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A letter relating to the divisions in the First Church of Salem
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New England's lamentations
under three heads, the decay of the power of godliness; the danger of Arminian principles; the declining state of our church-order, government and discipline. With the means of these declensions, and the methods of our recovery. By the Reverend Mr. John White, M.A. And Pastor of the First Church in Glocester. To which are added, reasons for adhering to our platform, and answers to some objections against ruling elders, by another hand. As also, a vindication of the divine authority of ruling elders, by a provincial assembly of Presbyterian ministers at London, in 1649 -
The last speech and dying words of John Ormsby
who was appointed to be executed on Boston Neck, the 17th of October, 1734. Written with his own hand, the day before he was to suffer; and recommended to all people, for their serious perusal -
The New-England diary: or, Almanack for the year of our Lord Christ 1735
... Applied to the horizon of Boston, in N.E. where the north pole is raised, and the south pole is depressed equal to an angle of 42 deg. 25 min. north, and a meridian 4 h. 44 m. west of London. B a native of New-England. [Seven lines from Milton's Paradise Lost] -
New England's lamentations
under these three heads, the decay of the power of godliness; the danger of Arminian principles; the declining state of our church-order, government and discipline. With the means of these declensions, and the methods of our recovery. by the Reverend Mr. John White, M.A. And Pastor of the First Church in Glocester. To which are added, reasons for adhering to our platform, and answers to some objections against ruling elders, by another hand. As also, a vindication of the divine authority of ruling elders, by a provincial assembly of Presbyterian ministers at London, in 1649 -
A Mournful poem on the death of John Ormsby and Matthew Cushing
who were appointed to be executed on Boston Neck, the 17th of October, 1734