Lost Israel Found
In the Anglo-Saxon Race
CONTENTS
PREFACE.
CHAPTER I. -- Consideration of the
promises to the fathers -- The meaning of the same --
Their application .
CHAPTER II. -- The promise of a
numerous offspring shown to be literally true -- Traced from
Abraham down to Moses, thence to Solomon -- The division of the
nation into two kingdoms -- The Assyrian captivity --
Israel lost -- The hunt for lost Israel -- The
history by "Oxonlan".
CHAPTER III. -- Dan's migration- A
colony to Greece -- At the sacking of Troy --
Settlement of twelve cities in Asia Minor -- The Lacedemonians,
Israelites, by Josephus -- Dan's escape with Simeon to Ireland
-- Simeon in Wales -- The other Dan escapes to Denmark,
via north of tile Black Sea, giving his name to every river crossed --
His final settlement in Denmark
CHAPTER IV. -- Jeremiah's escape to
Ireland -- The Babvlonish captivity -- His treatment
by the Jews, by Nebuehadnezzar -- Taking the ark and Jacob's
stone out of the temple -- Going down to Egypt with Baruch and
the women -- His flight thence to Ireland -- The
marriage of Tephi to Eoehaid -- Crowned on Jacob's stone
-- Transmitted down through every reign to Victoria, who was last
crowned on it -- .Now in Westminster Abbey --
Tephi's death and burial in Tarah -- Hebrew institutions
established by Jeremiah.
CHAPTER V. -- The other eight tribes
still in Assyria -- This their home for one hundred years or
more -- The wanderings meantime -- Buddha --
Confucius' -- Hold possession of all the land for twenty-eight
years -- Their resolution to escape to a land not inhabited by
man. (II Esdras, 13) -- Herodotus confirms the same --
Their journeying one and a half years 1,500 miles to Arsareth, where they
inhabit five hundred years or more -- Twelve or thirteen battles
with Rome -- Located in Germany -- Saxony.
CHAPTER VI. -- The Anglo-Saxons -- Who they are
-- Sharon Turnet's history of them -- Their emigration to
England -- The Octarthy -- Egbert crowned the first
king of England, A. D 800 -- The incursion of the Danes --
And last, William the Conqueror, 1066, who is found to be the leader of
Benjamin -- Himself a Benjamite -- How Benjamin
escaped from Jerusalem and wandered to Denmark, thence to France --
The ten tribes now all in the isles of the sea; yet all ignorant of their
own identity.
CHAPTER VII. -- The Anglo-Saxons. 1. Their
government. 2. Population. 3. Wealth. 4. Political influence. 5. Money lent
to many, but never borrow.
CHAPTER VIII -- The possession of the gates of his enemy
-- England now holds the gates of tile world, save at
Constantinople -- Israel without a king -- Scattered among all
nations -- Ignorant of their ancestry -- Called by another name --
Offspring of Abraham innumerable -- As a lion among the beasts of tile earth
-- Gathered from all nations, where they had been scattered -- Gathered from
the islands of the sea on the north -- Joseph pushing the people to
the ends of the earth -- The seed of Abraham a blessing to all nations,
how? -- 1. Politically. 2. Religiously -- Her missionaries -- The Bible --
Its translation, by whom made.
CHAPTER IX. -- Jacob's promises to the sons of Joseph -- Ephraim's
"a multitude of nations" -- Manasseh's" one great nation " -- Ephraim's
fulfilled in the government of Great Britain, with her more than sixty
different nationalities -- Manasseh finds his one great people here in the
United States.
CHAPTER X. -- The new covenant. (Jer. 31: 31-33.) 1. The parties. 2. The
time. 3. The effects of its fulfillment.
CHAPTER XI. -- The stone kingdom -- Nebuchadnezzar's dream
-- Daniel's interpretation -- The four kingdoms: Babylon, Medo-Persian,
Grecian, Roman -- The ten toes -- England not one of them -- Portugal
instead -- The stone is God's people, Israel, now the Anglo-Saxons -- Their
increase: 1. In wealth. 2. In literature. 3. Political influence. 4. In
religious influence -- Hence this people must be the stone kingdom.
CHAPTER XII -- I. Prophecies not yet fulfilled (Ezek. 37): Valley of dry
bones; the two sticks; the two kingdoms made one; placed in Jerusalem; hence
one king. 2. Gog and Magog, the battle of. 3. The new covenant, its
fulfillment yet future. 4. The possession of the land of Canaan by Ephraim
and Judah. 5. The building of the temple. 6. The temple service. 7. The
waters issuing from the threshold of the temple; how interpreted. 8. The
apportionment of the land to the twelve tribes; the priests' portion; tile
part for tile temple; the name of the city froth that day shall be, "The
Lord is there"