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PaulDupre1
Guest
That reminds me: When I was LDS (1975 - 1986) they taught that when I was baptised, God changed my blood so that now I was of the house of Israel, specifically the tribe of Ephraim.I agree with you as well.
The Latter-Day Saints, considering themselves to be the descendants of the Biblical Patriarchs, have a historical view of Judaism that is in sharp disagreement with the religious and secular history of my people.
Their claims to being of the House of Israel are not only impossible to reconcile through their skewed history but through DNA as well. A simple DNA test from me matches the paper trails and oral family history and confirms our place among the children of Abraham, but this cannot be said for them or their belief that Native Americans are descended from Semitic Israelites.
With no historical, genetic, linguistic, or cultural evidence to support their views of a connection with Israel it is no surprise that they fail to recognize the very points you make. Several members of my family had a connection with or may have lived in Alexandria in the Diaspora, and it is because of this that Koine Greek is one of the languages currently used in my Jewish family.
Their ideas on this subject are clearly unfounded.
They were big on “blood” back then, as in “One drop of negro blood disqualifies a man from the priesthood”.
I assume they meant that my DNA was altered. Do they still teach that? I doubt it. Same as they used to teach that Amer-Indians would turn white after they joined the LDS.
Paul