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A vindication of a book intituled a brief account of many of the prosecutions of the people called Quakers, &c
Presented to the members of both Houses of Parliament. In answer to a late examination thereof, so far as the clergy of the dioceses of Oxford, Glocester, and Chester, are concerned in it -
A catechism and confession of faith
approved of, and agreed unto, by the general assembly of the patriarchs, prophets and Apostles, Christ himself Chief Speaker in and among them. Which containeth a true and faithful account of the principles and doctrines, which are most surely believed by the Churches of Christ in Great Britain and Ireland, who are reproachfully called by the Name of Quakers; yet are found in the One Faith with the Primitive Church and Saints, as is most clearly demonstrated by some plain Scripture-Testimonies (without Consequences or Commentaries) which are here collected and inserted by way of Answer to a few weighty, yet easie and familiar Questions, sitted as well for the wisest and largest, as for the weakest and lowest Capacities. To which is added, An Expostulation with, and Appeal to, all other Professors. The Sixth Edition By R.B. a Servant of the Church of Christ -
A letter to Stephen Clarke, Rector of Burythorpe in Yorkshire, in answer to his Short vindication of the clergy's right to tithes
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Remarks on a late pamphlet, called, A defence of the Examination of a book entituled, A brief account of many of the prosecutions of the people call'd Quakers, &c
so far as the clergy of the diocese of Lichfield and Coventry are concerned in it -
A vindication of a book intituled A brief account of many of the prosecutions of the people called Quakers, &c
presented to the members of both Houses of Parliament -
Copy of part of a letter from Israel Pemberton, and son, of Philadelphia, to David Barclay, and son, of London
Philadelphia, the 1st of the 3d mo. 1740. The latest accounts we have received, confirming the apprehensions we have been long under, of a rupture with France, afford us a melancholy prospect of the state of affairs -
The people called Quakers defended, and the Baptists confuted, being a reply to Job Burt's pretended answer to R. B's 12th proposition, and to a book, intituled, A vindication of the doctrine of baptism, &c. To which is annex'd, An Appendix, in Answer to Oswald Edwards of Dublin his Attempt against the said Book, &c. In which Reply and Appendix, Their fallacious Reasoning is detected; their Erroneous and confused Notion of Spiritual Baptism obviated; their repeated Contradictions and Inconsistencies manifested; and the Doctrine of Baptism, as held by the People called Quakers, is farther inforced and vindicated. By Josiah Forster
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A letter to Stephen Clarke, Rector of Burythorpe in Yorkshire, in answer to his Short vindication of the clergy's right to tithes. By one of the people called Quakers
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A defence of The examination of a book, entituled, A brief account of many of the prosecutions of the people called Quakers, &c. so far as the clergy of the Diocese of Lichfield and Coventry are concerned in it: in answer to a late pamphlet publish'd by the Quakers, by way of vindication of that part of their Brief account
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A preservative against Quakerism
by way of conference between a minister and his parishioner. Wherein The Erroneous Tenets of the Leading Quakers are fairly Consider'd and Stated, and plainly and fully Confuted; and the True Principles of the Christian Religion in Opposition thereto, are Asserted and Vindicated. All being accommodated to the Understanding of the meanest Capacity. By Patrick Smith, M. A. Vicar of Great Paxton, Huntingdonshire -
An examination of a book, lately printed by the Quakers
and by them distributed to the members of both Houses of Parliament, entitled, A brief account of many of the prosecutions of the people called Quakers, in the Exchequer, Ecclesiastical, and other Courts; for Demands recoverable by the Acts made in the 7th and 8th Years of the Reign of King William III. for the more easy Recovery of Tythes, Church-Rates, &c. So far as the clergy of the dioceses of Oxford, Glocester and Chester, are concerned in it