MONARCHS
OF DESTINY – KING GEORGE III
by Brooks Alden
I
suppose, depending on one’s viewpoint, that George
was regarded in quite opposite ways. To the Americans, he
was and probably still is, looked upon as a greedy and overbearing
monarch and is still hated by many to this very day. Yet,
to his subjects of the day, he was popular and conscientious.
He became heir to the throne on the death of his father,
was the third monarch of the House of Hanover and the first
to have been born in Britain and to use English as his first
language. George devoted the required time to read all government
papers and he took a strong interest in policy. His political
influence proved most decisive on many occasions and he
could be most determined when he felt the cause was just.
For example, it was primarily his opposition to ending the
war with the colonies that kept it going until 1783. Another
example took place in 1801, when Prime Minister William
Pitt (the younger), wanted to grant Catholics full civil
rights. George III felt his coronation oath to uphold the
rights of the Church of England was such that he forced
Pitt’s resignation. Still, on the other hand, this
was a monarch who fostered a progressive and cultured environment
in England. Literature enjoyed a heyday as the writings
of men like Scott, Burns, Shelley, Byron and Wordsworth
flourished; great artists like Gainsborough and Reynolds
created their masterpieces and the British Museum was established
(65,000 of his books were later given to the Museum). George
personally founded the Royal Academy of Arts. In science
and invention, the progress was remarkable during George’s
reign, as things like the steam engine; the first machinery,
canal construction and spinning frames became realities.
Yet, George was a staunch family man as well, devoted to
his wife and fifteen children. Disappointed in his sons’
(and some of his brothers’) selection of wives, he
pushed the Marriages Act of 1772 through parliament, which
calls for the consent of the reigning sovereign for the
marriage on any lineal descendant, with few exceptions.
So many other momentous events took place in the reign of
George III. But perhaps this is an appropriate time to return
to our opening Bible passage from Isaiah 49: 1, 20. God
begins by saying, “Listen O Isles, the children which
thou shalt have, after thou has lost the other….”
God said, “after thou have lost the other.”
Of course, this part of the passage refers to America Manasseh,
the great nation of whom Jacob Israel spoke of in Genesis
48: 19, 20 thirty-five centuries earlier. So, significantly,
it would not have mattered who sat on the Throne of David
(England) at the time, Isaiah’s prophecy was going
to happen, for God had measured the times. The Bible tells
us in 1 Chronicles 5: 26, “And the God of Israel stirred
up…..Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria and he carried
them away, even the Reubenites, and the Gadites, and the
half tribe of Manasseh and brought them unto Halah, and
Habor, and Hara, and to the river Gozan, unto this day.”
History has shown this attack to have taken place in 745
BC, thus Manesseh’s seven times punishment began.
So, let’s look at how the prophecy unfolded.
-
In 745 BC, he King of Assyria begins to war against the
tribes of Manasseh. Exactly seven times (7 x 360 years)
later, in 1776 AD, the American Declaration of Independence
was issued.
-
In 732 BC, the Assyrians deported the conquered half tribe
of Manasseh to Northern Assyria. Exactly 2,520 years later
(seven times), in 1789 AD, George Washington becomes the
first President of the United States of America under
its new Constitution
So,
as prophesied, the “other” was lost. King George
III is often blamed, yet the break was simply a plank in
God’s Plan. In truth, George III wasn’t even
the instrument that God employed as the stimulus for the
break. It was an unwise Parliament that developed the Stamp
Act of 1765 and the Townshend duties of 1767 on tea, paper
and other products, legislation that led to the War of Independence.
It should be pointed out that George III became hated in
America more so because he linked himself with that Parliament.
George III was monarch at the time when Britain Ephraim
came out from under their 2,520 years of punishment as well.
The Bible tells us, “And it came to pass in the fourth
year of king Hezekiah……….that Shalmaneser,
king of Assyria came up against Samaria (meaning the northern
Kingdom or House of Israel) and beseiged it……….And
the King of Assyria did carry away Israel unto Assyria and
put them in Halah and in Habor by the river of Gozan, and
in the cities of the Medes” (2 Kings 18: 9-11). History
tells us this invasion took place in 721 BC and the remaining
tribes of the ten tribed Northern House of Israel, including
the tribe of Ephraim, are deported to Northern Assyria.
Exactly 2,520 years later (seven times), in 1800 AD, Great
Britain and Ireland united to form the United Kingdom. The
ruler was a descendant of King David of the tribe of Judah.
God is truly amazing. He established an intricate plan that
has so many variables, yet it employs the frailties of His
People to bring it about. Re-quoting Isaiah’s prophecy,
“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.”
So there were to be other children, in fact, there had to
be, because Jacob had said of Ephraim (Genesis 48: 19,20),
“his seed shall become a multitude of nations.”
It was during King George III’s reign that the extension
of English rule to Australia, Canada, New Zealand and many
other parts of the world took place as the seeds of the
Commonwealth of Nations were sown.
Amazingly, many other important events took place under
the rule of George III. To name just a few, the passing
of the East India bill, the great naval victories of Lord
Nelson and the final defeat of Napoleon by the Duke of Wellington
are of great significance. Probably no monarchial reign
from the time of Solomon was more significant in the history
of the Israelites. Indeed, during George III’s reign,
Britain had come of age; the seven times punishment was
over and a glorious century lay ahead. Of course, there
is more to Isaiah’s prophecy beyond Verse 20 but it
relates to the time beyond George III and shall be left
for a future study.
Sadly, it is strongly suspected that King George III was
inflicted with a little understood disease known as “porphria”
and it created spells of madness, the last in 1810, which
resulted in personal rule being handed over to his son,
who later was to become George IV. George III died in 1820,
deaf, blind and mad. It has often been said that those with
the greatest gifts invariably have rough roads to tread.
George was certainly a gifted man and it goes without saying
that his journey was anything but smooth. Still, it was
under George’s kingship that Great Britain emerged
as the world’s greatest ever-colonial power. Indeed,
there is little doubt that George III was one of the great
“Monarchs of Destiny.”
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