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                           The House of Israel





                   Iceland -- An Outpost of Modern              missionaries came to a largely heathen Iceland in 981,
                                   Israel                       but the first Bible in the Icelandic language did not ap-
                                                                pear until five centuries later and was a product of the
                                                                revival which followed the Reformation.
                Iceland, a large volcanic island lying in the remoteness
                of the North Atlantic and supporting a population of  The Icelandic Bible occupies a unique position be-
                something less than a quarter of a million, is a vital, an  cause, to the Icelander, it is both the inspired word of
                indispensable, part of that great world-wide brother-  God and the means by which he has retained his unique
                hood of nations, which comprise the modern continua-  language through centuries of foreign government. This
                tion of ancient Israel -- a fact which emerged during  language, the Norraena or Northern Tongue, has such
                the second world war. It will be recalled that when the  close linguistic affinities with the ancient language of
                Battle of the Atlantic assumed serious proportions Ice-  England, that it could almost be described as a living
                land was defended by British and later, jointly, by  form of Anglo-Saxon. Just as the King James Bible and
                American troops. It thus emerged, not merely as a step-  our Book of Common Prayer have preserved for us the
                ping stone between the two great branches of English-  English language at its most beautiful and best, so,
                speaking people, but as a common meeting place, a  thanks to the Icelandic Bible, the lovely language of
                joint bastion of defence. Since that time, Iceland has  Iceland differs very little from the northern tongue in-
                become a member of N.A.T.O. and, as one of its cur-  troduced just a thousand years ago.
                rent postage stamps implies, is now the ears and eyes
                of the free world in the North Atlantic.
                                                                            The Arms of Iceland
                Secular history describes the original settlers of Ice-
                land as Irish Culdees. A man -- the heraldic sign of  We have so much in common with the people of Ice-
                Reuben -- occupies a  prominent place in the Arms of  land that those of us who were aware of our common
                Iceland: we may therefore be reasonably certain that  origin were disturbed and pained by the fishing dispute
                these early settlers from Iceland were of Reubenite de-  which divided the two nations from September 1972
                scent. They were certainly Christians. In the eighth  until British trawlers withdrew from Icelandic waters in
                century the island was invaded and settled by another  December 1976. If the two people had known that they
                people of Israelite origin, possibly Danites, from the  had the same origin and, under Almighty God, the same
                coasts and fiords of Norway and these were joined by  destiny, it is safe to assume that they would have found,
                Danites from the Western Isles. The Icelanders are  in brotherly love, a solution which could have been in
                clearly of Celto-Saxon descent and there is now little  accordance with their common Christian heritage.
                doubt that the country was among the first outposts to
                be discovered and settled by the vanguard of the Israel  We pray that both peoples will soon wake up.
                dispersion. As a matter of ethnic interest, there was,
                during the first quarter of this century, an appreciable                                       -- Reginald H.W. Cox
                migration of people from Iceland to North America,
                particularly to the prairie Provinces of Canada.
                                                                         The Anglo-Dutch Link
                Although its remoteness has tended to keep Iceland in
                obscurity, the island was certainly under ordered gov-  Britain is so often seen to be in close association with
                ernment at a time when Europe was the unsettled scene  her kinsfolk in the United States, Canada, Australia and
                of conflicting influences. Indeed, the Icelandic Parlia-  New Zealand that her close personal links with the Is-
                ment, or  Althing, is believed to be the oldest institu-  rael nations of the North Sea fringe are often over-
                tion of its kind in the world. The national church, which  looked if not ignored. This article draws attention to
                is Protestant (Lutheran), has just celebrated its one-  the Netherlands because, contained in this small coun-
                thousandth anniversary by a series of festivals and by  try, we have one of the largest groups of Israelite
                the publication of a revised Icelandic Bible. The first  "stragglers" still outside the Commonwealth --

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