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A vindication of oaths and swearing in weighty cases as lawful and useful under the gospel
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Quakerism proved to be gross blasphemy and anti-Christian heresie
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A warning to souls to beware of Quakers and Quakerism
by occasion of a late dispute at Arley in Cheshire, between John Cheyney a Christian minister, and Roger Haydock, a sect-master and speaker to the Quakers, on Tuesday Jan. 23. 1676/7 -
One sheet against the Quakers
detecting their error and mis-practice in refusing to reverence men outwardly by word and behavior after the manner in use among us which is proved to be good and lawful -
Two sermons of hypocrisie and the vain hope of self-deceiving sinners
with an inspection into the manners and conversation of the people called Quakers, whose fruits betell them to be men of a worldly spirit, hating true holiness, and strangers to the simplicity that is in Christ -
A vindication of oaths and swearing in weighty cases, as lawful and useful under the Gospel and the Quakers opinion and practice against all oaths and oath-taking, proved to be unscriptural, and without any just reason
as also against their own principles -
Quakerism proved to be gross blasphemy and anti-Christian heresie
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A call to prayer, in two sermons on that subject, lately preached to a country-auditory
with an account of the principles and practice of the Quakers in the matter of prayer subjoined : wherein is shewed, that the Quakers religion is much wanting in prayer, and they themselves grosly guilty of not calling upon God, and of fathering much impiety upon the spirit of God, alledging him in defence of their prayerless course -
A vindication of oaths and swearing in weighty cases as lawful and useful under the gospel
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A branch of Quakerism cut off, or, A vindication of our common custom of naming the dayes and months after their usual names
as well consistent with Scripture and sober reason, and the Quakers opinion and practice to the contrary proved to be preciseness above the rule, and their zeal hereabout to be mistaken -
The shibboleth of Quakerism, or, That which they call the pure language proved ... to be only a matter of indifferency
and not of absolute necessity