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Peace without union. By way of reply, to Sir H--- M---'s peace at home
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Peace without union
by way of reply to Sir H-- M--'s Peace at home -
A letter to Sir H. Mackworth, concerning his treatise about the late occasional bill
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Catholicism without Popery
An essay to render the Church of England a means and a pattern of union to the Christian world. With a Letter to Sir Humphrey Mackworth, Occasioned by his late Discourse, Intituled, Peace at Home. In two parts. By John Hooke Serjeant at Law -
Peace without union
By way of reply, to Sir H--- M---'s Peace at home -
Peace without union
By way of reply, to Sir H---- M----'s Peace at home. The fourth edition. To which is added a preface -
A letter to Sir H. Mackworth, concerning his treatise about the late occasional bill
Upon four heads especially. I. Whether all wise Nations in the World do preserve the Administration of Publick Affairs in Persons of one and the same Perswasion, in Matters of Religion. II. Whether the Admission of any into Imployments, other than Sincere Members of a National Church, be consistent with the Safety of the Establish'd Government. III. Whether Occasional Communion with the Church, and abiding Nonconformity, are Contradictions. IV. Whether Dissenters do not still need, in several Instances, to be convinced by the Author, of the Usefulness and Necessity of such a Bill, for their own Good. By John Lacy, Esq -
Catholicism without popery
an essay to render the Church of England a means and a pattern of union to the Christian world -
The rights of Protestant dissenters
In two parts. The first being the case of the dissenters review'd. The second, A vindication of their right to an absolute toleration, from the objections of Sir H. Mackworth, in his treatise, intitul'd, Peace at home. Part I -
The rights of Protestant dissenters
In two parts. The first being the case of the dissenters review'd. The second a vindication of their right to an absolute toleration, from the objections of Sir H. Mackworth, in his treatise intitled, Peace at home, &c. Part I. The second edition corrected and enlarg'd. With a postscript in defence of some Passages in it, from the Exceptions of a Postscript to a Second Letter to the Author of the three Letters for Toleration