The spirit of delusion reproved, or, The Quakers cause fairly heard and justly condemned : being an answer to William Penn, George Fox, George Whitehead, George Keith, Edward Burroughs, and several other the most leading men amongst them : wherein their horrid perversion and false and dangerous interpretations of above 50 distinct texts of Holy Scriptures are plainly evinced /
| Main Author: | Wilson, Thomas, active 17th century |
|---|---|
| Format: | Microform Book |
| Language: | English |
| Series: | Early English books, 1641-1700 ;
1559:44. |
| Subjects: |
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The spirit of delusion reproved, or, The Quakers cause fairly heard and justly condemned : being an answer to William Penn, George Fox, George Whitehead, George Keith, Edward Burroughs, and several other the most leading men amongst them : wherein their horrid perversion and false and dangerous interpretations of above 50 distinct texts of Holy Scriptures are plainly evinced /
by: Wilson, Thomas, 17th cent
Published: (1678)
by: Wilson, Thomas, 17th cent
Published: (1678)
A fuller discovery of the dangerous principles and lying spirit of the people called Quakers : made manifest in George Whitehead, John Whitehead and George Fox the younger, in their book against Iohn Horne and Thomas Moore of Lin Regis in Northfolk /
by: Moore, Thomas, Junior
Published: (1660)
by: Moore, Thomas, Junior
Published: (1660)
A serious call to the Quakers inviting them to return to Christianity : By George Keith. To which is added, a true copy of the last will and Testament of that grand impostor George Fox, the first beginner of Quakerism, and the Quakers admired idol; who died Jan. 13, 1690. 1. Written with his own hand, and attested by George Whitehead, Sarah Mead, and Will. Ingram, and is now lying in the Perogative-Office London.
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Antichrist in spirit unmasked, or, Quakerism a great delusion : being an answer to a pamphlet ... intituled The Christianity of the people commonly called Quakers which they say is asserted against the unjust charge of their being no Christians ... : in which answer you have their deceit detected, their pretended faith examined and proved a counterfeit /
by: Paye, Edw. (Edward)
Published: (1692)
by: Paye, Edw. (Edward)
Published: (1692)
Bristol Quakerism exposed : shewing the fallacy, perversion, ignorance, and error of Benjamin Cool, the Quakers chief preacher at Bristol, and of his followers and abettors there, discovered in his and their late book falsely called Sophistry detected, or, An answer to George Keith's Synopsis : wherein also both his deisme and inconsistency with himself and his brethren, with respect to the peculiar principles of Christianity, are plainly demonstrated /
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Bristol Quakerism exposed : shewing the fallacy, perversion, ignorance, and error of Benjamin Cool, the Quakers chief preacher at Bristol, and of his followers and abettors there, discovered in his and their late book falsely called Sophistry detected, or, An answer to George Keith's Synopsis : wherein also both his deisme and inconsistency with himself and his brethren, with respect to the peculiar principles of Christianity, are plainly demonstrated /
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Published: (1700)
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Published: (1700)
Antichrist in spirit unmasked: or, Quakerism a great delusion. : Being an answer to a pamphlet lately published and dispersed in and about Deptford in Kent, intituled The Christianity of the people commonly called Quakers. Which they say is asserted against the unjust charge of their being no Christians, upon several questions relating to those matters wherein their Christian belief is questioned. By which pamphlet they would perswade the world that the Quakers are Christians. In which answer you have their deceit detected, their pretended faith examined and proved a counterfeit /
by: Paye, Edw. (Edward)
Published: (1692)
by: Paye, Edw. (Edward)
Published: (1692)
A breife discovery of the people called Quakers : and a warning to all people to beware of them, and of the their dangerous principles : being a true narrative of the sum and substance of two disputes with them at two severall meetings, that is to say, with John Whitehead at Gedney in Lincoln-shire, Sept. 2, and with George Whitehead and George Fox at Lin in Norfolk, Sept. 15, 1659 /
by: Horn, John, 1614-1676
Published: (1659)
by: Horn, John, 1614-1676
Published: (1659)
A breife discovery of the people called Quakers : and a warning to all people to beware of them, and of the their dangerous principles : being a true narrative of the sum and substance of two disputes with them at two severall meetings, that is to say, with John Whitehead at Gedney in Lincoln-shire, Sept. 2, and with George Whitehead and George Fox at Lin in Norfolk, Sept. 15, 1659 /
by: Horn, John, 1614-1676
by: Horn, John, 1614-1676
The gadding tribe reproved by the light of the Scriptures. : Wherin the true Protestants are encouraged to hold fast their Christian profession, maugre the Beast (i.e.) the pope; or the image of the Beast (i.e.) the Quakers, and their followers: to whom is given a mouth to speak great things. /
by: Willington, George
Published: (1655)
by: Willington, George
Published: (1655)
The second part of the Quakers quibbles, : set forth in reply to a quibbling pretended answer of G. Whiteheads, intituled The Quakers plainness &c. : Wherein many more of their quibbles and equivocations are manifested. : Also the companion betwixt the pretended prophet Muggleton and the Quakers justified to be true, rational, and necessary : whereunto is added an advertisement to Mr. W. Penn, George Whitehead, and the Quakers. : Touching their Jesuitical shifts, evasions, and unparallel'd confidence; : their grand mystery of directing the intention : with their pope-like power to sanctify and unsanctify words /
by: Thompson, Thomas
Published: (1675)
by: Thompson, Thomas
Published: (1675)
A strange but true narrative of the delusion of the devil at a late Quakers meeting, on one John Thurston. : How he was seduced to turn Quaker, and possessed by an evil spirit and of a tempation he had to cut his own throat, and how he was preserved therefrom and several passages which happen'd to him in the time of his delusion /
by: Robinson, William, fl. 1678
Published: (1678)
by: Robinson, William, fl. 1678
Published: (1678)
The Quakers quibbles : in three parts : first set forth in an expostulatory epistle to Will. Pfnn [i.e. Penn] concerning the late meeting held to Barbycan between the Baptists and the Quakers, also the pretended prophet Lod. Muggleton and the Quakers compared : the second part, in reply to a quibbling answer to G. Whiteheads, entituled The Quakers plainness ... : the third part, being a continuation of their quibbles ... /
by: Thompson, Thomas
Published: (1675)
by: Thompson, Thomas
Published: (1675)
Some of the letters which were writ to George Fox, and others of the Quakers teachers : are here presented to the rest of their fraternity ... /
by: Pennyman, John, 1628-1706
Published: (1680)
by: Pennyman, John, 1628-1706
Published: (1680)
Some of the letters which were writ to George Fox, and others of the Quakers teachers : are here presented to the rest of their fraternity ... /
by: Pennyman, John, 1628-1706
Published: (1680)
by: Pennyman, John, 1628-1706
Published: (1680)
New Rome arraigned and out of her own mouth condemned : containing a farther discovery of the dangerous errours and pernitious principles of the teachers and leaders of the people called Quakers which tend to overthrow the Christian faith : in answer to George Whitehead's Charitable essay &c. ... /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1693)
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1693)
The Quakers unmasked : their double-dealing and false-heartedness discovered by collections taken out of their own writings, which were communicated to G. Fox, G. Whitehead, and others of their preachers and leaders : wherein may be seen some of their contradictions thereupon by another hand : also, one of the forms of their oaths, used amongst themselves, with their definition of an oath : likewise a letter and paper formerly sent to the abovesaid G.F. : whereunto are annexed some remarks, &c. : also what an oath is : in a letter to E.S. ...
by: Pennyman, John, 1628-1706
by: Pennyman, John, 1628-1706
The Quakers unmasked : their double-dealing and false-heartedness discovered by collections taken out of their own writings, which were communicated to G. Fox, G. Whitehead, and others of their preachers and leaders : wherein may be seen some of their contradictions thereupon by another hand : also, one of the forms of their oaths, used amongst themselves, with their definition of an oath : likewise a letter and paper formerly sent to the abovesaid G.F. : whereunto are annexed some remarks, &c. : also what an oath is : in a letter to E.S. ...
by: Pennyman, John, 1628-1706
Published: (1691)
by: Pennyman, John, 1628-1706
Published: (1691)
Quakerism subverted : being a futher discovery and confutation of the gross errours of the Quakers published and maintained by William Penn and others of that sect : by which it is plain that the errours of the Quakers be most pernicious, subverting Christs true religion /
by: J. C. (John Cheyney)
Published: (1677)
by: J. C. (John Cheyney)
Published: (1677)
The proceedings at Turners-Hall, in relation to the great debate between George Keith and the Quakers, : as the same was manag'd in a dispute between two moderate persons of different perswasions.
Published: (1697)
Published: (1697)
A looking-glass for George Fox the Quaker, and other Quakers; wherein they may see themselves to be right devils. : In answer to George Fox his book, called, Something in answer to Lodowick Muggletons book, which he calls The Quakers neck broken. Wherein is set forth the ignorance and blindness of the Quakers doctrine of Christ within them; and that they cannot, nor doth not know the true meaning of the Scriptures, neither have they the gift of interpretation of Scripture. As will appear in those several heads set down in the next page following. /
by: Muggleton, Lodowick, 1609-1698
Published: (1667)
by: Muggleton, Lodowick, 1609-1698
Published: (1667)
The Quakers quibbles : in three parts : first set forth in an expostulatory epistle to Will. Pfnn [as printed] concerning the late meeting held to Barbycan between the Baptists and the Quakers, also the pretended prophet Lod. Muggleton and the Quakers compared : the second part, in reply to a quibbling answer to G. Whiteheads, entituled The Quakers plainness ... : the third part, being a continuation of their quibbles ... /
by: Thompson, Thomas
by: Thompson, Thomas
The Quaker condemned out of his own mouth, or, An answer to Will. Pen's book entitled Reason against railing, and truth against fiction : wherein he hathe confessed that if those things objected against the Quakers in two former dialogues be true, that then a Quaker is quite another thing than a Christian, that those matters heretofore objected were and are real truths and no fictions, is fully cleared and evinced in this third dialogue between a Christian and a Quaker /
by: Hicks, Thomas, active 17th century
by: Hicks, Thomas, active 17th century
The Quaker condemned out of his own mouth, or, An answer to Will. Pen's book entitled Reason against railing, and truth against fiction : wherein he hathe confessed that if those things objected against the Quakers in two former dialogues be true, that then a Quaker is quite another thing than a Christian, that those matters heretofore objected were and are real truths and no fictions, is fully cleared and evinced in this third dialogue between a Christian and a Quaker /
by: Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent
Published: (1674)
by: Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent
Published: (1674)
The spirit of the hat, or, The government of the Quakers among themselves : as it hath been exercised of late years by George Fox, and other leading-men, in their Monday, or second-days meeting at Devonshire-House, brought to light : in a bemoaning letter of a
by: Mucklow, William, 1631-1713
Published: (1700)
by: Mucklow, William, 1631-1713
Published: (1700)
A third narrative of the proceedings at Turner's Hall the twenty first day of April 1698 : giving an exact account of the proofs brought by George Keith out of the Quakers printed books ... opposing four great fundemental doctrines of the Christian faith as they were read by G. Keith out of his manuscript and examined by some ministers of the Church of England there present who compared each quotation with the Quakers printed books laid open before them : with various notes and observations by G.K. ... and some additions of proofs not then read ...: also W. Penn's letter to George Keith ... and George Keith's letter in answer to the same ... likewise a letter of G.K. to George Whitehead in answer to his /
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
A third narrative of the proceedings at Turner's Hall the twenty first day of April 1698 : giving an exact account of the proofs brought by George Keith out of the Quakers printed books ... opposing four great fundemental doctrines of the Christian faith as they were read by G. Keith out of his manuscript and examined by some ministers of the Church of England there present who compared each quotation with the Quakers printed books laid open before them : with various notes and observations by G.K. ... and some additions of proofs not then read ...: also W. Penn's letter to George Keith ... and George Keith's letter in answer to the same ... likewise a letter of G.K. to George Whitehead in answer to his /
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Published: (1698)
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Published: (1698)
Quakerism subverted /
by: J. C. (John Cheyney)
Published: (1677)
by: J. C. (John Cheyney)
Published: (1677)
Railings and slanders detected: or The folly and heresies of the Quakers further exposed. : Being an answer to an invective libel written by G. Whitehead, impertinently called, Antichrist in flesh unmasked, &c. which some of the Quakers call an answer to a book truly stiled Antichrist in Spirit unmasked: or, Quakerism a great delusion. In this brief discourse you have the slanderous out-cries of G. Whitehead, against Edward Paye, Henry Loader, and William Alcot, examined, detected, and confuted.
by: Paye, Edw. (Edward)
Published: (1692)
by: Paye, Edw. (Edward)
Published: (1692)
Quakerism withering and Christianity reviving, or, A brief reply to the Quakers pretended vindication : in answer to a printed sheet deliver'd to the Parliament wherein their errors, both in fundamentals and circumstantials are further detected, and G. Whitehead further unmask'd /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1694)
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1694)
Quakerism withering and Christianity reviving, or, A brief reply to the Quakers pretended vindication : in answer to a printed sheet deliver'd to the Parliament wherein their errors, both in fundamentals and circumstantials are further detected, and G. Whitehead further unmask'd /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
The principles of the Quakers further shewn to be blasphemous and seditious : in a reply to Geo. Whitehead's answer to the Brief discovery, stiled Truth and innocency vindicated /
by: Beckham, Edward, 1637 or 1638-1714
by: Beckham, Edward, 1637 or 1638-1714
The principles of the Quakers further shewn to be blasphemous and seditious : in a reply to Geo. Whitehead's answer to the Brief discovery, stiled Truth and innocency vindicated /
by: Beckham, Edward, 1637 or 8-1714
Published: (1700)
by: Beckham, Edward, 1637 or 8-1714
Published: (1700)
Quæries propounded to George Fox and his ministers : to answer from a paper wrote by George Fox, intituled An epistle from the people called Quakers to all people to read over ... /
by: R. C.
Published: (1669)
by: R. C.
Published: (1669)
Quæries propounded to George Fox and his ministers : to answer from a paper wrote by George Fox, intituled An epistle from the people called Quakers to all people to read over ... /
by: R. C.
by: R. C.
A backslider reproved and his folly made manifest : and his confusions and contradictions discovered in a short reply to a book lately published by Robert Cobbet called A word to the upright, who being turned from the light now makes it his work to war against it and them that walk in it; but his weapons are broken and in his own snare is he taken /
by: Crisp, Stephen, 1628-1692
Published: (1669)
by: Crisp, Stephen, 1628-1692
Published: (1669)
A backslider reproved and his folly made manifest : and his confusions and contradictions discovered in a short reply to a book lately published by Robert Cobbet called A word to the upright, who being turned from the light now makes it his work to war against it and them that walk in it; but his weapons are broken and in his own snare is he taken /
by: Crisp, Stephen, 1628-1692
Published: (1669)
by: Crisp, Stephen, 1628-1692
Published: (1669)
Some errors of the Quakers detected : viz. their denial of Christ, his sacrifice, ordinances, the Resurrection of the Body, and Christ's second coming : to which is added proof tha the light in all men is not Christ : with an answer to a Quaker's praise of William Penn /
by: Estwick, Francis
Published: (1697)
by: Estwick, Francis
Published: (1697)
Some errors of the Quakers detected : viz. their denial of Christ, his sacrifice, ordinances, the Resurrection of the Body, and Christ's second coming : to which is added proof tha the light in all men is not Christ : with an answer to a Quaker's praise of William Penn /
by: Estwick, Francis
by: Estwick, Francis
William Penn and the Quakers either impostors, or apostates : which they please: proved from their avowed principles, and contrary practices. By Trepidantium Malleus.
by: Young, Samuel, fl. 1684-1700
Published: (1697)
by: Young, Samuel, fl. 1684-1700
Published: (1697)