The following study identifies the Two Houses of Israel, the House of Israel, known as Ephraim, and the House
of Judah, as they are found in the Scriptures.
The study begins
with their history, and ends with their fulfillment of the Avrahamic Covenant. It
reveals how the people of Israel have shaped the history of the world.
The Two House teaching is one of the most important
studies that a believer should have after receiving salvation, and learning the fundamental doctrines of the faith. Without proper understanding of the Two House theme of Yahueh's Word, the believer cannot properly align
the First Covenant with the Renewed Covenant, and that is precisely why false teaching and religious doctrines have thrived
in Christianity for centuries.
This study begins with the ten instructions of
Torah given to the Kings of Israel.
All sources
for Scriptures are noted.
Torah Instructions for the Kings of Israel
Deuteronomy
17:14-20 gives the ten instructions for the Kings of Israel to follow:
1. The
King must be selected by Yahueh, not the people.
2. The
King must be an Israelite.
3. He
shall not acquire many horses.
4. He
must not have many wives.
5. He must not acquire great wealth.
6. He
must write a copy of Torah for Himself.
7. He
must read Torah to learn to revere or fear Yahueh.
8. He
must carefully follow Torah.
9. He
must be humble.
10. He must
not turn away/stray from Torah.
It was paramount for the King to understand that
if Yahueh's instructions were followed, the presiding King of Israel would be greatly blessed, and his descendants would continue to reign over the Kingdom of Israel
as a dynasty.
Yahueh's Punishment for a King's Disobedience
I Kings 9:1-9
Yahueh reminded Solomon to obey Torah. If he did not, the Kingdom of Israel would suffer consequences. If Solomon or his sons turned away from Yahueh and did not follow Torah to serve other
elohim/gods or to worship them, THE PEOPLE KNOWN AS ISRAEL WOULD SUFFER. The
following things would happen:
1. "....., then I will cut off Israel from the land," I
Kings 9:7, NIV. The Hebrew word for "cut off" is "karath" which means to be "destroyed, consumed, cut down." The basic understanding of the Hebrew here is that the people "Israel" would be left alone in the gentile/heathen world without Yahueh, separated from Him, and inevitably
enter into a pact or covenant with an enemy to eventually be destroyed or perish.
2. Solomon's
Temple would be "cast out of Yahueh's sight." The Hebrew word
for "cast out" is "shalach" meaning "send away from, forsake, leave, depart (to remove His presence, the
Shekinah glory)."
3. Israel
as a nation of people would become a byword (a proverb, an epigraph or something amusing from the
past and given little thought to), a thing of mockery, an object of ridicule, scorn, and taunt among all the
people of the world.
4. Solomon's
Temple would be scoffed at.
5. People
of the world would instinctively know that the people called Israel stopped worshipping Yahueh, and embraced,
worshipped, and served other elohim (gods), meaning to participate in pagan Gentile religions.
A King's Disobedience Brings Division to the Nation of Israel
I Kings 11:9-13
tells us that Solomon refused to obey Yahueh and follow His Torah. So Yahueh warned Solomon that
as a result of his disobedience Yahueh would tear the Kingdom of Israel in two (divide in two parts). This would happen during Solomon's son's reign, and his son would have only one tribe, Judah, to reign
over. Yahueh would give the Tribe of Judah to Solomon's son for the sake of David.
A Divided Kingdom - Two Houses - 931-586 B.C.E.
I Kings 11:26-43 Yahueh sent His prophet Ahiyah to a young man named Yeroboam/Jeroboam. The prophet tore his new cloak into twelve
pieces to represent the twelve tribes of Israel. To show Yeroboam what Yahueh intended to do to the nation of Israel, Ahiyah gave Yeroboam 10 pieces of the torn cloak to represent
ten tribes of the
nation of Israel. Ahiyah then related that Solomon's son would have only one
tribe given to him for the sake of David and the City of Yerusalem/Jerusalem.
The one tribe
given to Solomon's son would be the merger of the Tribe of Judah with the Tribe of Benyamin/Benjamin and the Levites. Yeroboam would become King over the ten tribes in the north, and Rehoboam, Solomon's
son would be King over the one tribe merger of the south. The Kingdom of Israel
would be two distinct Kingdoms. The prophet Ahiyah admonished Yeroboam to follow
Yahueh's instructions so that his Kingdom would be blessed and be a lasting dynasty to humble the Tribe of Judah for a period
of time.
Upper Division:
Northern Kingdom of Israel - House of Israel (10 Tribes)
I Kings 12:25-33 during Yeroboam's reign over the ten tribes of the north, he became fearful that his people would continue to go down to the Southern Kingdom under his rival, King
Rehoboam, to celebrate the Feast Days of Yahueh as they were commanded to do so in Exodus 23:14-17. His fear may have been based on several things that most leaders would face. The distance and effort
to cross over borders might cause his people to want to live in
the Southern Kingdom to be closer to the Temple in Yerusalem for the Feast Days. If his people moved to the Southern Kingdom,
he would suffer great financial and agricultural losses, and military strength in his Northern Kingdom.
The Golden Calf Worship System of the House of Israel - Northern Kingdom
To keep his people at home and happy in the Northern
Kingdom, Yeroboam developed the "Golden Calf Worship System." He built two temples
and strategically placed them in the Northern Kingdom. One was in the City of
Dan near the upper Northern border close to Mt. Hermon, and the other in the City of Bethel on the Southern border that divided
the two Kingdoms.
The focus of
worship in these temples was a "golden calf." Yeroboam mixed Torah worship of
Yahueh with the revived Egyptian "golden calf" Sun-god religion that Israel's
ancestors had learned when
they were in Egypt during their 430 years of slavery. Yeroboam's greatest sin was that he called his newly formed pagan religion
the true worship of Yahueh.
Exodus 32:1-6 relates how the people of Israel fell back into the "Golden Calf Worship" while Moshe/Moses was up on Mt. Sinai
receiving Yahueh's Torah instructions for the people of Israel. These verses
give us a clue that the Israelites had been involved in Egyptian Sun-god worship during their years of slavery. According to Egyptian mythology, the
Egyptians worshipped Amen-Ra/Amen-Rah/Rah as their high Sun-god, later called Osiris. They believed
that the gods could not be visibly seen, so they entered into
the bodies of animals so that they could reveal themselves through the characteristics of the animal. Amen-Rah/Osiris was believed to be like a strong and virile bull, and lived in the body of a special breed
of bulls, called Hap-bulls. These Hap-bulls were kept in the City of Ptah where
the Egyptians formed molten statues of the Hap-bulls to be used in the religious ceremonies of worship to Amen-Rah/Osiris. Eventually the Hap-bull statues became fashioned to look like a half-man, half-bull creature called
Apis, (Egyptian Mythology, Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2001).
Yeroboam instituted his false worship of Yahueh
approximately 930 years before Yahushua came to earth.
Lower Division - Southern Kingdom (1 Tribe-Judah, Benyamin, Levites) - House of Judah
I Kings 14:21-31
tells us that Rehoboam, Solomon's son, ruled over Judah, the Southern Kingdom. Scripture also tells us that the Southern Kingdom did evil in Yahueh's eyes.
1. The
people of Judah were worshipping the sexual, fertility gods and goddesses of Canaanite/Babylonian origin
which dated back to Cush, Nimrod, and the "Queen of Heaven, " Nimrod's wife, Simmeranis
also known as "Ishtar, Eostre, Eos, Ostara, Astarte, and Eastre." From the worship of this
goddess, comes the pagan origin of today's Easter
celebrations. Jeremiah 7:18
tells us that even later in Judah's history, the people of Judah continued
to worship this goddess by baking cakes as offerings to the Babylonian goddess "Ishtar," (The Two Babylons,
by Alexander Hislop).
2. The
people of Judah erected stone pillars and altars, and fertility poles called Asherah/Asherath poles on hills or high places. These poles symbolized the "male genital organ." The Asherah poles, the Egyptian obelisks, church towers
and steeples, the Washington Monument are all
related to the ancient poles and obelisks of Sun-god worship. Male
prostitution was also engaged in during Judah's worst sins against Yahueh.
As a result of these sins, Rehoboam's reign suffered. Solomon's valuable golden shields and articles were stolen from the Temple in Yerusalem,
and continual warfare plagued Judah which probably drained the Kingdom's treasuries.
The Nation's Punishment for Disobedience
Deuteronomy.
28:64-68 expressly states that Yahueh's punishment for the
nation's (twelve tribes) disobedience would be the following:
1. The
people would be scattered among all nations throughout the world.
2. They
would worship and serve other gods.
3. They
would have no repose (peace) nor resting place for their feet (be on the move; migrate).
4. They
would have anxious minds (anxiety; fear; worry; wishful thinking), eyes failing or weary with longing (to desire something unattainable; crave for), and sorrow of being (to have self-pity).
5. They
would be in constant fear, suspense, and dread.
6. They
would have no assurance of their future (complete uncertainty).
7. They
would go back to Egypt once again; Egypt as an example of slavery, hardship,
and turmoil found in the world.
Exile - Punishment Fulfilled
Northern Kingdom - House of Israel - 732-721 B.C.E.
II Kings 17:1-40
due to their sins of idolatry and whoredom, the House of Israel, the ten tribes of the Northern Kingdom were sent into exile as captives of the Assyrian Empire. The beginning of the exile of the numerously populated ten tribes of
the North began in 745 B.C. E. when Yahueh raised up the Assyrians to invade the Northern Kingdom, the House of Israel. Throughout the following years, Assyrians deported huge masses of Israelites into
Assyrian held lands, transplanting them as laborers within the Assyrian Empire. Yahueh's punishment was fulfilled upon the House of Israel, the ten tribes of the Northern Kingdom of Israel:
1. They
would be rejected by Yahueh (Jeremiah 3:8, Hosea 9:17).
2. They
would be invaded and taken captive by the brutal Assyrians (II Kings 17:23).
3. Their
lands of the Northern Kingdom would be resettled by Assyrian captives taken from other lands (II Kings 17:24).
4. They
would be scattered among the Gentile nations (Deuteronomy 4:27; Ezekiel 36:21). The Israelites were scattered among
Assyrian held lands. After the Assyrian Empire declined, they began to migrate further away from Assyrian
lands. The largest portion of the Israelite refugees moved north toward the European areas to eventually
settle. In the nations, they would accept Gentile cultures and adopt heathen religions. The Israelites
would intermingle
and intermarry with Gentile people and have mixed offspring. They would so thoroughly assimilate
that they would become like Gentiles, thus they became "invisible" in the world and were believed to be "lost." They continued to move from lands to lands to eventually
migrate throughout all the world (Hosea 9:17).
5. They
would lose their identity as Israelites, and their conscience would be seared (Hosea 7:8, 8:8). (KJ reads the best on Hosea 8:8.)
6. The
Israelites would not return to their land in Israel as the House of Israel, or the ten tribes, until their hearts returned to Yahueh (Deuteronomy
4:29-31), and the prophecies of restoration
would be fulfilled Ezekiel 37:21-22; Hosea 2:22-23).
Hosea's Life Becomes An Allegory for the House of Israel
Hosea 1:2-10 states that Yahueh called the Prophet Hosea to live out an allegory regarding the destiny of the House of Israel,
the ten tribes of the Northern Kingdom of Israel. The real life allegorical experience
for Hosea was to show him how Yahueh looked upon the House of Israel and how He would mete out punishment for their sins.
1. Hosea
represents Yahueh as Israel's husband.
2. Gomer
represents the House of Israel as an adulterous, rebellious wife, a spiritual fornicator and idolator.
3. Their
marriage represents an unholy union between Torah and pagan religion.
4. Jezreel
is a Hebrew name that has a dual meaning: In the negative, it means "to scatter;" in the positive, it means "to regather."
5. Lo-Ruhamah
is a Hebrew word that means "no compassion."
6. Lo-Ammi
is a Hebrew word that means "not my people;" term of rejection. The allegory depicts Yahueh's punishment for the House of Israel, the ten tribes.
Hosea and Gomer's
marriage depicts how Yahueh sees the House of Israel that was once married to Yahueh, in union with Him, and how Israel as His wife broke the marriage
vows. He gave His Torah to Israel at Mt. Sinai as the "ketubah" or marriage contract
which they agreed to abide in (Exodus 19:8).
The three children depict what would happen to the House of Israel:
1. Yahueh would scatter ("Jezreel" in the negative
meaning of the name) the Israelites among the nations as punishment for their sins; exile them.
2. He
would have no compassion or mercy on them during their exile.
3. He
would strip them of their Israelite identity by saying they are not His people thereby rejecting them.
However, Hosea
1:10 also reveals five positive things that would occur with the House of Israel during
their exile among the Gentile nations of the world.
1. The
House of Israel, the ten tribes of Northern Israel would literally fulfill the Avrahamic Covenant. The
Israelites would become like the sand on the seashore, so many that they can not be measured or counted
as stated in the Avrahamic Covenant (Genesis 15:5).
NOTE: At this point, one should realize
that the population ratio between the
House of Israel and the House of Judah from ancient times to modern day has always been a reality that the "Jews" have been smaller in number than the Israelites. The House of Judah can not possibly fulfill Gen.15:5 by itself.
2. At
a future time, Yahueh will no longer refer to the Israelites as "not my people." They will be reinstated in Yahueh's good favor.
3. Yahueh
will call the Israelites "sons of the living Elohim." In
Romans 9:24-27, Rav Shaul (Paul) refers to Hosea 1:10
in his statement to
the Messianic congregation in Rome. He states that Yahueh is calling His people out from not only the Jews but
also from among the Gentiles, and from both Houses a remnant will be saved. The remnant is Redeemed Israel which includes the saved from both Houses and non-descendants
from the Gentile world.
4. The House of Israel will be reunited with the House of Judah under
one leader, Yahushua HaMashiach (Jeremiah 3:18; Ezekiel 37:15-28; Hosea 1:11).
5. They
will come up out of the land (earth) in the Day of Jezreel. This Promise refers to the positive side of the name
"Jezreel" meaning "to regather." This Promise also alludes to two deeper levels
of spiritual understanding:
A.. The Israelites along with the Jews will be taken from the four corners of the earth to be regathered in Eretz Israel in the near future (Isaiah 11:12).
B. The Israelite portion of the remnant along with the other saints will
be resurrected from the earth when Messiah comes in the clouds (1 Thessalonians 4:16-17).
Good News For the House of Israel
Hebrews 8:8-12
The Messianic author of the Book of Hebrews understood very well the plight of the ten tribes, the House of Israel, and the House of Judah. He
was making
note of all the many references in the Prophets concerning the Two Houses. He made note that in the "last days" the tribes would recover
their relationship with Yahueh. In particular, he referenced that Yahueh will
put Torah in the minds of the people of the House of Israel, and write Torah
on their hearts. He further said that Yahueh will be their Elohim (Mighty Sworn One), and they will be His people
once more; He will forgive the people of their sins and remember their sins no more.
Futhermore,
Yahueh intends to rename the people of the House of Israel even while they still exist in exile:
Hosea 1:10b
says, "In the place where it was said to them (House of Israel),
'You are not my people (rejection by Yahueh),' they will be called 'sons of the living Elohim (God)," NIV.
Rabbi Shaul (Paul) told the congregation of Israelites meeting in Rome
that those of the House of Israel that had returned to Yahueh,
quoting from Hosea 1:10, he exhorted them that they were "the sons of the living Elohim (God);" they were to remain in a humble heart and not look
down on the House of Judah because they had not yet returned (Romans 9, 10, 11).
The Israelites will recover their relationship
with Yahueh. The following Scriptures all speak of their recovery: Jeremiah 3:11-13, 31:18-20, 33:7-8, 14, 23-26, 50:4-6, 19-
20; Ezekiel 11:17, 36:24-31.
Yahushua Came To Save the House of Israel
Matthew 10:6 says,
"Go rather to the lost sheep of Israel," NIV.
Matthew 10:6
says, " But go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel," KJV.
Matthew 10:6
says, " But rather go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel,"
The Scriptures.
The NIV translation has left out the important word "house" in the above verse. The word "house" indicates
that Yahushua gave His twelve talmidim (disciples) specific instructions to seek out the descendants of the House of Israel
(ten tribes) to bring them the Good News.
Matthew 15:24
states, "I was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel," NIV.
Matthew 15:24
states, "I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel," KJV.
Matthew 15:24
states, " I was not sent except to the lost sheep of the house of Israel" The Scriptures.
Again the NIV translation leaves out the word "house" which clarifies that an important aspect of Yahushua's earthly ministry was to see that the ten tribes of Israel that were in exile beyond the borders
of Eretz Israel were given the opportunity to hear the Good News. Yahushua wanted them to know that their
time of exile was over and that they could return to their Elohim (God).
Matthew 18:11
further says, "For the Son of Adam (Messiah) has come to save what was lost," The Scriptures. That which is "lost" refers to the ten tribes
of Israel, and their descendants down through their generations. The Great Commission
is a seek, find, save, and restore mission (Matthew
28:18-20). The key word in Matthew 28:19 is "nations"
for that is where the tribes were to be found and are to be found even today.
"....To the
twelve tribes scattered among the nations: Greetings," James 1:1, NIV.
The House of Israel, Ten Tribes of Northern Israel Are Known By Other Names
The House of Israel is known by several other
names in the Scriptures depending
on how Yahueh
speaks about them, or depicts them to the Prophet He speaks to. We must learn to distinguish the following
names that pertain to the House of Israel. Scripture examples are given for each
name.
1. House of Israel refers to the Northern Kingdom (I
Kings 12:21; Jeremiah 31:31).
2. Samaria is a reference to their state of idolatry or being like the pagans that Assyria planted in the Northern Kingdom (Hosea
7:1, 8:5-6, 13:16).
3. House of Joseph because the two tribes resulting from Joseph's two sons, Manasseh
and Ephraim, literally filled the Northern Kingdom during its existence due to their numbers. It is also a reference to their numerous descendants that would continue to fill
the nations during their exile (I Kings 11:28).
4. Ephraim as a picture of the House of Israel who would spiritually perish in the Gentile nations where they were
scattered because they had forsaken Torah; apart from Torah there is no spiritual knowledge. It is an allegorical picture of the House of Israel participating in pagan religions, believing that they have spiritual knowledge but in
fact are destroying themselves spiritually (Hosea 4:17, 5:3, 7:1).
5. Manasseh as a picture of the House of Israel seen as two tribes, Manasseh and Ephraim at odds with each other (sibling rivalry) but together
carrying hatred toward the House of Judah (Isaiah 9:21).
Exile - Punishment Fulfilled
Southern Kingdom - House of Judah - 605-586 B.C.E.
II Kings 24:8-17,
II Kings 25; Jeremiah 52 tells us that Judah also suffered
for their sins against
Yahueh. During the years of 605-586 B.C.E., the Babylonian army under Nebuchadnezzer invaded the
Southern Kingdom of Judah three times.The first invasion occurred in Yehoichin/Jehoichin's reign.
He was taken
prisoner along with all the officers and fighting men, all the craftsmen and artisans, and taken into exile into Babylon. In 597 B.C.E., the second invasion took place and more captives of the House of Judah were taken into Babylon.
Then in 586 B.C.E. the Babylonians
destroyed
Yerusalem, captured King Zedekiah, and executed officials. Jewish rabbis, scribes
and priests were among those taken captive by the Babylonians (God Intervenes in the Middle
East, by Marion F. Kremers. Yahueh's punishment came with the high
price of exile into foreign lands under the heavy yoke of the Babylonians.
Jeremiah 25:11,
"This whole country will become a desolate wasteland, and these nations (Judah, Benyamin, Levites) will serve the King
of Babylon seventy years."
House of Judah Released From Babylonian Captivity - 536 B.C.E.
The Book of Ezra tells us that after 70 years of captivity
had passed, King Cyrus
of Persia/Babylon announced to the survivors of the captivity that Yahueh had appointed him to rebuild the Temple in Yerusalem. The exiles were allowed to return to Yerusalem to help build the Temple.
A remnant of Judah, Benyamin, and Levites returned to their homeland. The
remainder of the captives chose not to return. Many remained in Babylon to eventually wander out into other lands. In those lands, they
would be "visible"
as "Jews" because they retained Torah practice. Whereas the House of Israel would remain invisible and thought to be "lost" because they
adopted pagan religions and assimilated into Gentile cultures.
Roman Invasion of Judea - 63 B.C.E. - 70 A.D.
The rebuilt Southern Kingdom of Judah, then called Judea, had been re-established for hundreds of years
by the time of the Roman conquest. The Roman armies invaded Judea in 63 B.C.E.
They captured Yerusalem and the Temple and entered the kodesh place (Holy of Holies).
Judea was then subject to Rome.
At the time of Yahushua's life here on earth,
Judea was still under the occupation of Rome. His talmidim thought that He had come to deliver them from Roman oppression
as the long awaited and hoped for "Messiah of Israel." "HaTikvah Yisrael," the
Hope of Israel, looks to a time when the twelve tribes are restored under the Messiah and the Nation of Israel is healed and
made whole again.
Acts 1:6 says,
" So when they met together, they asked him, 'Master (Lord), are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?'
" NIV.
Roman occupation of Judea lasted until 70 A.D. From May to September of that year, there was a Jewish revolt. Rome's punishment was
horrible, 500 Jews were crucified daily outside of the City of Yerusalem. On
the 9th of Av, the Roman soldiers
entered the
"kodesh place," the Holy of Holies, to plunder its valuables, and the gold on the building. They set the Temple on fire to be fully
destroyed; it has not been rebuilt to this day (God Intervenes in the Middle East, Marion
F. Kremers). The remaining Jews were dispersed beyond the Land of Israel not to return until 1948 A.D.
Daniel 9:26
states,".....The people of the ruler (Rome) who will come will destroy the city and the sanctuary," NIV.
Modern Day Remnant of Judah Returns to Eretz Israel
This study would not be complete if we left out the creation of the modern State of Israel. In 1880, the long held Jewish vision to
return to the Land of Israel called "Zionism" came to a reality.
Out of Zionism,
emerged the resurgence of the Hebrew language through the work of Eliezer Ben-Yehuda.
During the following years, masses of Russian and Eastern European Jews fleeing the "pograms" (massacres of Jews, especially
throughout Russia), found their way to the homeland (God Intervenes in the Middle East, by Marion F. Kremers). Upon arriving in Israel, they found the following to be true:
"Your children
who follow you in later generations and foreigners who come from distant lands will see calamities that have fallen on the
land and the diseases with which
Yahueh (the Lord) has afflicted it. The whole land will be a burning waste of salt and sulphur - nothing
planted, nothing sprouting, no
vegetation growing on it....," Deut. 29:22-23a.
Out of the hot desert, and malaria-ridden swamplands,
farmlands and small Jewish communities called "kibbutz"
emerged. Life was not easy, and Zionism was not welcomed by the nations of the world, especially the Arab nations. During the late 1930's and early 1940's, Jews fleeing
Hitler's regime of WWII also found their
way to Israel.
On
May 14, 1948, Israel declared itself to be an independent nation. The next day, May 15, 1948, the armies of Egypt, Transjordan, Syria, Lebanon, Saudi
Arabia, and Iraq
attacked the new state. January 7, 1949, saw Israel's War of Independence come to a halt with a cease-fire, and
the City of Yerusalem divided between Israel and Jordan. The Six-Day War broke
out in 1967 when Jordan attacked Israel again. The Jews regained control of the
City of Yerusalem and the Temple Mount. Intense Arab hatred of the Jews ensued. On Yom Kippur, October 6, 1973, the Egyptians and Syrians once again attacked Israel. On November 11, 1973, a cease-fire was signed.
Years later the Jordanian refugees that were
left within Israel's borders from the war were refused to be taken back by the Jordanian State. These Jordanian refugees
were left
by their countrymen to be at the mercy of the Jewish State.