PART THIRD
THE VEIL LIFTED FROM THE ABRAHAMIC NATIONS
"If I have told you of
earthly things, and ye believe not.
how shall ye believe if I tell you of heavenly
things" -- Jesus.
CHAPTER I
LOST ISRAEL AND THE FIRST OVERTURN LOCATED
The fact that a great nation, composed of ten tribes
of the posterity of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, is lost, or unidentified, among
the nations of the world is well known to enlightened students of the Old
Testament. This truth has been a source of such great mystery that it has both
puzzled the minds and engaged the interest of men to such an extent that many
of them who are the intellectual peers of the world have bent their best
energies to the work of hunting for this lost nation.
Thus, for many years, devout minds have been investigating
secular and sacred history, as well as sacred prophecy, which must have become,
or which must yet become, history. These men have carefully traced, not only
the perfectly connected outlines, but also the details of history. Hence they confidently assert there are no
missing links in the chain of racial and national events.
A large per cent of the men who have been thus
engaged are eminent in religious, historic and scientific research. Men who have called to their aid chronology,
astronomy, archeology, ethnology, pyramidology and philology. Indeed, they have
used any and every science that could throw any possible light upon this
subject; for they have been irrepressible in their search after facts, and are
men who purpose, for the truth's sake, that the Word of God shall be forced to
stand every test, be it ever so crucial, that its own internal matter demands.
It is the consensus of opinion among this class of
men, the number of whom is increasing daily, that the once-lost ten tribes of Israel
are found. Be they right or wrong, we are sure of this one thing -- namely,
that there is a race of people here amidst other races, who do not know their
ancestral origin, and who possess all the distinguishing marks whereby the
Scriptures declare the lost house of Joseph shall be found and recognized, not
only by themselves, but by the rest of the nations of the earth.
Still, be this as it may, there is nothing for us to
do now but to take up the thread of our story, which is a "scarlet" one and pertains to those members of the royal
family whom we left on the throne of Israel, and who were holding the sceptre
of David de facto, instead of the one
to whom it belongs de jure, and to
whom the Lord will give "it," and not the Sceptre which belongs to
some other royal family, race or kingdom.
While dealing with the breach which occurred in the
royal family -- which had been prophesied of, not only in the words which were
uttered by the midwife, but by the peculiar manner of the birth of the Judah
Tamar twins, which also had been used as a prophetic type or symbol -- we said
nothing about the three overturns which are a part of Ezekiel's prophecy
concerning some of the chief details of this same breach.
One reason for this omission was that we could not give
the proof concerning the location of that "goodly
land" to which the royal branches, i.e., Judah's prince and David's
princess, were carried, and in which they were "set," without making
many points in proof of the present whereabouts of the still preserved seed,
and the perpetuated Crown, Throne and Sceptre of David. For it was not our
desire to give any such proof until we should first prove that the building and
planting which Jeremiah's commission involved, had been accomplished, and that
the transfer of the crown had been made, that the high branch had been
dethroned, and that another branch -- one equally high by birth, but
"low," only in the sense of non-ruling, and because of the law of
primogeniture -- had been exalted by being enthroned.
Now, since we have shown that the Word of God
emphatically declares these things to have been accomplished, we are prepared
to show that the three prophetic overturns took place, and that they took place
in connection with these same royal ones, together with their succession, whom
we have followed to a new country.
It is not possible to follow the history of these
overturns, nor to follow further the history of that branch of the royal
family which came into power when the breach was made, and to do so independent
of lost Israel; for it was to Israel that Jeremiah fled with the "king's
daughters" -- the same people with whom the royal line of Zarah had been
for more than a century prior to the time when Jeremiah joined them, and since
that time. Nationally speaking, the fortunes and history of the Sceptre and
Birthright have become one.
We must remember that the place where this prince and
princess were planted was in the "Height of Israel"; that it was all
the trees in the field of Israel that were to know the low tree had been
exalted; that it was Israel, the dry tree, which is made to flourish, and that
has been dry hitherto for lack of royal honors and royal blood, but now that a
prince and princess of the blood are on the throne, the once dry tree doth flourish,
but the former green tree, the Jewish kingdom -- not the nation -- is dried
up.
We must remember that Israel is the ten-tribed
nation, the Birthright people, whose ancient capital was Samaria, whose
representative name is Ephraim, the second son of Joseph, to whom pertains the
birthright; and that his two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, were to "grow
into a multitude in the midst of the earth," that they were finally to
separate, Manasseh to become a great nation," and Ephraim to develop into
many nations, a multitude of nations, or a company of nations, as it is
variously given.
The first of these overturns is the one whose history
we have essentially given while dealing with the preservation of King
Zedekiah's daughters, and is the overturn of the kingdom from Palestine to that
goodly land, by the side of great waters, where it took root, grew, flourished
and became a spreading vine.
A ripple of holy joy went pulsing through our heart
when we found that the prophet had, in his riddle, used the expression, "spreading vine" in connection
with Israel. The Hebrew word, sawrakh
-- spreading, as here used, is defined in Strong's Exhaustive Concordance,
"to extend, to spread, to stretch exceedingly, to extend even to
excess." Thus this new country, this strange and unknown land, in which
the royal remnant found the cast-out people of Israel, is the place from which
it is declared that they shall spread out, that they shall exceedingly extend
their borders and so fulfill their
national destiny.
How perfectly this harmonizes with the promises
concerning the "place" which the Lord made to David in connection
with the promises concerning the perpetuity of his seed, throne and sceptre,
and which was given at the same time, as follows: "Moreover, I will
appoint a place for my people Israel, and will plant them, that they may dwell
in a place of their own, and move no more; neither shall the children of
wickedness afflict them any more, as beforetime."
At this juncture we feel impelled, for fear you will
not think it out for yourselves, to point out the fact that the Lord had cast
Israel out of her land, and cast her afar off; and while going to that far-off
land she was to be "sifted through the nations as corn is sifted in a
sieve; but after they have reached their far-off destination, their
God-appointed place, then they are to move no more. For it is in reference to
this same casting out of the Ephraimic nation that Hosea declares: "The
children of Israel shall abide many days without a king, and without a prince."
But now, with this prophetic riddle fulfilled, their king is with them, and the
monarchy of Israel is flourishing as a green, or living, tree.
Our next effort will be to find this far-off land,
whose history has been one of spreading out -- yea, spreading out exceedingly,
even excessively.
The very fact that the Jews have a record of the
birth, call and commission of Jeremiah, and the history of the execution of
the first part of his commission, i.e., the tearing down, rooting out and
plucking up of the house and throne of David -- this, considered in the light
of the fact that they can give no account of him after his sudden disappearance
from among them, is evidence that he neither died nor completed his
God-ordained task among them. And all the civilized races of the world know
that he did not build that seat of
power, nor plant those royal scions
among the Jews.
But since we find it on record that Jeremiah's work
has been accomplished, we know that it must have been he who did it; even if
his name is not mentioned in the Scriptural account of the doing of it. For God
would not permit some other man to do that work, after having sanctified
Jeremiah before he was born, and brought him into the world for that purpose.
We must bear in mind the fact that the sacred account of the building and
planting is in the form of a riddle or parable, and that metaphors instead of
names are used for those concerned; the high
and the low, the enthroned and the dethroned, the young twigs and
the tender twigs, the planted and the planter. But we must
remember also that the name of "Israel," the special national name of
the ten-tribed kingdom, is mentioned as the receiver of the planted and
enthroned pair. And since the historic testimony declares Jeremiah's work to
have been accomplished in Israel, it is only in Israel that we may hope to find
evidences of that fact.
This necessitates the finding of Joseph-Israel, and
they shall be found, for God says they shall; and when they are found,
manifestly, there must be found with them a branch of the Judah-Davidic family,
who are their sovereigns.
Since the East is left in such utter darkness, not
only as to the fate of Jeremiah and his little Royal Remnant, but also as to
the destination of "the dispersed" ten tribes, who had been lost,
even to the Jews, so long before Christ came, that some of them thought that no
person except the Messiah could go to them, or might even know where to find
them, we must look elsewhere. Also, because of their lack of historic data
concerning the completion of Jeremiah's work, and because his disappearance was
almost as marvelous as was the translation of Elijah, they were ready to say
that the Christ was Jeremiah, (Matt. 16:14).
Their thought was, no doubt, that Jeremiah, like Elijah, was still
alive, and that God would yet use him in connection with the building and
planting anew, or the restoration of the kingdom among them, to which they
looked forward with great anticipation and hope.
But, as we were saying, since there is no light in
the East concerning these matters, let us scan the pages of prophecy to see if
there are any straws which point West.
And since it is said of straws that they show which way the wind blows,
it will be well for us to know that Hosea gives a prophecy concerning Ephraim,
in which he declares: "Ephraim, followeth after an East wind." As an
East wind is one which blows from the East and travels to the West, this makes
it certain that Ephraim did not travel Eastward. For had he gone in an Easterly direction, he must needs have gone
facing an East wind; then he surely went WEST.
And since he was "cast afar off," he must be in the far-off
West.
When Jehovah confirmed his promise to David concerning
the perpetuity of his kingdom, throne, sceptre and house, and took oath by his
holiness that he would not lie to him, he said: "I will set his hand
[scepter] in the sea." The clues which the prophet Ezekiel gives in his
riddle, as to the location of Israel and the royal pair, are, that it is
"a land of traffic," that it has "good soil" and that it
"brings forth branches"; that is, that it is fruitful and populous.
We are told it has a "city of merchants," that "fowl of every
wing dwell under the shadow of its branches," i. e., mixed, or various
people dwell under the protection of its rulers; and that its location is by
"great waters," which, for reasons that will become more and more
apparent as we proceed, we affirm to be the Atlantic Ocean. For the Lord gives a message to Ephraim
through Jeremiah, saying: "I am a father to Israel, and Ephraim is my
first born. Hear the word of the Lord, O ye nations, and declare it in the
isles afar off, and say, He that scattered Israel will gather him." In
this declaration we find that the far-off home of Ephraim-Israel is in, not an island,
but "the isles," i.e., a group of islands. Thus Ephraim, also, is
located in the sea, in the isles afar off.
The prophet Isaiah, in the forty-ninth chapter, addresses
these same people, saying: "Listen, O isles, unto me; and hearken, ye
people from afar . . . . Thou art my servant, O Israel, in whom I will [still
in the future] be glorified." And when speaking, in the twelfth verse of
this same chapter concerning the future return of this same people to
Palestine, their former home, at which time he will be more fully glorified in
them, the Lord causes the prophet to make proclamation: Behold, these shall
come from far off, and lo, these from the north and from the west."
In the Hebrew there is no compound word for northwest
as we use it; hence the expression north and west. There is a group of isles
out in these "great waters," which
are just as directly north-west from Palestine as the lines of latitude and
longitude can lay them, namely, the British Isles. And we may just as well jump
into the midst of our proofs at once, since that is the place where
Ephraim-Israel shall chiefly be found.
If not there, it is because they have "spread out," from these
VERY ISLES, for it is a well-authenticated fact that Jeremiah went to Ireland,
where he died, and that his grave is one of the well-known and proudly-named
spots of that country, whose history is one of the mysteries of the world.
It is a well-known fact that the history of no country
on the face of the earth has so puzzled historians as that of Ireland. There is
both a sacred and secular reason for this.
The secular reason is that Ireland steps into the arena of history with
a monarchical kingdom running in full blast, and men do not know how it got
there. The sacred reason is because God
has issued a mandate, saying: "KEEP SILENCE before me, O islands, and let
the people renew their strength," (Isa. 41:1).
In the next verse the Lord asks the question:
"Who raised up the righteous man from the EAST?" Then in the fourth
verse he answers his own question, saying, "I the Lord, the first, and
the last; I am he," and in the eighth verse of the same chapter, still
addressing the dwellers in the isles, he says: "Thou art Israel, my
servant Jacob, whom I have chosen, the seed of Abraham my friend. Thou whom I
have taken from the ends of the earth." i.e., literally, from the rising
of the sun, from the beginning, or from the East.
This statement, coming from such high authority,
forever settles the question as to the origin of the peoples who dwell in those
far-off northwest isles.
We have read many authors on the subject of the
Hebrews in Ireland, who claim to have searched carefully and critically
through all available chronicles, records and histories and they all agree that
a perusal of these various authorities is not only heavy reading, but that they
are very obtuse, and that they are actually confusing, bewildering and
tormenting to all who do not take the word of God as an ally in the work of
unraveling their mysteries; for, all of these authorities do agree in stating
the following facts:
1. About 585 B. C. a "notable man," an
"important personage," a patriarch, a saint, an essentially important
someone, according to their various ways of putting it, came to Ulster, the
most northern province of Ireland, accompanied by a princess, the daughter of
an eastern king, and that in company with them was one Simon Brach, Breck,
Brack, Barech, Berach, as it is differently spelled; and that this royal party
brought with them many remarkable things. Among these was the harp, an ark and
the wonderful stone called Liafail, or stone of destiny, of which we shall
have much to say hereafter.
2. This eastern princess was married to King Herremon
on condition, made by this notable patriarch, that he should abandon his former
religion, and build a college for the prophets. This Herremon did, and the name
of the school was Mur-Ollam, which is the name, both in Hebrew and Irish, for
school of the prophets. He also changed the name of his capital city, Lothair
-- sometimes spelled Cothair Croffin -- to that of Tara.
3. The name of this Eastern princess is given as
Tea-Tephi, and it is a well-known fact that the royal arms of Ireland is the
harp of David, and has been for two thousand and five hundred years.
Ezekiel in his riddle, when speaking of the coming of
the female passenger who came to that land in the second vessel, whom he
afterwards proves to be a princess, speaks of "the furrows of her
plantation." It is a truth, and, to us, a marvelous one, that the province
of Ulster used to be called the "Plantation of Ulster," as any one
may know if they will take the trouble to consult Chamber's Encyclopedia on the
word Ulster.
Further, the crown which was worn by the sovereigns
of that hitherto unaccounted-for kingdom in Ireland had twelve points. Who shall say that "the king's
daughter" was not planted there; and that the first of the three of
Ezekiel's prophetic overturns was not from Palestine to Erin?