THE TRIBE OF BENJAMIN: A “WOLFPACK” FROM THE
NORTH
By
Steven M. Collins
Blog Post Date: 6-27-2019
Blog Post Date: 6-27-2019
Benjamin
was the youngest son of Jacob and Rachel, and the only full brother of Joseph.
This tribe was almost exterminated in an ancient Israelite civil war in which
the Benjaminites were sufficiently fearless and foolhardy to fight all the
other tribes at once.
This
senseless civil war is discussed in Judges 19-21. The Benjaminites were fierce
warriors. Although the Benjaminites were outnumbered 400,000 to 26,700, they
won the first two battles as they routed the combined forces of the other
tribes. Judges 20:21-25
records that the Benjaminites decimated the armies of the other tribes, killing
40,000 of them. The Israelite tribes had to fast and obtain God’s divine help
to defeat the Benjaminites. At the end of this needless war, the entire tribe
of Benjamin was reduced to only 600 men.
From
that time on Benjamin’s population lagged far behind the other tribes, and they
were the smallest tribe in Israel at the time one of their members, Saul, was
made the first king of Israel (I Samuel 9:21). When the tribes of Israel
divided into the two kingdoms of Israel and Judah, Benjamin remained with the
tribe of Judah (I
Kings 12:21). After Judah went into
captivity, a contingent of Benjaminites returned with the Jews to rebuild the
Temple and Jerusalem (Ezra
1:5, Nehemiah 11:3-4). However, even as most of
the tribe of Judah remained in Asia, most of the Benjaminites also remained in
Asian locations.
Herbert
Hannay’s book, European and Other Race Origins, included ancient records
that “representatives of Benjaminites spread over the whole length and breadth
of Asia Minor.”(1) The Bible indicates that Israelites were living in Asia
Minor during the Apostolic era. The book of I Peter begins by addressing “God’s
People [marginal reading in the KJV] scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia,
Cappadocia, Asia and Bithynia.” The term “Galatia” indicated the same people as
the “Gauls” of Europe.
The
New Testament records that one famous Benjaminite, Saul of Tarsus, was born in
Asia Minor, so there is biblical evidence that Benjaminites lived in Asia Minor
in ancient times. Saul of Tarsus was the Benjaminite who became the Apostle
Paul (Acts 9:11, 13:9 and Romans 11:1).
Herbert
Hannay links the Benjaminites to the modern nation of Norway (2), a conclusion
with which I concur. The biblical clue for Benjamin’s location in the modern
world is limited, but indicative. Genesis 49:27 states:
“Benjamin shall ravin as a
wolf: in the morning he shall devour the prey, and at night he shall divide the
spoil.” (KJV)
Wolves
are indigenous to northern climates, indicating that Benjamin’s latter day
territory will be in a northern latitude. Since this author has identified Finland as Issachar, and Sweden as Naphtali, the only
Scandinavian nation in a northern latitude not yet identified as one of the
tribes of Israel is Norway. By the process of elimination, Norway would seem to
constitute modern Benjamin. Norway is a lightly populated nation, consistent
with Benjamin’s historical role as the least populous of the tribes of Israel.
Yair Davidy and I have traditionally linked the tribe of Issachar with modern
Finland, leaving Norway and Sweden as candidates for the modern Benjaminites.
While
it is true that contingents of one tribe can live within the territory of a
modern nation dominated by another tribe of Israel, it is my opinion that
Norway is most linked to the ravenous, raiding style of the Vikings. Sweden
also has twice the population of Norway. Given Benjamin’s biblical role as the
Israelite tribe with the smallest population base, Norway’s lesser population
also makes it a good candidate for being Benjamin. Yair Davidy and I agree that
there is a strong Benjaminite component to the Normans (i.e. “North-men” or
Nor-mans) who invaded England in the 11th century A.D.
The
tribes of Joseph (Ephraim and Manasseh) would be closer genetically to the
Benjaminites than any other tribe of Israel because Joseph and Benjamin were
the only sons of Jacob and Rachel. Norway has traditionally had excellent
relations with the British and Americans, which one would expect of the
descendants of Benjamin.
Sweden
has been more distant from the British and Americans, both geographically and
politically. In World War II, Norway fought the Nazis as allies of the British
and Americans. Although conquered by Nazi armies, Norway had a vigorous
“underground” which fought the Nazi occupiers. By sinking a ship with a crucial
supply of “heavy water” destined for the Nazi atomic bomb project, the
Norwegian underground made a meaningful contribution to the war effort against
Hitler. Sweden, on the other hand, stayed neutral in World War II, and chose
not to fight the Nazis. In World War II, Norway displayed a much closer
affinity to the tribes of Joseph than did Sweden, which one would expect of the
tribe of Benjamin.
The
phrases about “devouring the prey” and “dividing the spoil” do not describe
today’s Norwegians, but they very aptly describe Norway’s well-known Viking
heritage. The Vikings were known for preying (in raiding parties akin to
wolfpacks) on all the other nations of Europe from bases in their northern
coastlands. This parallels ancient times.
Even
as Benjamin warred against all the other tribes of Israel in a bloody civil war
in biblical times, the Vikings also raided and preyed upon all the other tribes
of Israel who had migrated to various locations in Europe. The Vikings raided
the British Isles and Western Europe, and the Mediterranean coastlands of
Europe as well. The Vikings also raided into and settled in the modern Ukraine
and western Russia. National Geographic Magazine made this comment about
their eastern forays:
“By the early ninth century they [the Vikings] were
navigating the Volga and the Dnieper to reach the merchants of the Abbasid
caliphate. By 860 they had attacked Constantinople…”
The
Encyclopaedia Britannica notes that the term “Russia” is linked to the
term “Russ,” a name given to Viking Norsemen of the 10th century A.D. who
migrated from Scandinavia to the regions of Novgorod and Kiev. The name,
“Russia,” has a Scandinavian/Viking origin, not a Slavic one, even though
modern Russia is now overwhelmingly Slavic. The Viking name, Russ, may well
reveal a Benjaminite origin as one of the sons (and clans) of Benjamin was
named “Rosh” (Genesis 46:21).
Since
the vowels were not written in ancient times, the names of “Rosh” and “Russ”
both have the same consonants [R-S] in their root word.
The
National Geographic also notes the prominence of wolves (the symbol of Genesis 49:27 for Benjamin)
in Viking mythology and art. Historically, other Scandinavian people besides
the ancient Norwegians also comprised the Vikings; however, the Viking heritage
seems most closely identified with Norway.
There
is another possible connection between ancient Benjamin and modern Norway. It
was noted above that when the ancient Israelite tribes divided into a northern
kingdom of Israel and a southern kingdom of Judah, Benjamin stayed with Judah.
The Benjaminites had strong genetic ties to the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh,
but also retained a cultural affinity for the tribe of Judah.
The
modern Norwegians brokered the Oslo accords of 1993, a famous peace agreement
between the Israelis and the Palestinians. Even though the Oslo Accords now
seem to have failed to bring any peace to Mideast, the willingness of Norway to
involve itself in the Israeli peace process is consistent with one would expect
of modern Benjamin, which was once part of the Jewish kingdom of Judah.
Based
on the biblical clues about Benjamin’s location in the latter days, I believe
Norway best fulfills the prophecy of Genesis 49 about the tribe of Benjamin.
Curiously, while Joseph’s tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh were destined to
become the most populous tribes of Israel, Benjamin (Joseph’s brother) became
the Israelite tribe with the smallest population.
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