APA (7th ed.) Citation

Garmston, J. (1715). The folly of excusing our selves, and condemning others; especially of condemning the afflicted. What judgment men should make of afflictions; their duty under them; and the means to deliver and preserve themselves from them: A sermon preach'd at the Guild-Hall in the city of Lincoln, June the 19th, 1715, to the prisoners confin'd for debt in the City-Prison. By John Garmston, M.A. master of the free-school in the city of Lincoln; and late Fellow of Magdalen College in Cambridge. Printed for John Knight, bookseller in Lincoln.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Garmston, John. The Folly of Excusing Our Selves, and Condemning Others; Especially of Condemning the Afflicted. What Judgment Men Should Make of Afflictions; Their Duty Under Them; and the Means to Deliver and Preserve Themselves from Them: A Sermon Preach'd at the Guild-Hall in the City of Lincoln, June the 19th, 1715, to the Prisoners Confin'd for Debt in the City-Prison. By John Garmston, M.A. Master of the Free-school in the City of Lincoln; and Late Fellow of Magdalen College in Cambridge. London: Printed for John Knight, bookseller in Lincoln, 1715.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Garmston, John. The Folly of Excusing Our Selves, and Condemning Others; Especially of Condemning the Afflicted. What Judgment Men Should Make of Afflictions; Their Duty Under Them; and the Means to Deliver and Preserve Themselves from Them: A Sermon Preach'd at the Guild-Hall in the City of Lincoln, June the 19th, 1715, to the Prisoners Confin'd for Debt in the City-Prison. By John Garmston, M.A. Master of the Free-school in the City of Lincoln; and Late Fellow of Magdalen College in Cambridge. Printed for John Knight, bookseller in Lincoln, 1715.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.