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  1. Vernon McGee quotes H.S. Miller’s chart, which includes (1) those who proceeded from Magog: Scythians, Slavs, Russians, Bulgarians, Bohemians, Poles, Slovaks, and Croatians; (2) those from Madai: the Indians and the Iranic races—Medes, Persians, Afghans, and Kurds; (3) those from Javan: Greeks, Romans and the Romance nationalities such as ...

  2. List of the Table of Nations Mentioned in the Old Testament. This chart contains a list of the nations descending from the three son's of Noah. They formed after the Tower of Babel and are mentioned in Genesis 10 of the Old Testament. Scroll down to see maps, references, and Bible verses for more background information.

  3. Genesis 10:1-5. 10:1-5. Anthropologically and ethnologically speaking, this is probably the most important document in man's possession today, because it records the earliest lines of the human race. The biblical scholar, H. S. Miller, tells us that 70 nations are found in this account ... all of which came from Noah's three sons.

    • h.s. miller ethnology chart1
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    • Notes on Shem, Ham and Japheth by Ray C. Stedman
    • Notes on The Table of Nations by Ray C. Stedman
    • Notes on The Sons of Noah by Henry M. Morris
    • Family Tree of The Patriarchs of Israel

    ...this answers a very widespread distortion of this passagethat has been accepted for many, many years which says that thecurse fell on the Black people. The mark of it was a black skin,and therefore they are destined to be servants among mankind.But the Canaanites, as far as we know, were not black-skinnedpeople. The curse was wholly fulfilled in...

    Chapter 10 of Genesis is a record of how mankind fannedout over all the earth, like spokes in a wheel, radiating froma center which both science and Scripture place in the MiddleEast. The Middle East has been called, "the cradle of civilization,"or "the cradle of mankind." We are now dealing withthe days immediately following the Flood, when the so...

    ...Finally, it was the sin of Ham (not Canaan) that had servedas the occasion for his father's curse, and it would have beeninappropriate for Noah thus to single out only one of Ham's foursons as bearing the burden of the curse. Therefore, it seems necessaryto understand this as a Hamitic, rather than Canaanitic, curse,with Canaan mentioned specifi...

    Noah lived 350 years after the flood and Shem 500 years. Thedate of the flood appears to be ~3600-3000 BC based on few gapsin the family tree leading from the First to the Second Adam.Barry Setterfield'sChronologyplaces the Flood date as 3526 BC. The confusion of tongues at the tower of Babeloccurred not long after the flood, (~100 yrs). The world ...

  4. tion and Special Introduction. 29. General Introduction deals with the Bible as a whole, and. shows (1) how it came into existence, (2) how it has come down to us. It discusses (1) the inspiration of the Bible; whether it is from God. or from man; (2) its canonicity; the origin, extent, and preservation.

  5. static1.squarespace.com › static › 582fb46a9de4bb0caCHAPTER 10

    If you are interested in ethnology and anthropology and the story of mankind on the earth, you may want a far deeper study than you will find here. H. S. Miller, who has his master's degree in ethnology, has charted the origin of the nations, using Genesis 10 as a basis for the threefold division

  6. AN INTRODUCTION TO THE TABLE OF NATIONS. Many years have been spent researching the origin of the world’s tribes, peoples and races based on the mysterious Table of Nations found in Genesis chapter ten. Piecing together the many parts of the puzzle, the strands of information and the bits of data required for an exercise such as this has not ...

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