., is
accounted
for by the relation of this new booklet to the original "Letter
to an Inquirer," which is embodied in it.Let
me ask the reader's Christian forbearance for any expressions in
this
little work which may be regarded as too severe. I would only say
that if the unbiassed reader had had to wade through the amount of
Anglo-Israel literature, with all its fearful perversions of
Scripture and history, which the writer has had to do in the course
of the preparation of this little work, he would most probably have
felt as he did—the difficulty of putting a restraint upon his
spirit so as not to use much stronger language. Toward the persons
of
the propagandists of this theory I have, I trust, no other feelings
than those of Christian charity; but the theory itself I cannot
help
regarding, after a close study of its principles, as subversive of
the truth, and as one of the dangerous delusions of these latter
days.After
this little book was finished, an honoured friend in Brighton sent
me
the article by the late Dr. Horatius Bonar, which appeared
in
The Sunday at Home
in 1880. I add it, with the permission of the proprietors of that
magazine, as an appendix in the assurance that the testimony on the
subject of so honoured and eminent a servant of God will be
welcomed
and carry weight with many.
PART I.ANGLO-ISRAELISM EXAMINED.
ANGLO-ISRAEL
ASSERTIONS AND CLAIMS.
DEAR
FRIEND,—I shall endeavour to comply with your request, and to give
you in this Letter a few reasons for my rejection of the
Anglo-Israelite theory. I can sincerely say that I am not a man
delighting in controversy, and I only consent to your wish because
I
believe that you, like many other simple-minded Christians, are
perplexed and imposed upon by the plausibilities of the supposed
"Identifications," and are not able to detect the fallacies
and perversions of Scripture and history upon which they are
based.The
theory is that the English, or British, are the descendants of the
"lost" Israelites, who were carried captives by the
Assyrians, under Sargon, who, it is presumed, are identical with
the
Saxae or Scythians, who appear as a conquering host there about the
same time. Or, to quote a succinct summary of Anglo-Israel
assertions
from a standard work:—"The
supposed historical connection of the ancestors of the English with
the Lost Ten Tribes is deduced as follows: The Ten Tribes were
transferred to Assyria about 720 B.C.; and simultaneously,
according
to Herodotus, the Scythians, including the tribe of the Saccae (or
Saxae), appeared in the same district. The progenitors of the
Saxons
afterward passed over into Denmark—the 'mark' or country of the
tribe of Dan—and thence to England. Another branch of the tribe of
Dan, which remained 'in ships' (Judges v. 17), made its appearance
in
Ireland under the title of 'Tuatha-da-Danan.' Tephi, a descendant
of
the royal house of David, arrived in Ireland, according to the
native
legends, in 580 B.C. From her was descended Feargus More, King of
Argyll, an ancestor of Queen Victoria, who thus fulfilled the
prophecy that 'the line of David shall rule for ever and ever' (2
Chron. xiii. 5, xxi. 7). The Irish branch of the Danites brought
with
them Jacob's stone, which has always been used as the
Coronation-stone of the kings of Scotland and England, and is now
preserved in Westminster Abbey. Somewhat inconsistently, the
prophecy
that the Canaanites should trouble Israel (Numbers xxxiii. 55;
Josh.
xxiii. 13) is applied to the Irish. 'The land of Arzareth,' to
which
the Israelites were transplanted (2 Esd. xiii. 45), is identified
with Ireland by dividing the former name into two parts—the former
of which is
erez,
or 'land'; the later,
Ar,
or 'Ire.'"[1]As
to the Jews, quite a different history and destiny is marked out
for
them. They, as the descendants of Judah, are still under the curse.
In fact, the Anglo-Israelite, by another and more mischievous
method,
is doing exactly what the allegorising, or so-called
spiritualising,
school of interpreters did. The method was to apply all the
promises
in the Bible to the "spiritual" Israel, or the Church, and
all the curses to the literal Israel, or the Jews; but by this new
system, while the curses are still left to the Jew, all the
blessings
are applied not even to those "in Christ," but
indiscriminately to a nation, which,
as a nation,
is like the other nations of Christendom in a greater or lesser
degree in a state of apostasy from God, though I thankfully
recognise
the fact that there are in proportion more of God's true people in
it
than in any other professing Christian land.I
shall endeavour later on to show you the baselessness of the
distinction which Anglo-Israelism makes between the ultimate fates
of
Israel and Judah, but let me first say that the supposed historical
and philological "proofs" by which the theory is supported,
most of which have no more basis in fact than fairy tales, are
utterly discredited by competent authorities."Philology
of a somewhat primitive kind," writes a prominent and learned
Jew, "is also brought in to support the theory; the many
Biblical and quasi-Jewish names borne by Englishmen are held to
prove
their Israelitish origin. An attempt has been made to derive the
English language itself from Hebrew. Thus, 'bairn' is derived
from
bar
('son'); 'berry' from
peri
('fruit'); 'garden' from
gedar;
'kid' from
gedi;
'scale' from
shekel;
and 'kitten' from
quiton
(katon
ish
('man'); 'Spanish' means 'Spain-man'; while 'British' is identified
with
Berit-ish
('man of the covenant'). Perhaps the most curious of these
philological identifications is that of 'jig' with chag (hag"Altogether,
by the application of wild guess-work about historical origins and
philological analogies, and by a slavishly literal interpretation
(or
misapplication) of selected phrases of prophecy, a case is made out
for the identification of the British race with the Lost Ten Tribes
of Israel sufficient to satisfy uncritical persons desirous of
finding their pride of race confirmed by Holy Scripture. The whole
theory rests upon an identification of the word 'isles' in the
English version of the Bible unjustified by modern philology, which
identifies the original word with 'coasts' or 'distant lands,'
without any implication of their being surrounded by the sea.
Modern
ethnography does not confirm in any way the identification of the
Irish with a Semitic people; while the English can be traced back
to
the Scandinavians, of whom there is no trace in Mesopotamia at any
period of history. The whole movement is chiefly interesting as
a
reductio ad absurdum
of too literal an interpretation (or misapplication) of the
prophecies."[2]To
this let me add the verdict of a prominent Christian scholar.
Commenting on Edward Hine's "Identifications of the British
Nation with Lost Israel," Professor Rawlinson wrote that: "The
pamphlet is not calculated to produce the slightest effect on the
opinion of those competent to form one. Such effect as it may have
can only be on the ignorant and unlearned—on those who are unaware
of the absolute and entire diversity in language, physical type,
religious opinions, and manners and customs, between the Israelites
and the various races from whom the English nation can be shown
historically to be descended."The
fact of the matter is that the so-called historical proofs, by
which
the theory is supported, are derived from heathen myths and
fables,[3]
and the philology which traces "British" to "Berith-ish,"
and "Saxon" to "Isaac's-son," etc., deserves no
other characterisation than
child-ish.It
is in a misunderstanding of Scripture, and especially of prophetic
Scripture, to which the origin of Anglo-Israelism can be traced.
Coming across some of the great and precious promises in the Bible
in
reference to Israel, for instance, such as that they should be a
great and mighty nation, and rule over those who previously had
been
their enemies and oppressors, and overlooking the fact that these
prophecies and promises
refer to a future time,
when Israel as a nation shall be restored and converted, and under
the personal rule of their Messiah become great and mighty for God
on
the earth, evidence of their fulfilment has been sought
in the present.
Now certainly these prophecies of might and prosperity are not now
being fulfilled in the "Jews"—on the other hand, see how
great and influential the British nation is in the world—ergo,
the British must be the "lost" Israel of the "Ten
Tribes"! The "history" and philology is, so to say, an
after-thought of Anglo-Israelism, by which an effort is made to
support the false postulate with which it starts. The Scriptural
"Identifications" with which Anglo-Israel literature abound
turn out on examination to be perversions and misapplications of
isolated texts taken from the English versions of the Bible without
any regard for true principles of exegesis.THE
WAY ANGLO-ISRAEL WRITERS INTERPRET SCRIPTURE.
Some
of their interpretations can only be characterised as bordering on
blasphemy. Let me quote a few examples:—I.
The glorious Messianic prophecy of the stone cut without hands
which
smote the image of Nebuchadnezzar (Daniel ii.) is applied to the
British people; and the British Empire, which is one of the Gentile
world-kingdoms, is made to be identical with the Kingdom of
God."We
will see what is to be the future of the British Empire, or, in
other
words, the stone that smote the image. It is to become a great
mountain and fill the whole earth. Our Colonial Empire, then, will
continue to grow till it covers the whole world. We have tried to
avoid extending our Empire many and many a time, and yet God has
caused it to grow larger and larger, and I believe will still do
so.
We are already by far the greatest Empire there is, or ever has
been,
and we shall yet be far greater."The
British Empire, again, can never be conquered. Daniel says, 'The
God
of Heaven shall set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed: it
shall stand for ever.' Consequently, we shall never be conquered;
we
must continue till the end of time—so that we are to continue to
exist as the last kingdom or empire this world is to see."[4]II.
Messiah's Throne of Righteousness and Peace is made out to be
identical with the throne of England, and the English people are
"the
saints of the Most High," to whom all the kingdoms of the world
shall be given."If
the Saxons be the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel ... then the English
throne is a continuation of David's throne, and the seed on it must
be the seed of David,[5]
and the inference is clear—namely, that all the blessings attaching
by holy promise to David's throne must belong to England.... To
this
end God is overturning, and will overturn, until the whole world
shall be federated around one throne, and that David's throne
(which,
according to the writer, is identical with the throne of
England)—the
only throne God ever directly established, and the only one He has
promised perpetuity to.... This kingdom is the fifth kingdom to be
set up in the latter days of those kings, says Daniel. The kingdom
was never to be left to other people.... To her (that is, to
England)
was promised the isles of the sea, the coasts of the earth, the
waste
and desolate places—the heathen and the uttermost parts of the
earth as a possession. Already, out of the 51,000,000 square miles
which compose the earth, England, including the United States
(Manasseh), now owns about 14,000,000, say, one-fourth. She bears
rule over one-third of the people of the earth; she adds a colony
every four years, on an average. At the present rate it will not be
long before the kingdoms of this world will be given to the saints
of
the Most High [that is, according to the writer, the English
people].
It is no marvel in the light of and instruction of prophecy that
this
throne and people should be so stable and prosperous."[6]III.
The smoke which ascends from the "blazing furnaces and steam
engines" of London is identified with the Shechinah Glory, the
visible symbol of God's presence with His people.