Katadynastēs: : might overcoming right· Or a cleer answer to M. John Goodwin's Might and right well met. : Wherein is cleared, that the action of the Army in secluding many Parliament men from the place of their discharge of trust, and the imprisoning of some of them, is neither defensible by the rules of solid reason, nor religion. /
| Main Author: | Geree, John, 1601?-1649 |
|---|---|
| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
London :
Printed for Robert Bostock at the King's Head in Paul's Church-yard,
1649.
|
| Series: | Early English books online.
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
Similar Items
Katadynastēs : Might overcoming right, or, A cleer answer to M. John Goodwin's Might and right well met : wherein is cleared that the action of the army in secluding many Parliament men from the place of their discharge of trust, and the imprisoning of some of them, is neither defensible by the rules of solid reason nor religion /
by: Geree, John, 1601?-1649
Published: (1649)
by: Geree, John, 1601?-1649
Published: (1649)
Katadynastēs : Might overcoming right, or, A cleer answer to M. John Goodwin's Might and right well met : wherein is cleared that the action of the army in secluding many Parliament men from the place of their discharge of trust, and the imprisoning of some of them, is neither defensible by the rules of solid reason nor religion /
by: Geree, John, 1601?-1649
by: Geree, John, 1601?-1649
Katadynastēs: : might overcoming right. Or a cleer answer to M. John Goodwin's Might and right well met. Wherein is cleared, that the action of the Army in secluding many Parliament men from the place of their discharge of trust, and the imprisoning of some of them, is neither defensible by the rules of solid reason, nor religion. /
by: Geree, John, 1601?-1649
Published: (1649)
by: Geree, John, 1601?-1649
Published: (1649)
Ho auto-katakritos. = The self-condemned. Or, a letter to Mr Jo: Goodwin: shewing, that in his essay to justifie the equity, and regularnes of the late, and present proceedings of the Army by principles of reason, and religion, he hath condemned himselfe of iniquity, and variablenesse in the highest degree, untill he shall explaine himself in publike. /
by: Nethersole, Francis, Sir, 1587-1659
Published: (1648)
by: Nethersole, Francis, Sir, 1587-1659
Published: (1648)
'O 'auto-kata'kpitos : The self-condemned, or, A letter to Mr. Jo. Goodwin : shewing that in his essay to justifie the equity, and regularnes of the late and present proceedings of the army by the principles of reason and religion, he hath condemned himselfe of iniquity and variablenesse in the highest degree, until he shall explain himself in publike /
by: Nethersole, Francis, Sir, 1587-1659
Published: (1649)
by: Nethersole, Francis, Sir, 1587-1659
Published: (1649)
Sal Scylla: or, A letter written from Scilly to Mr John Goodwin, minister of the gospel in London.
by: Salter, Christopher
Published: (1653)
by: Salter, Christopher
Published: (1653)
The great accuser cast down; or, A publick trial of Mr. John Goodwin of Coleman-street, London, at the bar of religion & right reason. : It being a full answer to a certain scandalous book of his lately published, entituled, The triers tried and cast, &c. Whereupon being found guilty of high scandal and malediction both against the present authority, and the commissioners for approbation and ejection, he is here sentenced and brought forth to the deserved execution of the press.
by: Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678
Published: (1657)
by: Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678
Published: (1657)
The lightless-starre : or, Mr. John Goodwin discovered a Pelagio-Socinian: and this by the examination of his preface to his book entituled Redemption redeemed. Together with an answer to his letter entituled Confidence dismounted. By Richard Resbury, Minister of the gospel at Oundle in Northampton-shire. Hereunto is annexed a thesis of that reverend, pious, and judicious divine, Doctor Preston, sometimes of Immanuel College in Cambridge, concerning the irresistibility of converting grace.
by: Resbury, Richard, 1607-1674
Published: (1652)
by: Resbury, Richard, 1607-1674
Published: (1652)
Peace protected, and discontent dis-armed. : Wherein the seventeen queries (with the addition of three more, postscript-wise) lately published, partly to allay the discontents of some about the late revolution of government, but more especially to guide every mans feet into the way of peace, as well his own, as the publique, are reinforced with replies unto, and animadversions upon, such answers, which some (it seems) have given unto them, to invalidate their purport and intent. Together with four new queries superadded. By the author of the said seventeen queries.
by: Goodwin, John, 1594?-1665
Published: (1654)
by: Goodwin, John, 1594?-1665
Published: (1654)
Moro-mastix: Mr Iohn Goodwin whipt with his own rod. Or The dis-secting of the sixteenth section of his book truly nam'd by himself Hagio-Mastix: : so far as it falsly and frivolously mentions a late disputation in Christ-Church-Parish, concerning the lawfulness of paying tythes. /
by: A Diligent Observer of the Said Disputation
Published: (1647)
by: A Diligent Observer of the Said Disputation
Published: (1647)
Coleman-street conclave visited, : and, that grand imposter, the schismaticks cheater in chief (who hath long, slily lurked therein) truly and duly discovered. Containing a most palpable and plain display of Mr. John Goodwin's self-conviction (under his own hand-writing) and of the notorious heresies, errours, malice, pride, and hypocrisie of this most huge Garagantua, in falsly pretended piety; to the lamentable misleading of his too-too credulous soul-murthered proselytes of Coleman-street & elsewhere. Collected, principally, out of his own big-bragadochio and wavelike-swelling and swaggering writings, full-fraught with six-footed terms, and flashie rhetoricall phrases, far more than solid and sacred truths. And may fitly serve (if it be the Lords will) like Belshazzars hand-writing, on the wall of his conscience, to strike terrour and shame into his own soul, and shamelesse face; and to un-deceive his most miserably cheated and inchanted, or bewitched followers. /
by: Vicars, John, 1579 or 80-1652
Published: (1648)
by: Vicars, John, 1579 or 80-1652
Published: (1648)
Faces about. Or, A recrimination charged upon Mr. John Goodvvin, in the point of fighting against God, and opposing the way of Christ. And a justification of the Presbyterian way in the particulars by him unjustly charged upon it. VVith other short animadversions upon his late book called, Theomachia. Or, The grand imprudence of men running the hazard of fighting against God, &c. Published by authority.
by: Prynne, William, 1600-1669
Published: (1644)
by: Prynne, William, 1600-1669
Published: (1644)
An Apologie for Mr. Iohn Goodwin: : who having subscribed proposalls to be presented to the magistrate concerning matters of religion; after that, makes 30 Queries, whether it be the magistrates duty to interpose his authoritie in matters of religion.
Published: (1653)
Published: (1653)
Master John Goodwins quere's questioned, : concerning the power of the civil magistrate in matters of religion: by one quere opposed to his thirty. Quere, whether the fourth commandment doth not sufficiently justifie and injoin the power of the civil magistrate in matters of religion.
Published: (1653)
Published: (1653)
A Scotch antidote against the English infection of Arminianism : Which little book may be (through Gods blessing) very useful to preserve those that are yet found in the faith, from the infection of Mr John Goodwin's great book. By Robert Bailie, minister of the Gospel at Glasgow.
by: Baillie, Robert, 1599-1662
Published: (1652)
by: Baillie, Robert, 1599-1662
Published: (1652)
Sion College what it is, and doeth. : Together with a vindication of that society from the slanderous diffamations of two fell and fiery satyres, the one called Sion College visited : the other The pulpit incendiary. As also a little taste, by the way, of another young thing of Mr. J Goodwins, running about with the shell on the head before it be all hatcht, under the name of Neophylopresbyteros, or, The youngling elder. /
by: Burges, Cornelius, 1589?-1665
Published: (1648)
by: Burges, Cornelius, 1589?-1665
Published: (1648)
An ansvver to Mr. J.G. his XL. queries, : touching the lawfulness, or unlawfulness of holding church-communion, between such who have been baptized after their beleeving, and others who have not otherwise been baptized, then in their infancie. As likewise touching infant, and after baptism. In which answer, the undueness of such mixt communion is declared, the unlawfulness of infant-baptism, and the necessity of after baptism is asserted. By W.A.
by: Allen, William, d. 1686
Published: (1653)
by: Allen, William, d. 1686
Published: (1653)
An answer to Mr. J.G. his XL queries : touching the lawfulness, or unlawfulness of holding church-communion, between such who have been baptized after their beleeving, and others who have not otherwise been baptized, then in their infancie, as likewise touching infant, and after baptism : in which answer, that undueness of such mixt communion is declared, the unlawfulness of infant-baptism, and the necessity of after baptism is asserted /
by: Allen, William, d. 1686
Published: (1653)
by: Allen, William, d. 1686
Published: (1653)
An answer to Mr. J.G. his XL queries : touching the lawfulness, or unlawfulness of holding church-communion, between such who have been baptized after their beleeving, and others who have not otherwise been baptized, then in their infancie, as likewise touching infant, and after baptism : in which answer, the undueness of such mixt communion is declared, the unlawfulness of infant-baptism, and the necessity of after baptism is asserted /
by: Allen, William, -1686
by: Allen, William, -1686
The apologist condemned: or, A vindication of the Thirty queries (together with their author) concerning the power of the civil magistrate in matters of religion. : By way of answer to a scurrilous pamphlet, published (as it seems) by some poposalist, under the mock-title of An apologie for Mr John Goodwin. Together with a brief touch upon another pamphlet, intituled, Mr J. Goodwin's queries questioned. By the author of the said Thirty queries.
by: Goodwin, John, 1594?-1665
Published: (1653)
by: Goodwin, John, 1594?-1665
Published: (1653)
The lightless-starre, or, Mr. John Goodwin discovered a Pelagio-Socinian : and this by the examination of his preface to his book entituled Redemption redeemed : together with an answer to his letter entituled Confidence dismounted /
by: Resbury, Richard, 1607-1674
by: Resbury, Richard, 1607-1674
The lightless-starre, or, Mr. John Goodwin discovered a Pelagio-Socinian : and this by the examination of his preface to his book entituled Redemption redeemed : together with an answer to his letter entituled Confidence dismounted /
by: Resbury, Richard, 1607-1674
Published: (1652)
by: Resbury, Richard, 1607-1674
Published: (1652)
The doctrine of the saints perseverance, explained and confirmed, or, The certain permanency of their 1. acceptation with God & 2. sanctification from God : manifested & proved from the 1. eternal principles 2. effectuall causes 3. externall meanes thereof ... vindicated in a full answer to the discourse of Mr. John Goodwin against it, in his book entituled Redemption redeemed : with some degressions concerning 1. the immediate effects of the death of Christ ... : with a discourse touching the epistles of Ignatius, the Episcopacy in them asserted, and some animadversions on Dr. H.H. his dissertations on that subject /
by: Owen, John, 1616-1683
Published: (1654)
by: Owen, John, 1616-1683
Published: (1654)
Coleman-street conclave visited, and, that grand imposter, the schismaticks cheater in chief (who hath long, slily lurked therein) truly and duly discovered : containing a most palpable and plain display of Mr. John Goodwin's self-conviction (under his own hand-writing) and of the notorious heresies, errours, malice, pride, and hypocrisie of his most huge garagantua, in falsly pretended piety, to the lamentable misleading of his too-too credulous soul-murthered proselytes of Coleman-street & elsewhere : collected, principally, out of his own big-bragadochio and wavelike-swelling and swaggering writings, full-fraught with six-footed terms, and flashie rhetoricall phrases, far more than solid and sacred truths, and may fitly serve (if it be the Lords will) like Belshazzars hand-writing, on the wall of his conscience, to strike terrour and shame into his own soul, and shamelesse face, and to un-deceive his most miserably cheated and inchanted, or bewitched followers /
by: Vicars, John, 1579 or 80-1652
Published: (1648)
by: Vicars, John, 1579 or 80-1652
Published: (1648)
Coleman-street conclave visited, and, that grand imposter, the schismaticks cheater in chief (who hath long, slily lurked therein) truly and duly discovered : containing a most palpable and plain display of Mr. John Goodwin's self-conviction (under his own hand-writing) and of the notorious heresies, errours, malice, pride, and hypocrisie of his most huge garagantua, in falsly pretended piety, to the lamentable misleading of his too-too credulous soul-murthered proselytes of Coleman-street & elsewhere : collected, principally, out of his own big-bragadochio and wavelike-swelling and swaggering writings, full-fraught with six-footed terms, and flashie rhetoricall phrases, far more than solid and sacred truths, and may fitly serve (if it be the Lords will) like Belshazzars hand-writing, on the wall of his conscience, to strike terrour and shame into his own soul, and shamelesse face, and to un-deceive his most miserably cheated and inchanted, or bewitched followers /
by: Vicars, John, 1579 or 1580-1652
by: Vicars, John, 1579 or 1580-1652
A right use made by a stander by at the two disputations at Great All-hollowes; between Mr. Goodwin and Mr. Symson, the 14. of January and 11. of February 1649. : Concerning the poynts of generall redemption, and inevitable damnation immediately from God alone.
by: Graunt, John, of Bucklersbury
Published: (1649)
by: Graunt, John, of Bucklersbury
Published: (1649)
A nosegay of rank-smelling flowers, : such as grow in Mr. Iohn Goodvvins garden. Gathered upon occasion of his late lying libell against M. Thomas Edvvards, which he himselfe fitly stiled Cretensis, for the foule lies therein contained, with sundry others, exactly gathered, and published. /
by: Ricraft, Josiah, fl. 1645-1679
Published: (1646)
by: Ricraft, Josiah, fl. 1645-1679
Published: (1646)
As you vvere, or, A reducing, if possibly any, seduc't ones, to facing about, turning head, front against God, by the recrimination, so intended, upon Mr. J.G., Pastor of the church in Colmanstreet, in point of fighting against God /
by: Woodward, Ezekias, 1590-1675
Published: (1644)
by: Woodward, Ezekias, 1590-1675
Published: (1644)
As you were: or A reducing (if possibly any) seduc't ones, to facing about, turning head, front against God) by the recrimination (so intended) upon Mr. J.G. (Pastor of the church in Colmanstreet) in point of fighting against God. By an unworthy auditor of the said (Iuditious-pious-divine) master Iohn Goodvvin.
by: Woodward, Ezekias, 1590-1675
Published: (1644)
by: Woodward, Ezekias, 1590-1675
Published: (1644)
As you vvere, or, A reducing, if possibly any, seduc't ones, to facing about, turning head, front against God, by the recrimination, so intended, upon Mr. J.G., Pastor of the church in Colmanstreet, in point of fighting against God /
by: Woodward, Ezekias, 1590-1675
Published: (1644)
by: Woodward, Ezekias, 1590-1675
Published: (1644)
The pagan preacher silenced. Or, an answer to a treatise of Mr. John Goodwin, entituled, the pagans debt & dowry. : Wherein is discovered the weaknesse of his arguments, and that it doth not yet appear by scripture, reason, or the testimony of the best of his own side, that the heathen who never heard of the letter of the Gospel, are either obliged to, or enabled for the believing in Christ; and that they are either engaged to matrimonial debt, or admitted to a matrimonial dowry. Wherein also is historically discovered, and polemically discussed the doctrin of Universal grace, with the original, growth and fall thereof; as it hath been held forth by the most rigid patrons of it. /
by: Howe, Obadiah, 1615 or 16-1683
Published: (1655)
by: Howe, Obadiah, 1615 or 16-1683
Published: (1655)
A compendious answer to a book called A brief survay of the judgement of Mr. John Goodvvin, and the Church of God walking with him, : touching their reasons of dissenting from many of their brethren, in these imprtant heads of doctrine; 1. Election and reprobation. 2. The death of Christ. 3. The grace of God in and about conversion. 4. The liberty or power of the will, or of the creature man. 5. The perseverance of the saints. VVherein the absurdities of all their dissenting doctrines are clearly exhibited, by a loving friend to the truth it self, Ellis Bradshaw.
by: Bradshaw, Ellis
Published: (1652)
by: Bradshaw, Ellis
Published: (1652)
The great accuser cast down, or, A publick trial of Mr. John Goodwin of Coleman-street, London, at the bar of religion & right reason : it being a full answer to a certain scandalous book of his lately published, entituled, The triers tried and cast, &c. whereupon being found guilty of high scandal and malediction both against the present authority, and the commissioners for approbation and ejection, he is here sentenced and brought forth to the deserved execution of the press /
by: Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678
by: Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678
The great accuser cast down, or, A publick trial of Mr. John Goodwin of Coleman-street, London, at the bar of religion & right reason : it being a full answer to a certain scandalous book of his lately published, entituled, The triers tried and cast, &c. whereupon being found guilty of high scandal and malediction both against the present authority, and the commissioners for approbation and ejection, he is here sentenced and brought forth to the deserved execution of the press /
by: Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678
Published: (1657)
by: Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678
Published: (1657)
Moro-mastix. Mr. Iohn Goodwin whipt with his own rod, or, The dis-secting of the sixteenth section of his book truly nam'd by himself Hagio-mastix : so far as it falsly and frivolously mentions a late disputation in Christ-Church parish, concerning the lawfulness of paying tythes /
Allotrioepiskopos, = the busie bishop. Or The visitor visited. By way of answer to a very feeble pamphlet lately published by Mr J.G. called Sion Colledge visited, in which answer, his cavils against the ministers of London for witnessing against his errours touching the holy Scriptures, and the power of man to good supernaturall, are answered, and the impertinency of his quotations out of the fathers, Martin Bucer, and Mr Ball are manifested. /
by: Jenkyn, William, 1613-1685
Published: (1648)
by: Jenkyn, William, 1613-1685
Published: (1648)
Some stop to the gangrene of Arminianism, lately promoted by M. John Goodwin' in his book entituled, Redemption redeemed. : or, the doctrine of election & reprobation in six sermons opened and cleared from the old Pelagian and late Arminian errors. By Richard Resburie, Minister of the gospell in Oundle in Northamptonshire.
by: Resbury, Richard, 1607-1674
Published: (1651)
by: Resbury, Richard, 1607-1674
Published: (1651)
Truth triumphing over falshood, antiquity over novelty. Or, The first part of a just and seasonable vindication of the undoubted ecclesiasticall iurisdiction, right, legislative, coercive power of Christian emperors, kings, magistrates, parliaments, in all matters of religion, church-government, discipline, ceremonies, manners: : summoning of, presiding, moderating in councells, synods; and ratifying their canons, determinations, decrees: as likewise of lay-mens right both to sit and vote in councells; ... In refutation of Mr. Iohn Goodwins Innocencies Triumph: my deare brother Burtons Vindication of churches, commonly called Independent: and of all anti-monarchicall, anti-Parliamentall, anti-synodicall, and anarchicall paradoxes of papists, prelates, Anabaptists, Arminians, Socinians, Brownists, or Independents: whose old and new objections to the contrary, are here fully answered. /
by: Prynne, William, 1600-1669
Published: (1645)
by: Prynne, William, 1600-1669
Published: (1645)
The reduction of a digressor, or, Rich. Baxter's reply to Mr George Kendall's digression in his book against Mr Goodwin
by: Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691
Published: (1654)
by: Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691
Published: (1654)
The doctrine of the saints perseverance, explained and confirmed, or, The certain permanency of their 1. acceptation with God & 2. sanctification from God : manifested & proved from the 1. eternal principles 2. effectuall causes 3. externall meanes thereof ... vindicated in a full answer to the discourse of Mr. John Goodwin against it, in his book entituled Redemption redeemed : with some digressions concerning 1. the immediate effects of the death of Christ ... : with a discourse touching the epistles of Ignatius, the Episcopacy in them asserted, and some animadversions on Dr. H.H. his dissertations on that subject /
by: Owen, John, 1616-1683
by: Owen, John, 1616-1683