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LIBRARY
OF THE
Case, Division 1 _
Shelf. Section .
REMNANT FOUND ;
OR,
SHOWING THAT
IN THE
LONDON:
J. HATCHARD AND SON, 187, PICCADILLY.
184E
LONDON:
PRINTED BY IBOTSON AND PALMER,
SAVOY STREET.
TO ROBERT WOODROW, ESQ.,
OF GLASGOW,
THIS VOLUME
IS DEDICATED,
AS A
AS WELL AS
BY
THE AUTHOR.
Introduction - vii
The Kingdom of Israel 1
The Dispersion of the Ten Tribes 5
I he Dispersion (continued) If)
Conjectures concerning the Tribes :26
Personal Narrative 37
Proofs.
1 he Festival of Inauguration - 63
The Feast of Purim - 64
Fast days -
65
The Sabbath -
67
Funerals
73
Treatment of the corpse
74
VI CONTENTS.
Defilements - - - 78
Marriage .... - - 80
Circumcision - - - 82
General Proofs - „ - 87
Ablutions - - - 87
Slaughtering - - - 87
Priesthood - - - - - 89
Prayers - - - 89
Scriptures, Literature, &c. - - - 90
Mode of saluting the stranger - - 98
An Account of the Jews in Imiriti - _ - 100
Appendix.
ISRAEL DISCOVERED.
B
2 THE KINGDOM OF ISRAEL.
mankind.
The sin of David and the apostasy of Solomon
soon manifested their bitter fruits; and that
kingdom which seemed settled in their house in
its entireness, was rent in twain. In the reign
of their successor Rehoboam, the rebel tribes
affirmed to that fatal principle, which, in these
days it is almost treason to gainsay, (the right of
the people to govern themselves,) which was fol¬
lowed with such fatal consequences, “ What
portion have we in David ? neither have we
THE KINGrOM OF ISRAEL. 3
11.)
Strictly speaking, there were three deporta¬
tions of these tribes:
1st. Of the two and a half tribes, on the other
side of Jordan, by Pul and Tilgath-pilneser.
2nd, Of the bulk of the seven and a half tribes,
by Shalmaneser.
3rd. Of the remains of the latter, by Esar-
haddon, who swept the land of even the poor
lingerers on the mountains of Israel; so that
Israel could not by any means become a people ;
but remained broken as a nation, and broken as
a people too.
To make the riddance complete, Esar-haddon
“ brought men from Babylon, and from Cuthah
and from Ava, and from Hamath, and from
Sepharvaim, and placed them in the cities of
Samaria, instead of the children of Israel.” (Ezra
iv. 2, 10 ; 2 Kings xvii. 24.)
o
, .)
21 22
memorial abide.
But Israel is not only scattered and sifted among
the nations, but he is swallowed up amongst
the Gentiles ; he is as a people divorced from
God. He has lost the only sign of the covenant
which distinguishes the seed of Abraham, and
his name and memorial have perished. The
descendants of Judah and Benjamin, on the con¬
trary, are everywhere, and by all nations ac¬
knowledged as the Israel oi God, and will
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 13
* * * * * #
Turn, O backsliding children, saith the Lord
For I am married to you.
]4 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.
Tribes—
(continued.)
C
18 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.
rated.
22 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.
* On the Prophecies.
CONJECTURES CONCERNING THE TRIBES. 27
* History of Pennsylvania.
THE TRIBES. 35
d 2
36 CONJECTURES CONCERNING THE TRIBES.
E
50 THE PASSOVER.
rnjnntwi Jrr.
feast of Pentecost.*)
rwnn dv
FEAST OF TRUMPETS.
* Regarding the laws for the new year, and the obser¬
vances of the modern Jews, see Hilchath Rash Hashanah;
Hilchoth Teshunah ; Shulchan Aruck ; Prayers for the new
year.
58
“TID'D Dl>
FEAST OF TABERNACLES.
mDDn an
ninin.
chap, ii.)
“ When every preparation for the inauguration
was completed, no consecrated oil could be found
for the sacred lights, and the scrupulous Judas
justly feared to contaminate the purity of the
temple by using oil which had been defiled by
idolaters. In this strait, a small jar of oil, with
the seal of a former high priest, still inviolate, was
found ; and though the quantity which it con¬
tained was barely sufficient once to light the
sacred lamps, yet, by the special blessing of the
FAST DAYS. 05
DniD
FAST DAYS.
THE SABBATH.
FUNERALS.
DEFILEMENTS.
MARRIAGE.
G
82 MARRIAGE.
nVo nnn
CIRCUMCISION.
GENERAL PROOFS.
□>T /6'tM
ABLUTIONS.
mow
SLAUGHTERING.
PRIESTHOOD.
nbsn robn
PRAYERS.
t The time for the study of the Bible is at five years ; for
the Mishna ten. To be under the obligation of the law at
thirteen, and fifteen is the age for the study of the Talmud.
SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C. 93
H
98 PLACES OF ASSEMBLY
n 2
100 SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C.
rtVzitD.
THE JEWS IN BOMBAY, &c. 115
®reagum.
Henry Cremer, Esq., 40, Lime Street, Fenchurch Street.
P?onoravg j&ttretarg.
L. H. J. Tonna, Esq., United Service Institution
(Fro tern.)
©ommtttfc.
The Rev. John Cumming, Henry Cremer, Esq.
M.A. S. Dennis, Esq., Bank of
The Rev. T. Boys. England.
The Rev. — Monro, M.A. Richard King, Esq., Pay¬
Henry Blanshard, Esq. master General’s Office.
Captain Cotton, R.A. E. J. Longley, Esq.
Captain La yard, late 97 th. L. H. J. Tonna, Esq.
A. Turnbull, M.D. James Mondeau, Esq.
George Bogue, Esq.
120 APPENDIX.
AND
Extract.
“ * You are well aware that the grand principle on which our
connexion for the last five years has subsisted, and on which
our harmonious intercourse has been based, is, that in the
conduct of your mission, in all spiritual affairs, we refrain
from the assumption of all authority over you. While we
have to acknowledge that you have always been ready to listen
to our advice, and follow it as far as you thought you could
do so with propriety, we have ever acted on the assumption,
that the man who goes forth in dependence on Divine Provi¬
dence, not counting his life dear to him, that he may fulfil
the ministry of the word, is, to say the least, as likely to
know the path of duty as any other, and has as good a right
to suppose that divine directions will be afforded directly to
126 APPENDIX.
that I must do as the apostle did, and ‘ count all things but
loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ my
Lord; and therefore, if I would gain my kinsmen after the
flesh, I must go to this expense for their sakes.’
breathe upon them, that the bones may come together, bone to
his bone, and that the sinews and the flesh may come upon
them, and that they may live and stand up upon their feet, an
exceeding great army. The work indeed is great, the fields,
white for the harvest, are wide and measureless, and the weak
heart of man may at first be discouraged, and doubtingly ask,
4 Where shall the labourers be found ?’ But here we may
claim a precious promise. We may pray to the Lord of the
harvest to send forth labourers; and though we seem but a
little and a feeble band, yet let us remember that it is not by
might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord.
“ To His name be all power and honour and praise
ascribed, henceforth and for evermore. Amen.
“ H. L. Layard.
Thomas Fisher.
Lewis H. J. Tonna.”
“Having been prevented from attending the meetings of the
Sub-committee, I wish, after repeated conferences with Jacob
Samuel, and examination of data which he placed before the
Committee, to mark my unison with the above Report, and to
express my approval of the principle adopted by the Bombay
Society, which, whilst it gives to those who are engaged in the
work that “ Liberty of prophesying ” which every rightly
qualified minister should enjoy inviolate, retains in its hands a
necessary and wholesome check to errors, both in doctrine and
practice.
“Thomas Hodgkin, M.D.
« Lower Brook Street, Grosvenor Square,
2!2nd October, 1840.”
Lewis H. J. Tonna,
Hon. Sec. pro tem.
LONDON :
PRINTED BY IBOTSON AND PALMER, SAVOY STREET.
THE FOLLOWING WORKS
WILL BE PUBLISHED IN A FEW MONTHS
j&ubgcripttoit,
I.
A COMPLETE
II.
A JOURNAL
OF
Price 6 s.
III.
ON
“ For Zion’s sake I will not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem’s
sake I will not rest, until the righteousness thereof go forth as
brightness, and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth.”_
Isaiah lxii. 1.
LONDON:
1840.
Communications regarding the Indian Society for pro¬
moting the welfare of the Jews in India, Persia, and Arabia,
may be addressed to the Rev. Mr. Samuel, or to the Secre¬
tary of the Society, care of Messrs. Manning, Anderton,
and Co., 3, New Bank Buildings, London.
LONDON :
PRINTED BY JBOTSON AND PAI.MER, SAVOY STREET, STRAND.
TO CHRISTIANS
OF ALL DENOMINATIONS,
BUT ESPECIALLY
spirit of inquiry has led forth this people, in too many eases,
into neology and infidelity, there is an inquiry amongst the
Eastern Jews, which can only be substantially satisfied by the
faithful tidings of a free and full salvation by the blood of
the Cross. The Talmud does not prevail there as in
Europe. And, except in the case of a few thousand Jews
through India and Arabia, who have embraced Mahom-
medanism, (and who, to missionaries disposed to glory in the
flesh of a Jew, would, without much difficulty, be forward
subjects for baptism,) the Eastern Jews are a simple, devout
people, walking circumspectly in their law, and in submission
to their elders. A conquest amongst these achieves much
in its influence on the Jewish mind. I have rarely found a
lax Jew turn out a creditable Christian. And what a need
there is of simple, faithful missionaries amongst them to ma¬
nifest Christianity in its truth and power ! The Armenian
Church, with its corruptions and hostility to the seed of
Abraham, is the only institution from which the Jew derives
his notion of the Church of Christ. At Oormia, it is true,
where a few American missionaries labour amongst the Nes-
torians there, the sound of the Gospel is heard; but it is a
striking fact, that with all the excellence of the Nestorian
Christians, they bear a bitter hatred to the Jews.
Annexed to this is a table of the Jewish population, and of
missionaries required for the field of labour ;* men of God,
self-denying, laborious, counting not their lives dear to them,
upon whom not only the Cross, but the advent of Messiah in
power and glory, exerts its proper influence; leading them,
tor the love they bear their Saviour, to care for the lost sheep
who wander without a shepherd ! having in this cause, and
for this people, a love stronger than death,—an undying affec¬
tion which many waters cannot quench.
The limits of this address necessitate me to be brief: I
will, therefore, summarily make my appeal in an especial
manner to three classes in your native land, exerting, espe¬
cially the first and the last, a powerful and peculiar influence,
which I would fain engage, in some measure at least, on behalf
their first meeting. They have now been constituted five months,
and after a careful examination of the qualifications and character
of Mr. Samuel, they have resolved to employ him as their agent to
lead the Jews at this Presidency to a knowledge of the truths of
our holy religion; by which alone they can receive remission of sins,
and become partakers of the kingdom of heaven.
President. The Rev. Archdeacon Corrie.
Treasurer. The Rev. T. Dealtry.
Secretary. Alexander Beatie, Esq., No. 8, Esplanade Row.
*
Sermons on the Jews, 1686—8.
16
JACOB SAMUEL,
Senior Missionary of the Indian
Association for Promoting the Welfare of
the Jews in India, Persia, and Arabia.
London, Oct. 1st, 1840.
c
APPENDIX.
PLAN OF A SCHOOL
ESTABLISHED BY
1st. The revealed religion being the basis of this Institution, the
Bible is to be considered as its school-book, reserving, however, the
New Testament until the intellect of the pupils is sufficiently ad¬
vanced to understand the prophecies relating to the coming of the
Messiah, For that purpose they will be examined in the Old
Testament concerning the character, offices, miracles, and all the testi¬
monies the prophets give of the divine nature of the expected Messiah,
it being considered that an earlier introduction of the New Testament
amongst the Jews would not only be labour lost, but mischief done.
2nd. Besides the Scriptures, which are to be taught in their native
languages, namely, Hebrew and Arabic, arithmetic, penmanship,
civil and natural history, geography, the use of the globes, the ele¬
ments of chemistry, some practical knowledge of man as a physical,
moral, and intellectual being, and English literature, to be commu¬
nicated in the English language.
3rd. Scholars who have attained the ninth year shall attend, for one
year before their removal from the School, to lectures on the funda-
19
SUBSCRIPTION LIST
In aid of the School Establishment for the Benefit of the Jews in
Aden.
Monthly Annual
NAMES OF SUBSCRIBERS. Subscrip¬ Subscrip¬ Donations.
tions. tions.
Commandant Yeadell - 30
R. Diggles, esq., Governor of
21 11 10
Batavia -
Rev. G. Arbuthnot 20 8
DEPOSITED WITH
BY A CONVERTED JEW.
Peace be unto the beloved elder. Rabbi Jacob, son of Rabbi Samuel,
priest of the living God. Be it known unto my lord, that I, who
am of dust and ashes, Samuel, the son of Rabbi Isaac, servant to
my lord, came to this city last year, and heard that you arrived
here. The first thing I did was to find out your place of residence,
and came to find grace in your sight, that I might disclose to
you the secrets of my heart, that you might have mercy on me,
and teach me where my soul might find rest, even in Jesus the
Messiah.
It is now four years since I first came to Calcutta, when I heard
of your preaching from the law and the prophets, and proving to our
brethren that Jesus is the Messiah; and from the many New Tes¬
taments you had given to the Jews, I procured one, and gave my
heart to inquire into the truth of this doctrine, wherein I read and
found many passages which agree with the law and the prophets
concerning the Messiah. I prayed then to God (blessed be He !)
that he would give me a spirit of understanding, that I might know
and receive the truth as it is in Jesus the Messiah. Blessed be he,
and blessed be bis holy name, who has now heard my prayers, taken
away my stony heart, and given me a heart of flesh ; and by this I
know that Jesus is the Messiah my Lord. I now come to my master
for instruction, that I may learn which is the good way, that I may
walk therein; but before this, it is needful that I, Samuel, the son
of Rabbi Isaac, from Bagdad, testify that I believe Jesus is the
Messiah, who came the first time. I believe that he will come a
second lime to redeem all Israel. I believe that there is no other
22
(
Extract from the Minutes of the Committee of the Associa¬
tion in aid of the Rev. Jacob Samuel's Mission to the
Asiatic Jews, held in St. Andrew's Church, Bombay,
November 22nd, 1839.
INTER ALIA,
Resolved,—
SUMMARY OF LABOURS
Times. Persons.
Preached from Moses’ Chair, and on the various
Gotts, an average audience 60, 110 6600
Visited families for private preaching, average 50, - 300 15000
Meetings for reading the Scriptures with adult Jews,
average 10, - 34 340
IN COCHIN.
BOMBAY PRESIDENCY.
IN ARABIA.
IN YEMEN.
DISTRIBUTION OF SCRIPTURES.
Copies.
Hebrew New Testaments,
1
1500
Old Testaments, To Jews, 500
Parts of Scripture, 1300
Scrij)tures, Old and New,
To Mussulmen, 6486
and parts.
Total, 9786
GENERAL LABOURS.
* With the exception of the Bibles granted by the British and Foreign Bible
Society, these labours were effected without the smallest assistance from the
parent country. The Scriptures were carried on mules and camels over an ex¬
tent of country averaging 10,000 miles.
28
November, 1838.
,
Extract of a Letter from Ezekiel Mazlech the Company's
Indigo Broker, Calcutta, to Daniel Cokin, Merchant,
Cochin.
November, 1833.
March, 1835.
March, 1835.
Extract of a Letter from David Sasun {an Elder and a
respectable merchant in Bombay) to his brother in Bussorah .
Receive, my brother, the bearer of this, Chaham Samuel Cohin,
who, though a Christian, is a very good and learned man.
March, 1835.
Extract from a Letter of Recommendation from the Nase of
Bussorah to Hacham Moses, Judge of the Jews in Bagdad.
Rabbi Samuel Cohin has requested me to give him an introduc¬
tion, which I could not refuse, for he had the power of bringing
great evils upon my head, and yet, contrary to what we expected,
he did me great favours, and honour to all the Jews here. He is a
great Talmud caham, and I hope you will be able to contradict his
arguments in favour of the Nazarene doctrines, for our Haam from
Jerusalem as well as ourselves are too weak scholars for him.
March, 1837.
Extract of a Letter from Rabbi Benjamin to the Rev. J.
Samuel.
Your discourses have caused great commotion amongst the Jews
here, and scarcely do we find two or three together without disputing
about the Christian doctrines; some approve and others disapprove
of them; but though many believe that Jesus is the Messiah, yet
none is more ready to you than myself.
If you permit me, I will follow you during the rest of my days,
and preach faithfully as you did last Saturday.
tOtOO)
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PLAN OF THE ASSOCIATION
FOR PROMOTING THE WELFARE OF THE JEWS IN INDIA, PERSIA, AND ARABIA ;
MISSIONARIES WANTED.
Seven Missionaries are wanted immediately, in connexion with the
foregoing Mission. Communications to be addressed to Mr. Samuel,
as aforesaid.
LONDON:
PRINTED BY IBOTSON AND PALMER, SAVOY STREET, STRAND.
DATE DUE
ntm*m 5
GAYLORD PRINTED IN U S A.