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The Israelites and The Jews Are Not Entirely the Same

By Arthur J. Licursi – as drawn from various sources

 

If we are to “rightly divide the word of truth,” as the Apostle Paul prescribes for believers today, it is needful to assign the proper names to the people to whom various Scriptures are addressed or who the particular Scripture concerns.

Today almost everyone identifies the name Israel with the Jews. Most people assume the Jewish people are the sole remaining descendents of the ancient nation of Israel . This assumption however is incorrect.

Originally, the Hebrew term Yehudi referred specifically to members of the tribe of Judah, as distinguished from the other tribes of Israel. However, after the death of King Solomon, the nation of Israel was split into two kingdoms: the kingdom of Judah and the kingdom of Israel (I Kings 12; II Chronicles 10). After that time, the word Yehudi could properly be used to describe anyone from the kingdom of Judah, which included the tribes of Judah, Benjamin and Levi, as well as scattered settlements from other tribes. The most obvious biblical example of this usage is in Esther 2:5, where Mordecai is referred to as both a Yehudi and a member of the tribe of Benjamin. So technically, the Jews are descendents of two of the twelve Israelite tribes: Judah and Benjamin, plus a considerable part of a third, the priestly tribe of Levi.

In common speech, the word "Jew" is used to refer to all of the physical and spiritual descendants of Jacob/Israel, as well as to the patriarchs Abraham and Isaac and their wives, and the word "Judaism" is used to refer to their beliefs. Technically, this usage is inaccurate, just as it is technically inaccurate to use the word "Indian" to refer to the original inhabitants of the Americas. However, this technically inaccurate usage is common today both within the Jewish community and outside of it, and is therefore used throughout this site.

Unknown to most, the 10 other tribes in ancient Israel were never called Jews. These 10 were the Northern tribes who were historically distinct and politically separate from the Jews. The Jews were their brothers in the Southern kingdom who formed the Kingdom of Judah , from which the term Jew was derived. Jerusalem , as mentioned in verse 5 above, is located in the south, in the Kingdom of Judah . “Rezin king of Syria and Pekah son of “Rezin king of Syria and Pekah son of Remaliah king of Israel came up to Jerusalem to war

The northern coalition of tribes, the Kingdom of the House of Israel, had already become an independent nation, separate from the House of Judah, with its own King, by the time the word Jew first appears in the Biblical narrative of Abraham’s descendents.

In fact the very first time the term Jew appears in the Kings James Version of the Bible, Israel was at war with the Jews (2Kings 16:5-6 above). 2Kings 16:1-6 briefly summarizes one of the many wars between the Kingdom of Judah in the south and the Kingdom of Israel to its north.

So we might ask, Are all Israelites Jews? No they are not. But, the Jews – the citizens and descendents of the Kingdom of Judah - are indeed Israelites.

The twelve tribes include the Jews. They all are the descendents of their father Israel (Jacob); we can apply the term Israelite to all the tribes, including the Jews. The term Jew, however, is accurate only for the tribes that comprised the Kingdom of Judah and for their descendents.