CHAP. I. THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM.
CHAP. II. THE CERTAIN RESTORATION OF JUDAH AND ISRAEL.
CHAP. III. THE PRESENT STATE OF JUDAH AND ISRAEL.
CHAP. IV. AN ADDRESS OF THE PROPHET ISAIAH TO THE
UNITED STATES RELATIVE TO THEIR RESTORATION.
SECOND EDITION, IMPROVED AND ENLARGED.
BY ETHAN SMITH, PASTOR OF A CHURCH IN POULTNEY (VT.)
"These be the days of vengeance."
"Yet a remnant shall return."
"He shall assemble the outcasts of Israel;
and gather together the dispersed of Judah."
PUBLISHED AND PRINTED BY SMITH & SHUTE, POULTNEY,
(VT.) 1825.
Page ii
District of Vermont, To wit:
BE IT REMEMBERED, That on the sixteenth day of April, in the forty-ninth
year of the Independence of the United States of America, SMITH
& SHUTE, of the said District, have deposited in this office
the title of a book, the right thereof they claim as proprietors,
in the words following, to whit: "View of the Hebrews; or the
Tribes of Israel in America. Exhibiting Chap.I. The Destruction
of Jerusalem. Chap.II. The certain Restoration of Judah and Israel.
Chap.III. The Present State of Judah and Israel. Chap. IV. An Address
of the Prophet Isaiah to the United States relative to their restoration.
Second edition, improved and enlarged. By ETHAN SMITH, pastor of
a church in Poultney, (Vt.) `These be the days of vengeance.' `Yet
a remnant shall return.' `He shall assemble the outcasts of Israel;
and gather together the dispersed of Judah.'" In the conformity
to the act of the Congress of the United States, entitled "An
act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of
maps, charts, and books, to the authors and proprietors of such
copies, during the times therein mentioned." JESSE GOVE, Clerk
of the District of Vermont. A true copy of record, examined and
sealed by J. GOVE, Clerk.
Page iii
FOR THE SECOND EDITION.
The importance of the question, Where are the Ten Tribes of Israel?
the speedy sale of the first edition of this work; and the obtaining
considerable additional evidence relative to the origin of the American
Indians;--have led the way to the publishing of a second edition
of this View. Additional evidences are adduced from various sources;
especially from Hunter's Narrative--Baron Humboldt on the Kingdom
of New Spain--and the American Archaeology. These authors, without
particular design, have furnished what is deemed material evidence
upon this subject.
Some objections are noted, and replies made to them. The writer
has had his ears open to objections; and he is of opinion that none
have been made, but what are capable of a fair solution.
Poultney, April 1, 1825.
Page iv
Page v
RECOMMENDATIONS.
Testimonials in favour of this work have not been wanting. The
following will be here inserted.
The Pawlet Association certify, that they have heard the Rev. E.
Smith read a considerable part of his "View of the Hebrews;"
that they do highly approve of the plan and execution of the work;
do wish its publication; and cordially recommend it to the perusal
of all classes of people.
Voted, unanimously, Attest, RUFUS CUSHMAN, Scribe.
Extracts from Reviews of the First Edition. "We have
been exceedingly gratified in taking a `View of the Hebrews,' through
the glass that Mr. S. has put to our eye; and it is presumed that
none will turn away dissatified with such a medium of vision, unless
they are dissatified that they may not look longer.--The subject
is large enough to engage a more extended discussion; but perhaps
Mr. S. has said all that need be said at present. Undoubtedly further
inquiries will be made, and more satisfactory results obtained ere
long."--[Boston Recorder.]
"Of this we feel convinced, that the religious community are
indebted to Mr. S. for the pains he has taken in this his sketch
of the Hebrews; and we hope that his labour will be amply remunerated,
not only in seeing the salutary tendency of his book in exciting
Christians to their duty in reference to the Jews, but also in its
rapid sale. The sentiments interspersed are calculated to be profitable
to the pious; as well as informing to the reader, who is merely
in pursuit of interesting historical knowledge." "We consider
the moral tendency of the publication to be truly
Page vi
valuable. No person can read it without some benefit, unless his
heart be strangely perverted." "One of the impressions
which this work is calculated to make is, the awful guilt and danger
contracted by a rejection of Jesus Christ as our atoning Saviour.
This we see in the terrible destruction of Jerusalem and the temple,
and in the dreadful slaughter and dispersion of the Jews. Another
is, the weight of obligation which now rests on Gentile Christians,
and emmently on American Christians to extend the gospel to the
Jews. When this people was rejected from spiritual privileges, we
were graciously received; and our duty now is, by every practicable
method, to persuade them to renounce their unbelief, and participate
with us in the rich blessings of grace."--[Christian Watchman,
published in Boston.]
"Certainly, if we may judge from our own feelings, such a
collection of facts and details, as is presented by our author,
must secure for his book an unusual degree of popularity."--
[Christian Advocate, published at Saratoga, N.Y.]
Extracts of a letter from the Rev. Jabez B. Hyde of Eden, Erie
county, N.Y. dated Feb. 4,1825, after having read the first
edition of this work.
"I have been in the sentiment of your book, that the natives
of our country are the outcasts of Israel. It cannot well be doubted
by any one, who has become acquainted with the religious ceremonies
of the Indians, but that they have a manifest shadow of the Mosaic
rituals. Most of the particulars you have mentioned in your book,
I know to be facts; and were observed by the Seneca Indians. When
I first came among them, the chiefs invited me to all their celebrations.
For some time (when I could make it convenient) I attended in hopes
of obtaining information concerning their ceremonies. All the information
I could obtain from their interpreter was, that all related to the
things their fathers taught them many years ago. "So our fathers
worshipped the Great Spirit!" This was all the account they
could give. I neglected their meetings. After I read Dr. Boudinot's
`Star in the West,' I again attended their religious ceremonies,
to see if I could discern what he had represented. In 1818, a general
religious excitement commenced among the Senecas. They attempted
to understand and reform their old religious rites, rather than
receive Christianity. This brought together
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their wise men, who were best acquainted with their mysteries.
They spent much time to investigate their religion, its origin and
what it taught, and to what it would avail. They found themselves
involved in darkness. Of the meaning of the words they used in their
dances, and divine songs, they were wholly ignorant. They used the
words, Y-O-He-Wah, and Hal-le-lu-yah, as Dr. Boudinot has represented
of other Indians. They became dissatisfied with their old rites,
and consented that they would take the book which the white people
call the word of God, to throw light on their path. This was the
commencement of Christianity among the Senecas. This in its progress
brought in two who had officiated as high priest in their religious
ceremonies. With these I have had frequent opportunities. They have
given me, I believe, an unreserved account of all they know of their
ancient religion. Their wish has been to obtain information whether
any thing is found in our scriptures simlar to their religion. They
have been firmly persuaded that they are the people of God; but
that they have lost their way, and are bewildered in darkness. They
call themselves, Hung-gwa-o-way;--i.e. the real people.
In all their rites which I have learned from them, there is certainly
a most striking similitude to the Mosaic rituals. Their feasts of
first fruits; feasts of ingathering; day of atonement; peace offerings;
sacrifices. They build an altar of stone before a tent covered with
blankets; within the tent they burn tobacco for incense, with fire
taken from the altar of burnt offering. All who have seen a dead
human body are considered unclean eight days; which time they are
excluded from the congregation. These Senecas observe their separations
of females, as you notice of other Indians in your book. These Indians
are well acquainted, that formerly places like cities of refuge
existed among them. An old chief showed me the boundaries of one
of them. I could fill sheets with details; but it would be unnecessary.
I remain yours in the bonds of the Gospel, JABEZ B. HYDE.
Rev. Ethan Smith.
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From the Rev. Dr. PROUDFIT, of Salem, N.Y. SALEM, FEBRUARY
18, 1825.
"Reverend and esteemed Brother: I have examined with no inconsiderable
interest your `View of the Hebrews,' and have been highly entertained,
and instructed. From the view given of their Language, and from
the similarity of their customs and religious rites, with those
of ancient Israel; from their belief in the existence of the one
Great Spirit. as the Creator and Judge of the world; from their
existing in tribes, during the lapse of so many ages; from the coincidence
of their traditions with the events recorded in the inspired volume;
we have in my opinion satisfactory evidence that the aborigines
of our country are the remnant of the ten tribes of Israel.
I am much gratified to hear that you are preparing a second edition,
with additional facts and evidences. If my name may have any influence
to introduce this work to the patronage of the religious public,
you have liberty to use it for the purpose.
That the blessings of Israel's God may accompany exertions for
the missionary cause, and extending the kingdom of the Redeemer,
in the gathering of the Jews, and the fulness of the Gentiles, and
hastening the progress of the millennial glory, is the prayer of
your brother in the faith of Jesus, and fellow labourer in the gospel.
ALEXANDER PROUDFIT.
Rev. ETHAN SMITH.
Page ix
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I
THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM
Description of Jerusalem, 15
Description of the Temple, 16
Christ fortells its destruction, 18
Various signs of the event, 19
Seven striking portents of it, 23
Causes of the war, 26
Factions of the Jews, 28
The Roman army approaching, 29
Some prophecies have a primary, and an ultimate fulfilment, 43
CHAPTER II
THE CERTAIN RESTORATION OF JUDAH AND ISRAEL
The expulsion of the ten tribes, 47
Arguments in favour of a literal restoration.
1. The distinct existence of the Jews, 49
2. Their past partial, and short possession of Canaan, 49
3. Express predictions of the event, 51
4. A mystical import given to these predictions inadmissible 64
5. Their expulsion was literal; hence their restoration may be expected
to be literal, 65
CHAPTER III
THE PRESENT STATE OF THE JEWS, AND OF ISRAEL
State of the Jews, 67
State of Israel, 69
Preliminary Remarks.
1. Israel as well as Judah are to be recovered, 70
2. Hence they are now in existence, but in an outcast state, 73
3. The last account of them, 74
4. Suppositions concerning them, 75
5. These suppositions true, 79
6. A prophecy in Amos viii. 11, 12, relative to a famine of the
word in Israel, 81
Characters and writings of James Adair, Esq. 84
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Commencements of arguments in favour of the natives of America
being the descendants of Israel, 85
1. These natives all appear to have one origin, 85
2. Their language appears to have been Hebrew, 89
Table of words, 90
3. The Indians have had their ark of the covenant, 95
4. They have had circumcision, 97
5. They generally have acknowledged one and only one God, 98
6. Testimony of William Penn, 107
7. Their superior tribe, 108
8. Several prophetic traits of character, 109
9. Their being in tribes with heads of tribes, 111
10. Their having an imitation of the cities of refuge, 112
11. Various other traditions and arguments, 113
Where they came to this country, 113
Promiscuous testimonies from page 114 to 225; a few only of
which shall be here noted.
[Notice of some objections from page 168-173, also in the Appx.]
Good original characters of the natives, 132-139, 173-177
Natives of New Spain, 177-187
Indian Pyramids, 179, 202
American High Places like those of ancient Israel, 200
Pyramid of Cholula, 179, 203
Traditions of an ancient celebrated character, probably Moses, 180,
204
Traditions of a Trinity in Unity in God, 210
Phylacteries, or ancient Hebrew writings, found on Indian Hill,
in Pittsfield, 217
CHAPTER IV
AN ADDRESS OF THE PROPHET ISAIAH, RELATIVE TO THE RESTORATION OF
HIS PEOPLE
Preliminary Remarks, 228
Exposition of Isaiah xviii 239
CONCLUSION, 253
APPENDIX, (Objections answered,) 271
Page xi
AUTHORS AND AUTHORITIES ADDUCED
Archaelogia Americana, page |
Hunter, 162 188. |
Adair, 80,84,88,89,92,95,98. |
Humboldt, 177. |
Bartram, 113,123-125. |
Herman, 140. 112,116,121,123. |
Beatty, 96,98,116,119. |
Heckewelder, 107. Some of his arguments, 147- |
Boudinot, 87,91,93,96,98,100. |
Hebard, 101. 154. |
Buttrick, 130. |
Hutchinson, 93,174. |
Carver, 123,154. |
Immanuel de Moraez, 97. |
Casas, 176. |
Jarvis, 79,116,120,123-125,133,134. |
Chapman, 123,157. |
Lewis & Clark, 106,124. |
Charlevoix, 85,174. |
Long, 141,160. |
Clavigero, 116. |
M'Kenzie, 97,114,115, 138. |
Colden, 94,109. |
Mather, 127. |
Columbus, 132. |
Melverda & Acasta, 162. |
Commissioners, 137. |
Morse, 91,126,142. |
Cushman, 105,174. |
Occum, 106. |
Don Alonzo de Ericilla, 158. |
Pedro de Cicca, 88. |
Dodge & Blight, 104. 174, 175. |
Penn, 107,174. |
Edwards, 86,89,162. |
Pixley, 111,113,130. |
Esdras, 74. |
Pratz, 87,175. |
Frey, 118. |
Robertson, 153. |
Giddings, 88,102. |
Sauard, 92. |
Gookin, 107. |
Schoolcraft, 145. |
|
Smith, (Col.) 117,126,134,136.
Ulloa, 83.
Williams, 88,101,110,114.
Williams, (Roger) 107. |
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