“Listen,
O Isles, unto me: and hearken ye people, from afar……..The
children which thou shalt have, after thou hast lost the
other, shall say again in thine ears, The place is too strait
for me; give place to me that I may dwell.” (Isaiah
49: 1,20)
In
this series of Monarchs of Destiny, we have looked at the
lives and significance of four monarchs. With Edward I,
we witnessed the third overturn of the Throne of David as
prophesied by the prophet Ezekiel (Ezekiel 21: 26,27). We
also saw the introduction of parliament and how Edward ceded
it more power than he would have liked because of his great
need of money to fight his war with Scotland. With Henry
VIII, we saw how parliamentary power weakened with the Tudors
and how Henry was extremely autocratic. Yet, Henry’s
reign was indeed a significant time in God’s Great
Plan, as the Reformation came to pass and Britain became
a European power for the first time. With Elizabeth I, we
watched as this great English monarch led British Ephraim
into the final period of punishment and out of the shadow
of the other great European powers. And we witnessed the
firm entrenchment of the Reformation after a short setback
under Bloody Mary’s reign. Yet, as powerful and autocratic
as Elizabeth I was, she did try to work in concert with
parliament on many issues. On the other hand, her successor,
King James I, although he was also autocratic, struggled
with a stronger parliament, particularly for his money needs.
Still, it was his reign that saw the partial fulfillment
of the two sticks as Scotland and England became one nation
(Ezekiel 37: 19-22). Of course, his reign also saw the introduction
of the Authorized King James Version of the Bible. Our next
monarch of destiny, King George III, didn’t have the
same freedom from parliamentary sanctions. He tried to pursue
an autocratic style, but couldn’t and was burdened
with a parliament that made some dramatic errors of judgment,
errors that cast a dark shadow on his long reign. He reigned
from 1760 to 1820.
It almost seems a travesty of justice that King George III
is primarily remembered for two unfavourable events in his
life, that is, losing the American colonies and going mad.
For, in reality, his reign was placed at a highly significant
time in God’s Great Plan for Israel. To view its importance,
we have to go back to Genesis 35: 10-12 when God spoke to
Jacob at Bethel and said to him, “……Israel
shall be thy name……..a nation and a company
of nations shall be of thee, and kings shall come out of
thy loins; and the land which I gave Abraham and Isaac,
to thee I will give it, and to thy seed after thee will
I give the land.” Many scholars mistake the land as
being just the lands of Canaan promised Abraham in Genesis
13: 14,15 but overlook the vision God granted to Isaac (Genesis
26: 3-5) wherein Isaac was shown all the countries in which
his seed would occupy. It was these countries to which the
prophet Nathan referred when he carried God’s Word
to King David, “Moreover I will appoint a place for
my people Israel….” (2 Samuel 7: 10). Genesis
35: 11 set the stage for the nation and company (commonwealth)
of nations. The leaders of those nations were identified
when Jacob Israel adopted, so to speak, the two sons of
his beloved son Joseph and set the stage for their destiny.
Speaking of Manasseh, the eldest, God said, “…he
shall also become a people, and he also shall be great….”
Of the younger Ephraim, He said, “but truly his younger
brother shall be greater than he, and his seed shall become
a multitude of nations……….and he set Ephraim
before Manasseh….” (Genesis 48: 19,20). Then,
in his blessing of all the tribes, it is clear that the
tribe of Joseph was to be the leading tribe of all Israel,
with great possessions and wealth and special protection
from the Lord God Almighty (Genesis 22-26).
We know the tribes later went into Egyptian captivity, were
led to Sinai by Moses, brought into a (marriage) relationship
with God as the Kingdom of God was formally established
(Exodus 19) and the Constitution (Laws) were codified. The
national punishment for disobedience was clearly identified
when God told His New Bride, “And if ye will not yet
for all this hearken unto me, then I will punish you seven
times more for your sins” (Leviticus 26: 18). Those
who read “Monarchs of Destiny-Elizabeth I” in
the September, 2001 Thy Kingdom Come know that the conversion
process brings the seven times to 2,520 years. Then too,
most readers are knowledgeable about the subsequent conquest
of Canaan, the division of the lands, the beginning of the
Throne of God with David as its first occupant, the split
in the Kingdom after Solomon, the wickedness of the people
and the beginning of the seven periods of punishment as
God permitted the Assyrians to conquer the House of Israel
and most of the House of Judah (the separated nations) and
banish them from Canaan. Ultimately, we know that they made
their way across Europe. The tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh,
the inheritors of the Covenant God made with Abraham (1
Chronicles 5: 1) and importantly, the inheritors of the
very name “Israel” (Genesis 48: 16), arrived
in the “isles of the sea” over the ensuing centuries,
along with great numbers of the other tribes.
History has shown us that the tribe of Manasseh was first
attacked and brought under submission by the Assyrians in
745 BC and the tribe of Ephraim was conquered in 721 BC.
In the ensuing years, the Israelites in these nations were
sent to Northern Assyria and the punishment promised them
in Leviticus 26: 18 began. By the time of George III, those
periods of punishment for the sons of Joseph were set to
expire.