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The heavenly guide to true peace of conscience
Wherein is observed in a most plaine and comfortable manner, 1. What conscience is. 2. What a miserable thing an evill conscience is. 3. What an happinesse a good conscience is. 4. How the estate of conscience is truly discerned. 5. The meanes to procure a good conscience. By H.V.V.I -
A true copie of the disputation held betweene Master Walker and a Iesuite, in the house of one Thomas Bates in Bishops Court in the Old Baily
concerning the ecclesiasticall function -
A gad of steele, wrought and tempered for the heart to defend it from being battred by Sathans temptation, and to give it a sharpe and lasting edge in heavenly consolation
shevving that Deus est optima possesio, God is the best possession -
An answer to a foolish pamphlet entitvled A swarme of sectaries & schismaticks put forth by John Taylor the Water-Poet
wherein is set downe -
An answer to a foolish pamphlet entituled A swarme of sectaries & schismaticks
Put forth by John Taylor the water-poet. Wherein is set downe 1. An epistle to John Taylor. 2. Iohn Taylors armes, blazed by Fennor. 3. George Hattons lines sent to Iohn Taylor. 4. The view of his long silence. 5. The view of his writing this booke. 6. A view of the title. 7. A view of Iohn Taylor in the tub. 8. A view of his Puritans. 9. A view of his hypocrisie. 10. An exhortation to Iohn Taylor to repent -
A gad of steele
wrought and tempered for the heart to defend it from being battred by Sathans temptation, and to give it a sharpe and lasting edge in heavenly consolation. Shevving that Deus est optima possessio, God is the best possession -
Corda Angliæ: or, The generall expressions of the land
moving XXV. particulars to the honourable assembly in the High Court of Parliament. That the Church of England may become a glorious church of God -
A remarkable revelation of the wandrings of the Church of England in idolatry, superstition, and ceremonies
from the first motion throught each particular station to the first great period. In parallell with the children of Israel in the desert from Rameses to mount Sinai -
Taylors physicke has purged the divel. Or, The divell has got a squirt
and the simple, seame-rent, thredbare Taylor translates it into railing poetry, and is now soundly cudgelled for it. By Voluntas Ambulatoria -
A remarkable revelation of the wandrings of the Church of England i idolatry, superstition and ceremonies
from the first motion throught each particular station to the first great period : in parallell with the children of Israel in the desert from Rameses to mount Sinai -
Corda Angliæ, or, The generall expressions of the land
moving XXV. particulars to the honourable assembly in the high court of Parliament : that the church of England may become a glorious church of God -
The churches purity, or, The difference betweene the churches frame in darke times and her settlement in the purest times
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A terrible out-cry against the loytering exalted prelates
shewing the danger, and unfitnesse of conferring them in any temporall office or dignity : wherein the Devill is proved to be a more diligent prelate, then any of our English bishops are, leaving them to the consideration of the Kings Majestie, and the high court of Parliament -
The prelates pride, or, The manifestation, that the bishops lordly government from the originall institution, is not de iure divino, by divine right, but meerely humane and contrary both to the holy word of God, the practice of the Apostles, and of the primitive churches in the purest times
whereunto is added the Bishop of Lincolnes prophecie concerning the prelates -
A trve copie of the disputation held betweene Master Walker and a Iesuite in the house of one Thomas Bates in Bishops Court in the Old Baily concerning the ecclesiasticall function
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Taylors physicke has purged the divel, or, The divell has got a squirt
and the simple seame-rent thred bare Taylor translates it into railing poetry and is now foundly cudgelled for it