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A letter to Dr. Snape, occasion'd by his letter to the Bishop of Bangor
Wherein the doctor is answer'd and expos'd, Paragraph by Paragraph. By a layman of conscience and common sense -
A letter to Dr. Snape, occasion'd by his letter to the Bishop of Bangor
Wherein the doctor is answer'd and expos'd, paragraph by paragraph. By a layman of conscience and common sense -
The Character of a Trimmer neither Whigg nor Tory
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Prosecution no persecution, or, The difference between suffering for disobedience and faction, and suffering for righteousness and Christ's sake
truly discussed and stated in a sermon upon Phil. I. 29, preached at Bury St. Edmunds in Suffolk on the 22th of March, 1681, being the time of the general assizes there held -
The French King's edict upon the declaration made by the clergy of France, of their opinion concerning the ecclesiastical power
wherein is set forth, that the King is independent in things temporal, that general councils are above the Pope, that the Popes power is to be limited by the antient canons, that the Popes decisions are not infallible without the consent of the Church : together with the said declaration of the clergy as they were registered in the Parliament of Paris, the 23 of March 1682 -
A reply to the second return
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Animadversions on Dr. Burnet's History of the rights of princes in the disposing of ecclesiastical benefices and church-lands
in a letter to a friend -
The last words and sayings of the true-Protestant Elm-Board
which lately suffer'd martyrdom in Smithfield, and now in Southwark: together with a true relation of a conference between Dr. B-, and the said Board -
The copy of a letter from Scotland, to his Grace the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury
subscribed by eight archbishops and bishops of that kingdom, as follows: viz. Edenburgh, March 9. 1682. May it please your grace -
The copy of a letter from Scotland, to his Grace the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury
subscribed by eight archbishops and bishops of that kingdom, as follows: viz. Edenburgh, March 9. 1682. May it please your grace -
The copy of a letter from Scotland, to his Grace the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury
subscribed by eight archbishops and bishops of that kingdom, as follows: viz. Edenburgh, March 9. 1682. May it please your grace -
Faction display'd
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A sermon preached before the King at VVhite-hall, on thf [sic] fifth of November, 1681
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A letter from Scotland, with observations upon the anti-Erastian, anti-prælatical, and phanatical Presbyterian party there
by way of dialogue between Anonymus and Antiprælatus -
Great and wonderful news from France
communicated in a letter from Paris, to a gentleman in London, concerning the great designs of that monarch: as also an account of the answers of the embassadors at Frankfort, to the French embassadors propostions lately made there -
The postscript to Mr. Hunt's argument
for the Bishops right of judging capital causes in Parliament, which he calls, a letter to a friend for vindicating the clergy, and rectifying some mistakes that are mischievous and dangerous to our government and religion : published for the benefit of such as approve not of the argument -
A Letter to the author of the Preparation for martyrdom
with some cursory reflections upon some passages in it -
A New song, being the Tories tryump, or, The point well weathered
to a new theatre tune -
No Protestant, but the dissenters plot discovered and defeated
being an answer to the late writings of several eminent dissenters : wherein their designes against the established Church of England, and the unreasonableness of separation are more fully manifested -
The French king's edict upon the declaration made by the clergy of France, of their opinion concerning the ecclesiastical power
wherein is set forth, that the King is independent in things temporal, that general councils are above the Pope, that the Popes power is to be limited by the antient canons, that the Popes decisions are not infallible without the consent of the Church. Together with the said declaration of the clergy as they were registered in the Parliament of Paris, the 23 of March 1682 -
Reflexions upon the controversy about the oath of allegiance, occasion'd by the letter in answer to English loyalty
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A sober vindication of the Reverend Dr. and the harmless Board
Lately glew'd together in a profane pasquill, and turn'd out in that undecent familiarity into the street, and expos'd to the merciless hootings, and popish jibes of Tantivy coffee-houses, and Tory clubs; together with an apology for the truly worthy patron of wit and criticism F.S -
A Letter from Colchester to the disperst bretheren of the late intended Whig feast
proving that Presbytery is inconsistent with monarchy -
A letter from Scotland with observations upon the Anti-Erastian, anti-prælatical and phanatical Presbyterian party there
by way of dialogue between Anonymus and Antiprælatus -
The Form of an address expressing the true sense of the dissenting Protestants of England