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Appendix
Some objections to the scheme in the preceding pages have been
noted. The writer is desirous that due attention should be paid to every objection; hence
the following things are appended.
The Afghans in Persia have by some been conjectured to be of the ten
tribes of Israel. Mr. Vansittart of England has given notice of them. While he was in the
east, he met with a Persian abridgement of a book styled, Ararul Afghainah; or secrets of
the Afghans. This he translated, and sent to Sir W. Jones, who then presided over the
Asiatic Society. He observes that it opens with a very wild description of the origin of
that tribe of people, and conveys a narrative, which is by no means to be offered upon the
whole as a serious and probable history. This book unfolds some notions of their having
descended from Melic Talut, supposed to be king Saul. And a number of things they mention,
which seem to have arisen from the ancient history of Israel. But not a rite or ceremony
is noted of them, which seems to bear any resemblance to the ceremonial system of ancient
Israel. Afghan, a noted ancient leader, (they inform) made frequent excursions to
the mountains, where his posterity after his death established themselves, lived in a
state of independence, built forts, and exterminated the infidels. When Mohammedism
was propagated in the east, the Afghans embraced it with avidity, and have remained under
that delusion to this day. Surely this favours not their being of Israel. This people have
latterly divided themselves into four classes. The first class consists of those who are
purely Afghan. The second, of those whose fathers were Afghan, and their mothers of
another nation. The third of those, whose mothers were Afghan and their fathers of another
people. The fourth of those whose connexion was still more remote.
A question arises, whether this history of their apparent descent
from Israel might not have been furnished to this class of people from the grand imposter,
Mohammed? They were a brave warlike race. They at once
[beginning of page 212]
embraced his system; upon which they boast that he said to them,
Come, O moluc, or kings;--that Mohammed gave them his ensign; and said
that the faith would be strengthened by them. He knowing that Israel were once
planted in that region, might think further to please them by furnishing them with a
legend of their having descended from that people. This he might have done by the Jewish
apostate who assisted him in forming his system of delusion. But it is said that their
account of the time of their departure from Palestine does not at all agree with the Old
Testament account of the same. Mr. Faber upon the circumstance says; It must be
confessed, that this Afghan tradition bears a strong resemblance to many of those
Mohammedan legends, which are founded upon scripture accounts, (i.e. allude to them, to
strengthen the imposition) whence it is certainly not impossible that a tribe of
Mussuimans might be in possession of it, without being descended from the house of
Israel.
But should the Afghans prove to be of Israel, they may be from a
tribe, or scattering people of ancient Israel, who tarried behind when most of that people
set off for this continent. The Indian tradition says, that they once lived in
another country, where the people were very wicked; and nine tenths of their people
took counsel, and left that wicked people, and were led into this land. The posterity of
that one remaining tribe may possibly now be found somewhere in the east. But the Afghans,
according to their own account, have much mixed with other people. We are led to believe
from prophecy that God would keep the tribes of Israel (as he designs they shall finally
be known and recovered as such) free from any considerable degree of mixture.--And it
would appear that Israel, as such, must be ascertained by evidence less liable to
imposition than the aforenoted book of the secrets of the Afghans.
Doctor Buchanan gives an account of white and black Jews at Cochin,
East Indies. The Most High speaks of gathering his ancient people from the east,
and from the west. If nine tenths of Israel migrated to this continent; the residue
of them might migrate to the East Indies. Doctor Buchanan informs that the white
Jews there emigrated from Europe in later times. The black Jews have a tradition that they
arrived to the Indies not long after the Babylonish captivity. And Doctor Buchanan adds;
What seems to countenance this tradition is, that they have copies of those books of
the Old Testament, which were written before the captivity; but none of those whose dates
are subsequent to that event. It seems most probable then, that these black Jews are
descendants of those Jews, who turned their course to that region of the east, when they
were liberated from Babylon, instead of returning to Jerusalem. Some of the Jews
manifestly did thus part from their brethren, and migrate to the east. These were the Jews
who abounded in eastern as well as western provinces of Ahasuerus, in the days of Haman,
Esther and Mordecai; when the impious decree was obtained against them by Haman. Ahasuerus
then reigned over one hundred and twenty-seven
[beginning of page 213]
provinces, even from India to Ethiopia. Esther i. 1. And Jews
appear, at that time, to have scattered in all these provinces. Thence these black Jews
became planted in India; and they had their bible as far as was written before the
captivity. Their being blacker than modern Jews in Europe, may be accounted for upon the
same principles, of different climates and habits of living, which have given to the
American natives a darker skin than to the Jews of Europe; or than their ancestors
possessed.
But two arguments testify against those black Jews of Asia having
descended from the ten tribes.
1. They call themselves Jews. The Jews have ever been strict to
retain the knowledge of their descent. And the deep rooted prejudices mutually maintained
between the Jews and Israel, forbid that the latter should ever relinquish their name for
that of the former.
2. The tribes of Israel were threatened with the famine of the word,
which has been already noted; Amos viii. 11, 12. Here the ten tribes in their long
banishment, should wander from north to east, and from sea to sea; running to
and fro, to find communication from Heaven; but should remain destitute of the word of
life, till about the time of their restoration. But the black Jews in Asia, as well as the
white Jews there, have had their word of the Lord to this day, all the sacred writings,
which were given before the Babylonish captivity. These reasons render it probable if not
certain that these black Jews are not of the ten tribes of Israel.
Since preparing the above the writer has seen in communications from
the London Jews Society, for May 1824, an extract of a letter from Thomas Jarratt, Esq. at
Madras, East Indies, giving account of Mr. Largons mission in the east in search of
the ten tribes. It is happy that such a mission has been undertaken, to ascertain whether
any traces can be found of Israel in the east. Mr. Largon gives the following account of
some people discovered by him in Hindostan.
1. These people in dress and manners resemble the natives, so as not
to be distinguished from them, but by attentive observation and inquiry.
2. They have some Hebrew names with local terminations.
3. Some of them read Hebrew. And they have a faint tradition of the
cause of their original exodus from Egypt.
4. Their common language is Hindoo.
5. They keep idols, and worship them; and use idolatrous ceremonies
intermixed with Hebrew.
6. They circumcise their children.
7. They observe the Kippoor, or great expiation day of the Hebrews.
8. They call themselves Gorah Jehudi, or white Jews; and they term
the black Jews, Callah Jehudi.
9. They speak of the Arabic Jews as their brethren; but do not
acknowledge European Jews as such, because they are of fairer complexion than themselves.
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10. They use a Jewish prayer; Hear, O Israel; the Lord thy God is
one Lord; Deut. vi. 4.
11. They have no priest, Levite, or nasi among them; though they
have elders and a chief in each community.
12. They expect the Messiah; and that when he comes, he will go to
Jerusalem, whither they shall return, to be dispersed no more.
For these reasons Mr. Jarratt seems inclined to view this people as
of the ten tribes. Should they prove to be thus, they may be descendants of the small part
of Israel who stayed behind, according to the Indian tradition, when nine tenths of their
nation journeyed to this country. But relative to their origin, let the following things
be considered.
1. They are found in the country of both the white and the black
Jews; and seem to have no essential distinction from them. They may then be of the tribe
of Judah. Any circumstantial difference between them and the other Jews may be accounted
for at least as easily, as we can account for the different complexions of the white and
black Jews; or for the different complexions among the different tribes of our natives, or
among any other different tribes of men, when all sprang from Noah. They appear from their
name to be not so black as the black Jews. And they appear not to be so white as the
European Jews from their aversion to them on account of their whiter complexion. From some
circumstance they have a shade half way between the white and black Jews. But this forms
no greater objection against their being of the Jews, than against their being of the ten
tribes.
2. They call themselves Jews. Why then shall we not credit them, and
believe they are Jews? The ten tribes after the separation, were never called Jews. And
such was their inveterate enmity against the Jews, that they would never be likely to
assume their name in a rejection of their own, as has been noted. It is predicted in Isai.
xi. 13, as one peculiarity of these two branches of Israel, after their final restoration,
that they shall envy each other no more. Neither this prediction, nor the nature of the
case, admits that Israel,--long ages before the restoration,--should be so in love with
Judah, as to adopt his name instead of their own. This new clan of Jews, half way between
the white and black Jews, say the Arabian Jews are their brethren. Grant this to be a
fact, and they no doubt are of the descendants of Judah.
3. The two ancient branches of the house of Israel were to be long
lost from each other; as has appeared. This seems to warrant the belief that they were to
be planted in different regions of the earth. But this does not accord with the idea of
their having been found in a measure intermixed, or in the same vicinity. The ten tribes
were to wander northeast, and from sea to sea; from one extreme ocean to another, in a
famine of the word; Amos viii. 11, 12. While the American natives appear fully to answer
to this description; the same cannot be said of that people in Hindostan.
4. We are led to believe (as has been noted,) that God would furnish
a place of retreat and safe-keeping for his outcast tribes of Israel for 2500
[beginning of page 215]
years; that they might be kept, and not be lost among the nations.
Would Israel then be led into the heart of the populous Hindostan?--or into any of the
crowded empires of the east? It is inadmissible. The Jews were to be dispersed through the
cities and nations, and were to be kept and known as Jews. But this cannot be said of the
ten tribes. Fact forbids it; and facts are stubborn things. The Jews have been known as
such, over the nations, in all ages since their dispersion. The ten tribes have never been
known; but have been lost from the world. Some have objected to the distinction recognized
in this book between dispersed and outcast. I wish every part of this
subject to be thoroughly examined; but I wish it to be examined with candour, and with an
acknowledgment of plain facts. This distinction is plainly made in the word of God. Of the
final restoration it is predicted Isai. xi. 12; And he shall set up an ensign for
the nations, and assemble the outcasts of Israel, and gather together the dispersed
of Judah from the four corners of the earth. This is one of a number of texts
recognizing this distinction. Had not providence illustrated and fulfilled this
distinction, we might with better grace say, it is a mere accidental expression, or a mere
expletive. But when we find the thing exactly fulfilled for so many centuries; that
the Jews are dispersed, and known as Jews for 1800 years; and the ten tribes have been
outcast and unknown both to the Jews and the civil world for between two and three
thousands of years; we are warranted to say--(all groundless doubts of it notwithstanding)
that there is a manifest meaning in this inspired and repeated distinction. As well might
any other manifest facts be denied as this! But this fact does highly favour the
belief, that the ten tribes would have been, and doubtless were, planted in regions very
different from the populous regions of the East Indies.
5. Compare the evidences which have been adduced in favour of the
hypothesis, that the natives of our continent are the tribes of Israel, with the above
evidence in favour of the Hindoo Jews being the ten tribes; and what will be the result?
The question is cheerfully submitted to every impartial reader. And it is cheerfully
submitted whether more than ten times as much evidence has not appeared in favour
of the former, as has ever yet appeared in favour of any other people on earth.
Some have objected to the following effect against the theory in the
preceding pages: Who knows but such traditions and religious customs, as are said to be
found among the natives of America, may not be found among all or most of heathen nations?
Let such be asked in their turn; Who knows but much of the rites of the christian religion
may not be found among all or most of the heathen nations? Who knows that these rites are
from heaven, and are not of heathen origin? This is a more glaring case; but is perhaps
upon the same scale of reasoning. The objection must be too loose and general, if not
uncandid. If such rites and religious traditions as are found among the Indians of
America, can be found among any other heathen nations; let the fact be adduced, and
something is accomplished. But idly to
[beginning of page 216]
say, who knows--is an easy way of answering not only human writings,
but the word of God itself. And it is an objection unworthy of a serious answer.
That some traditionary notions of the flood, of the ark, of the
confusion of tongues, and of sacrifices, have been handed down in heathen mythologies, is
so far from being denied, that Christians glory in the fact, as adding an incontestible
argument to the divinity of revelation. And that some nations living in the twilight of
ancient revelation, caught some rays of the light shining from heaven, and blended various
shreds of bible sentiment and bible morality with those of the heathen, is admitted as a
manifest fact. Says a first character of our nation; Neither Plato nor Aristotle
would have taught even their purblind ethics, had not the light of divine revelation
shone. They moved in the twilight made by the radiations from the church. Philosophy was
not born in Greece, till after the Jews were dispersed among the heathen by
Nebuchadnezzar. Pythagoras, the earliest of the Grecian philosophers, and the cotemporary
of Thales, the founder of the first school, began to flourish half a century after that
event. He spent twenty years in Egypt, where much of the Jewish religion had long before
been known. He visited Phoenicia and Chaldea. He conversed with the Persian Zoroaster, and
also with the Jewish prophets. Thales travelled in pursuit of knowledge to Egypt, where
the Hebrews had lived hundreds of years, and in the neighbourhood of which they had lived
nine centuries. These correct remarks of Doctor Griffin suggest the aid derived by
ancient heathen philosophers from their contiguity to a people blessed with the true light
from heaven. This principle may account for all the excellencies found in the morals of
Seneca, and other heathen moralists. They caught some of the rays which shot off from the
true Light of Israel. The golden age of Virgil was no doubt borrowed from the Kingdom of
the Messiah in the prophet Isaiah. But while we admire various of the sayings of Seneca,
Cicero, and some other heathen writers; we are not in the least staggered at the divine
assertion that the world by wisdom knew not God. But we are led to admire the
word of prophecy shining in ancient Israel; the distant twilight of whose rays could light
up in unsanctified heathen minds ideas so correct and so sublime. These things are
cheerfully admitted.
And it is also admitted that various heathen nations in the
contiguity of the light of Israel, having their superior and subordinate divinities of
heathenism, might borrow the name of the God of Israel, and attach it to their superior
false divinity. Yes, the Romans had their Jove, the Moors their Juba, and the Greeks their
Iou. And other contiguous heathen nations might symbolize with them in some similar facts.
But I ask the objector; can these ancient facts afford him a
satisfactory account how the American natives (granting them to be of Tartar extraction)
came to possess so many traditions of the Mosaic ceremonial law? Behold these
natives, filling this western world, far separated from the old continent, living at a
period of between two and three thousand years later than the
[beginning of page 217]
ancient heathen round about Israel, destitute of letters, children
of nature, roaming for more than two millenaries in wild forests; and yet possessing many
manifest traces (what ancient heathen even in the vicinity of Israel never possessed) of
the ceremonial laws of Moses! Too often did the sons of Jacob adopt the idolatrous customs
of the heathen neighbours. But when did their heathen neighbours return the compliment?
Who of them ever adopted the ceremonial religion of the God of Israel? The Mosaic
ceremonies were the distinguishing peculiarities of the chosen tribes. By these they were
insulated from all other people of the earth, who were in gross idolatry. You only
have I known of all the families of the earth. He suffered all other nations
to walk in their own way. While some traditionary notions of the flood, the ark, of
Babel, and of sacrifices, taught long before, were floating in heathen mythologies;
the peculiarities of the Mosaic ceremonial code were never adopted by heathen nations.
Let the objector then, (who cannot but be haunted with the thought, Who
knows but a lively imagination can find just such things as these among all heathen
nations?) be so kind as to inform us; how the ancient Scythians of the north,
(barbarous, and far remote from all intercourse with the people of Israel,) should be
supposed to be so intimately acquainted and delighted with the distinguished ceremonial
religion of Israel, as not only to have adopted it themselves; but to have so deeply
imprinted it in the minds of their posterity as that they should transmit it to their far
distant sons through the wilds of America, for thousands of years? Men, seriously to adopt
this alternative, must be far more wild, and fond of miracles, than ought to be admitted
at this day of light and improvement!
And it must be extraordinary, to hear men of letters, and of
Christian improvements, when so many distinct Indian traditions, manifestly from the
ceremonial law of Israel, have been ascertained from a great variety of unimpeached
witnesses,--indulging in the vague objection, Who knows but such things exist among all
heathen nations? Let it be asked also; Who knows that the Mosaic rituals descended
from Heaven? Who knows but they were derived from heathen mythologies?
Let the fact be ascertained, that the Indians of our wilds have
brought down from their ancestors a variety of the ceremonial laws of ancient Israel; and
let who will object, or disbelieve,--I shall rest satisfied that a very considerable if
not a sufficiency of that very kind of evidence is here found, which about this period of
the world is to bring to light the long lost tribes of the house of Israel.
The writer has seen a review of his first edition in the United
States Literary Gazette, in which objections are made which merit some reply.
The Reviewer it seems does not believe in a literal restoration of
the Jews and Israel to Palestine. He argues, that as the prophecies relative to the
advent of the Lord were misunderstood by the Jewish church, existing when Christ
appeared;--as they were understood to speak of the restoration
[beginning of page 218]
of Israel; but the dispersion of the two remaining tribes
followed; So the existing Christian church believes that when the Millennium
arrives the children of Israel will be restored to their promised land. But they may
be under an equal mistake. The Reviewer seems cautious in being understood as adopting
this as his own sentiment. But it appears manifest that it is his sentiment, and a ground
of his reasoning. As far as the Reviewer makes reliance on this argument, I would briefly
say, it does not follow, that because the Jews, when Christ appeared, had become extremely
corrupt, perverted their own scriptures, were prepared to reject and crucify the Lord of
Glory, and were just ready for destruction; that accordingly the existing Christian
church may now be as grossly ignorant relative to the true sense of Israels
promised restoration. It is to be hoped the present church of Christ has more correct
evangelical sentiment, and more grace, than had those Jews. They certainly have had more
opportunity to investigate the true sense of the prophecies than had those Jews. And it is
to be hoped many of them are far less corrupt.
The Reviewer informs us, that the words Judah, Israel,
Jerusalem, &c. used in the prophecies, which relate to this subject, are nearly
synonimous with the word church. And he proceeds to inform that those
prophecies which had a primary reference to the consummation and devastation of the Jewish
dispensation existing at the time they were revealed, were necessarily fulfilled in
relation to those who were literally denominated Israel and Judah. But those which,
speaking of Israel and Judah, relate in fact to the establishment, the condition and
progress of another church, cannot be expected to have their fulfilment with any peculiar
reference to that nation, because it has ceased to be Israel, in the prophetic sense of
the term. With whatever extreme caution this sentence is phrased, its sentiment
appears from all the use made of it, to be this; the Old Testament prophecies relative to
the names of Judah and Israel, but which relate to periods subsequent to the destruction
of Jerusalem have no further allusion to those particular people; but to another community
under the same name,--the Christian church. If this is not the sense of the
Reviewer I am unable to comprehend his meaning, or arguments. I understand it as being on
this ground that he now believes that the many prophecies which seem to predict the
literal restoration of Israel and Judah to Palestine, yet mean no such event. The Reviewer
finds in Rom. xi. that the literal Jews are to be converted to Christ; but not to be
restored to Palestine, as he conceives. But the ground he has assumed as much forbids
their being brought to Christ as Jews, as their being as such restored to Palestine. If
his premises contain his consequences; it can be only on the ground that no Old Testament
prophecy relative to the literal Jews and Israel under the Christian dispensation, has any
distinct appropriation to literal Jews and Israel; but to a Christian church under their
name. And according to the same argument, their being brought to the land of their fathers
can mean only their being brought into the kingdom of Christ.
[beginning of page 219]
But if this be correct, how strangely have the existing
church, and the most profound and pious commentators, been deceived in supposing
that they have seen held up before the world, a tremendous fulfilment of Old Testament
denunciations of signal judgments on the literal Jews now for about 1800 years. Those
predictions foretold they should be removed into all kingdoms, for their hurt, their
reproach; and they should be a proverb, and a taunt, and a curse in all places; Jer. xxiv,
9., Ezek. v. 15. Are we now to learn that such things were never to befall the Jews, as
such under the Christian system? Should the present church decline this sentiment, and
still adhere to their belief, that Old Testament predictions of evil are now fulfilling on
the Jews as such; they may be likely still to infer that the connected predictions of the
recovery of the same Jews, and their restoration to their own land, may likewise be
expected to have a literal accomplishment. And if so, they may in like manner deem it a
truth that the collateral predictions of the restoration of Israel with the Jews, will
have a literal fulfilment.
Does the Reviewer mean to have it understood that the ten tribes,
when expelled from Canaan, 725 years before Christ, amalgamated with the heathen world,
and were lost? The writer was informed, before he saw the review, that this was the
sentiment of the Reviewer. And I see not but the review carries this sentiment. But the
existing Christian church will want more evidence than has yet been discovered, to adopt
this belief. The names of Israel and the Jews, it is acknowledged, are in some sacred
passages used in a mystical sense. But to take an occasion from this to annihilate all
further use of these terms in the prophecies, as relating to that particular people, would
indeed be extraordinary!
The reasoning of Paul, Rom. xi. to show that the temporal casting
away of the Jews was consistent with the entail of the covenant of grace with Abraham,
involved (among other things) the fact, that they as Jews should be recovered. And the
same argument must hold equally true with the ten tribes.
Had the Jews disappeared from the world when expelled from Canaan,
and never more been heard of as Jews; whatever difficulty might have attended to
reconciling of this with the divine promises and predictions; the Reviewer would have had
greater plausibility of reasoning on his side. But as the Jews do still as Jews exist; and
are receiving the manifest fulfilment of ancient denunciations upon them as Jews; it must
be a task indeed to show that the predictions of their restoration to the land of Canaan
(where they shall in numbers, and in prosperity, far exceed all their ancient fathers,)
are to receive no literal fulfilment. But if they are to be literally fulfilled, then the
predictions which are blended with those of the event, that Israel shall in like manner be
recovered to the same land, that the two sticks in the prophets hand shall become
one, Ezek. xxxvii. and all this over and above Gods giving them a new heart and a
new spirit; must likewise be literally fulfilled.
[beginning of page 220]
Had the general theory of the Reviewer been correct, probably
nothing more would have been heard of the Jews, after the destruction of Jerusalem, than
has long been heard of Israel. But the Jews have been wonderfully kept a distinct nation,
for many centuries. And one of the brightest ornaments of the republic of science, (and
one too who did not deem it beneath his dignity to study the prophecies) could say;
Whenever I see a Jew, I seem to see a standing miracle in favour of the truth of
divine Revelation!
Relative to the proofs adduced in the View of the Hebrews in favour
of our Indians having descended from Israel; the Reviewer says; Various degrees of
credit are due to the authorities on which Mr. S. relies. Reply. I never heard these
authorities impeached, unless this insinuation is designed to impeach them. It was
designed that nothing dubious should be admitted. And the testimonies of authors are given
in their own words, that nothing should appear coloured.
The Reviewer expresses his difficulty with the scheme, from a
dissimilarity of the Indian features and countenance with those of the Jews. This
objection has in the preceding pages received an answer, which will not here be repeated.
But granting all the facts stated in the View of the Hebrews, the
Reviewer discovers nothing conclusive in all this. For he says; We have no evidence
that the customs and institutions of the Hebrews, which were sanctioned by divine
authority, were all peculiar to that people, nor that they originated with them. It
is admitted that various sacrifices were offered among other nations. And circumcision was
practised among the descendants of Abraham in Arabia. But the chief reliance of the writer
was on those rites, which he ever deemed peculiar to Israel. Have we then no
evidence that the passover, the ark of the covenant, the special feasts in Israel,
the separation of females, the annual atonement, cities of refuge, and the other
ceremonial observances adduced;--have we no evidence that these originated in Israel? Have
we now to learn that the ceremonial laws in Israel were only sanctioned by divine
authority there;--but that they were not peculiar to that people; nor
did they originate with them? Let evidence of this be exhibited, and it shall have
its weight. But till this is done, I shall stand firm in the old belief, that God did
originate the ceremonial law in Israel. As soon should I believe that the rites of the
Christian religion did not originate from God in his church, but originated among the
heathen; and were only sanctioned by God in his church; as to believe the same
relative to the rites of the ceremonial law, which have been noted.
The Reviewer adds; Neither does it appear that the Jewish
scriptures were the first that God gave to man. On the contrary; there is strong proof
that parts of the first books were compiled from earlier scriptures. And the ancestors of
the Indians might have had a book, without being Hebrew. That communications were
made from God to man, before the days of Moses, perhaps there is no room to doubt. And
possibly the knowledge of some
[beginning of page 211]
things which Moses was inspired to incorporate into his history,
might have been correctly handed down by tradition. But if there is strong
proof that eastern nations had possessed sacred writings before the writings of
Moses, from which antecedent writings our natives may have brought down the tradition that
their ancestors had a book of God, with no allusion to the writings of Moses; so that such
a tradition is no evidence that those Indians descended from Israel; (which is the
argument of the Reviewer;) how strange it must be that none beside the Indians of America,
and the Reviewer, have any knowledge of such a book of God? Why have not the literary
world been blessed with the knowledge of it? Why could not our literary Reviewer himself
have laid his hand upon it, and presented it to us; or at least some of the strong
evidence in its favour? The human family in the days of Abraham were going off to
gross idolatry. God selected and covenanted with Abraham, in order that the true knowledge
of himself might be maintained on earth. He suffered all other nations to walk in
their own way. And he said to Israel, You only have I known of all the
families of the earth. Moses, in this family, was inspired to write the book of God.
And it is noted as the special privilege of the circumcised Israel, that to them
were committed the oracles of God. Now was there during all this time, in the other
nations of the east, the knowledge of another book of God, so well known among the
nations, and the sacred impressions of it so deep and universal, that the descendants of
the northern barbarous nations might bring down many deep and correct impressions of it
for three or four thousand years, in so distant and extensive a region of the world as
this continent? So that all the rites of our natives, and their notions of an ancient book
of God, afford no evidence of their being of Israel? Why has nothing of this kind ever
been known in the learned world, till our literary Reviewer has brought it to light? Can
he make it appear indeed, that although the natives of our continent claim the one Great
Spirit as the God of their fathers, who they say were exclusively in covenant with him;
who had his prophets to work miracles, and foretell future events; who had the ark of the
covenant; places of refuge; high priests; yearly atonements; and many other exclusive
Mosaic rites; yet all this amounts to no distinctive evidence that they descended from
Israel?--because they may have derived all these things from ancient heathen nations. One
of two things, from the Reviewers view of the subject, appears true; either the
church of God have been under a great mistake relative to the origin of the Mosaic
religion; or, deep literature does not always constitute a man a sound divine!
The Reviewer seems to be disturbed, that the writer should make the
attempt he has done in this little book, to give an explanation to some prophecies
relative to Israel. He informs that the true mode of interpreting the prophecies is
certainly little understood at this day. He proceeds to allude to a dissertation on
the prophecies of the writer published some time since; which he says received a quietus
in the death of Buonaparte. The
[beginning of page 222]
Reviewer certainly expresses these things with a sufficient degree
of disrespect! One would imagine he was indeed much disturbed at any attempt to explain
prophecy. But his assertion relative to the general ignorance of the true mode of
interpreting the prophecies, surely must be understood as indicating that he himself
has been so happy as to arrive at a superior knowledge upon this subject. Now, whether he
has reached this high attainment by close application, or instinctively, he surely should
not object to others taking what they may judge the most proper methods to obtain a small
degree of that knowledge, of which he is so happy as to have much! The information given
by the Reviewer, relative to what the scriptures do or do not mean concerning the
restoration of the Jews, certainly would seem to indicate, that he himself has made great
proficiency in this knowledge. For one must possess considerable knowledge on this deep
subject, before he can with modesty and propriety publish what shall sweep away at a
stroke the long received rules and writings of such men as Mede, Lawman, Bishop Newton,
Sir Isaac Newton, and other most profound and celebrated expounders of the prophetic
scriptures! The Reviewer then should be willing, (if he has been so successful) that
others should make their humbler attempts, even though they should arrive at some
different conclusions from himself. If this seems foreign from the first professed object
of the Reviewer; the blame will not be attached to the reviewed, when it is considered he
is following only where he is led, in self-defence.
Relative to the duty of studying the prophetic scriptures, let the
following divine testimonies be considered. To the Jews Christ said, when light was far
inferior to what it now is, How is it that ye do not understand the signs of the
times? The signs of the times were the fulfilments of prophecies then taking place.
Whoso readeth, let him understand. Blessed is he that readeth, and they
that hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things that are written therein; for
the time is at hand. Numerous were such testimonies many centuries ago. Light has
been rising on the subject. And now it must be viewed as involved in inexplicable
darkness! When then can so great a part of our holy revelation ever be understood? Or was
it given in vain? Why has God commanded men to search and understand this part of his
blessed word?
Every event for time and eternity, now future, is known only by
prophecy. And yet the true mode of interpreting prophecies is certainly little known
at this day. Does this hold true in relation to the judgment, and eternity? to the
resurrection, to heaven, and to hell? Where shall we draw the lines? Are no opinions to be
formed of the Millennium?--of the battle of that great day of God? Why then are ministers
commanded to blow the trumpet in Zion, to sound an alarm in Gods holy
mountain, that all may tremble for the day of the Lord, which is nigh at hand? And
if these vast events must be studied and known, why not other great events connected with
them, and revealed with equal clearness?
[beginning of page 223]
But if the Reviewer may have mistaken as much in relation to the
prophecies, as he has in stating that the writers former Dissertation received a
quietus in the death of Buonaparte; possibly his knowledge of this subject will not prove
to be of great practical importance; and possibly his remarks may receive a
quietus in a statement of facts.
The writer did about fourteen years ago publish a Dissertation on
the Prophecies. He did it at the request of many, and with the special recommendation of
more than half a dozen of the first literary characters in New England.
In this work Buonaparte was noted only as one signal leader of the
last head of the secular Roman beast rising from the bottomless pit. But he was never
identified with this beast; but was ever distinguished from it. Hence let his death have
taken place ever so soon, after the beast was exhibited in his characteristic marks, it
would in no sense have given a quietus to Mr. Ss. scheme. For as the first part of
the ancient imperial head of this beast depended on no one emperor; but was accommodated
with many in succession; so notice was given that it might be with the last imperial reign
of the same head, recovered to life in these last days. See the following quotations from
the first edition of the Dissertation. And the king shall do according to his will,
and he shall exalt himself and magnify himself above every god, and shall speak marvellous
things against the God of gods.
By a king in the language of prophecy, is generally to be
understood a kingdom, or civil power, and not an individual person. In this sense we are
to understand the king in this text. In the passage we are presented with a great
atheistical power, who in his commencement is to be anarchical.--His licentiousness is
first noted; he shall do according to his will; breaking every restraint. His
anarchy follows; and he shall exalt himself above every God, i.e. above every
king or legitimate ruler. War with kings, was to be among his first characteristics. His
atheism follows; and shall speak marvellous things against the God of gods. He
shall blaspheme and deny the God of heaven. But in his estate shall he honour the
god of forces. After this power shall gain national importance, he shall honour
military munitions, or pay his first attention to the arts of war.
And a god whom his fathers knew not, shall he honour with gold
and silver, and precious stones, and pleasant things. Although his fathers
god, and all gods (kings) have been rejected; yet a god, or ruler of foreign descent shall
by and by come to be acknowledged by this power, and honoured with the greatest
magnificence. Thus shall he do in the most strong hold with a strange God whom he
shall acknowledge and increase with glory; and he shall cause them to rule over many, and
shall divide the land for gain. This infidel power shall overrun strong holds, and
powerful nations, with this foreigner at their head, who shall be received as their
supreme ruler, and honoured with the highest dignity. And he shall lead them
[beginning of page 223]
to subdue states and nations; and shall distribute their governments
among his favourites.
And at the time of the end the king of the south shall push at
him; and the king of the north shall come against him like a whirlwind. The Ottoman
empire may provoke the infidel power to its own ruin. Whether this will be the case;
or whether some other two powers, one on the south, and the other on the north of the
infidel power, will be found to unite, with a view to crack their common enemy; time will
decide.*1
This power is ever treated of in this dissertation as an empire, and
not as any emperor, or succession of emperors.
This beast in his last head, (in the scheme of the seven vials given
in the Dissertation, which scheme has never been disproved, but has met with general, if
not universal approbation) was to continue through the three last and greatest vials, the
fifth, sixth and seventh. The periods of these vials was to be distinguished from each
other by various reverses experienced by this power. Says the writer in his first edition,
Floods of delusion, of wicked agents, of falsehoods and abuse, if not of national
rage, armies and bloody violence, will be excited, as though belched out of the mouth of
the old serpent, like an overwhelming torrent; in so much; that nothing can save the cause
of Christ from destruction, but signal interpositions of Providence in counteracting those
violent measures, and confounding the enemy, like the earth opening her mouth and
swallowing up floods of water. ** 2 Great reverses in the state of this
power of the last days were thus implied in the first edition of this work.
And it occurred to the writer, while preparing his second edition,
(soon after) that these reverses were clearly held up in various collateral prophecies, as
being far greater than he had expressly stated; while yet the power (not any individual
leaders of it) would continue its mystical existence, till it should sink in perdition at
the close of the seventh vial, subsequently to the restoration of the Jews. It was to be
part of iron, and part of clay; partly strong and partly broken. Of this the
writer gave ample notice in his second edition in the following sentences, and many
similar ones; To how great a degree these reverses may proceed, God only knows.
Should the brokenness of this last part of the Roman power be now made in some degree as
conspicuous as his antecedent strength, (as the text the kingdom shall be partly
strong, and partly broken, seems to warrant us to expect) that wicked power would
indeed be prostrated. But should this be the case, should all the horns of the
anti-christian beast be torn off, and the wretch lie bleeding and fainting; yet it appears
evident that all his work is
[beginning of page 225]
not yet done. He does not go into final perdition, till the battle
of that great day of God, which is subsequent to the restoration of the Jews.3
The enormous power or influence, symbolized by the beast from
the bottomless pit, (says the writer) depends on no one man;; though it has been
accommodated hitherto with a leader truly prepared for the work of judgment. In the first
reign of the imperial head of the Roman beast, emperors were set up and deposed, and
numbers slain, in thick succession. And it repeatedly seemed as though destruction had
fallen upon the empire; still that imperial head continued, (i.e. till the days of
Constantine.) That genius of the people continued, which would not be governed by any
thing short of a military despotism. And this (it may be expected) will be the case on the
Roman earth henceforth, till the battle of the great day. Should revolution succeed
revolution, it would not alter the case. The nature of the beast from the bottomless pit
is not changed. It rests on the broad basis of a general systematic corruption, which will
never be purged, but by the exterminating fire of the great and notable day of the
Lord.
Much of this kind of notice was given in this publication, which
fully accords with the subsequent death of Buonaparte, and the prostration of his
particular schemes of ambition, which was so terrible under the fifth vial. It was
anticipated in the following words on the king of the north coming against him like a
whirlwind, &c. The phraseology seems to intimate great success against the
infidel power. For a mighty whirlwind usually prostrates every thing in its way.
Between the present time and the battle of the great day, (the
writer adds) as great intervals of light may be experienced as might be expected to form a
transition from the events of one great vial of wrath to another.
The scheme of the vials, in this Dissertation, makes the events of
the French revolution the fulfilment of the fifth vial, poured on the throne of the Papal
beast, and filling his kingdom with darkness. The sixth is to be fulfilled in the
subversion of the Turks. And the seventh in the utter destruction of the great secular
Roman beast, which arose in his last head. He is clearly to continue in some kind of
existence, till the battle of the great day; though with the reverses which have been
hinted.
In relation to the general scheme of this Dissertation, the writer
of it has never found occasion to alter his mind. He as much believes, as when he wrote,
that his scheme of the last head of the Roman beast, and of the seven vials, is
essentially correct; and has to the present day been more and more confirmed in the
opinion, by the events of the times. He anticipated and published his opinion, that
between one vial and its successor, there might be intervals of peace. He believes the
fifth vial closed at the battle of Waterloo. He often from that time stated to his friends
his apprehension that the sixth vial, to subvert the Turkish government, might next be
expected.
[beginning of page 226]
This was the scheme of his Dissertation. And events thus far appear
fully to accord with the hypothesis.
The Reviewer then, on re-examining the subject, may possibly be
convinced that his attack on the Dissertation was not only unprovoked and gratis, but
wholy incorrect.
His following assertion is no less incorrect. He says; But he
(Mr. S.) maintains boldly that the prophecies respecting the restoration of the Jews, and
the Millennium, must be fulfilled about this time. The writers time for the
commencement of the Millennium, (and his reasons for it) he gave to the public in his
second edition, published ten years ago; which is stated to be about the year 2000. And
never since that time has a word been by him uttered or written in opposition to this
opinion.
In the first edition of his Dissertation, he stated the scheme of a
noted author, and several things that might render it probable; which scheme introduces
the Millennium before the close of the present century.. But attending further to the
subject, in his second edition, the writer became of opinion that the Millennium will not
commence before the year A.D. 2000.*4
Such representations then cannot be for the benefit of the public,
or of the author reviewed; and hence cannot be for the honour of the Reviewer! Some other
things in the Review might be noticed, but shall pass. If the Reviewers conscience
is satisfied with them, they may rest in silence.
The writer of the preceding pages is not insensible that such an
attempt as he has made, is not only a task; but one that will excite obloquy from a
certain class of men. He solicits information on the subject of his book from all who may
find it convenient to communicate it. And every objection to his scheme, stated with
candor, shall be gratefully received. But he shall never feel grateful for any
communications to the public calculated to bring attention to the prophetic scriptures
into disrepute; or to prevent a candid attention of the public to any evidences adduced
relative to the state and recovery of the long lost tribes of Israel.
1 *See sect. 2, chap. I. 1st edit.
2 ** Page 45, 1st edit.
3 Page 8, 2d edit.
4 *Page 131, 2d edit.