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Who wou'd have thought it?
[A] collection of some remarkable passages out of a late pamphlet, entituled, The dissenters vindicated, or, A short view of the present state of the Protestant religion in Britain, as it is now profess'd in the Episcopal Church of England, the Presbyterian Church in Scotland, and the dissenters in both: in answer to some reflections in Mr. Webster's two books publish'd in Scotland -
An account of the proceeding in Convocation, in a cause of contumacy, commenc'd April 10. 1707
Occasion'd by the publishing a protestation made against it, in one of the common news-papers -
Britannia concors
Magnæ Britanniæ divinis auspiciis & consiliis Annæ Serenissimæ Invictissimæ Reginæ felicitèr unitæ encomium. Hac oratione continentur, 1. Salutem & felicitatem cum ecclesiæ tum Regni Hiberniæ in Britannorum domi & foris concordiâ praæcipuè consistere. 2. Brevis statûs Anglicani cum civilis, militaris & ecclesiastici commendatio. 3. Prolixior rerum Scoticarum bello & pace, & inter se & exteros præclarè gestarum enarratio. 4. Ad Scotiam, Reginam & Britanniam versibus heroicis, Alloquium. Quæ omnia ad imperij Britannici dignitatem & gloriam illustrandam, omnibus hiberniæ incolis nativitate, sanguine & fide Britannis composuit & dedicat Ninianus Wallisius Britannus -
No-church establish'd: or, The schismatick unmask'd
Being an impartial answer to the rights of the Christian Church asserted. Humbly offer'd to the consideration of the two renowned Universities, and the whole body of the clergy of this Kingdom -
An account of the proceeding in Convocation, in a cause of contumacy, commenc'd April 10. 1707. Occasion'd by the publishing a protestation made against it, in one of the common news-papers
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Refexions upon the present state of England
Particularly upon Mr. John Chamberlayn's two last prefaces to that book. By G.M. author of The new state of England -
The act for securing the protestant religion and presbyteriran church-government: with the statutary act
Which were retify'd by the touch of the royal scepter at Edinburgh, the 16th of January, 1707. By his grace James Duke of Queensbury, Her Majesty's high commissioner for that kingdom -
Lawful prejudices against an incorporating union with England; or some modest considerations on the sinfulness of this union, and the danger flowing from it to the Church of Scotland
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The interest of England in the Irish transplantation, stated
wherein is held forth (to all concerned in Irelands good settlement) the benefits the Irish transplantation will bring to each of them in particular, and to the Common-wealth in general, being chiefly intended as an answer to a scandalous, seditious pamphlet, entituled, The great case of transplantation in Ireland discussed. Composed and published at the request of several persons in eminent place in Ireland, to the end all who desire it, might have a true account of the proceedings that have been there in the business of transplantation, both as to the rise, progress, and end thereof. By a faithfull servant of the Common-wealth, Richard Laurence -
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 two steps of a nonconformist minister
made by him, in order to the obtaining his liberty of preaching in publick : together with an appendix about coming to church in respect to the people -
The harmony of divinity and law, in a discourse about not resisting of soveraign princes
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Faction display'd
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At the Court at Kensington, the seventeenth day of April, 1707. Present, the Queens most Excellent Majesty in Council.Whereas by the late act of uniformity, which establisheth the liturgy, and enacts, that no form or order of Common Prayer be openly used, ...
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Mars Christianissimus
Autore Germano Gallo-Græco: or, an apology fo r the most Christian King's taking up arms against the Christians -
Factum comitis Argatheliæ, seu, De Argyll
in quo continentur juramentum testa dictum, à Parliamento regni Scotiæ, anno 1681 pro securitate religionis & regis, omnibus, præterquam regis legitimis filiis & fratribus injunctum : ut etiam excepta seu objecta contra hanc testam unà cum actione criminali hâc occasione adversus dictum comitem mota, & sententia gravissima desuper lata -
The grand case of subjection to the higher powers in matters of religion resolved
to which is added an appendix to a late book intituled A plea for liberty of conscience, wherein the kings supream power in ecclesiastical matters is asserted -
A phenix or the solemn league and covenant, of the three kingdoms of Scotland, England and Ireland; for reformation and defence of religion, sworn to in the three kingdoms. With some acts of the church and state, authorizing the same
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A letter from a member of the commission of the late General Assembly to a minister in the country, concerning present dangers
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Scots news from London, or the treatise between the two Kigdoms [sic] concerning the Union. London January 23d. 1707
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The interest of England in the Irish transplantation, stated
wherein is held forth (to all concerned in Irelands good settlement) the benefits the Irish transplantation will bring to each of them in particular, and to the Common-wealth in general, being chiefly intended as an answer to a scandalous, seditious pamphlet, entituled, The great case of transplantation in Ireland discussed. Composed and published at the request of several persons in eminent place in Ireland, to the end all who desire it, might have a true account of the proceedings that have been there in the business of transplantation, both as to the rise, progress, and end thereof -
Religion and loyalty, or, A demonstration of the power of the Christian church within it self
the supremacy of sovereign powers over it, the duty of passive obedience, or non-resistance to all their commands : exemplified out of the records of the Chruch and the Empire from the beginning of Christianity to the end of the reign of Julian -
The epistle congratulatory of Lysimachus Nicanor of the Society of Jesu to the Covenanters in Scotland
wherein is paralleled our sweet harmony and correspondency in divers material points of doctrine and practice -
The decency and order of church and state as now established
asserted in a late visitation sermon