To the generall councill of officers of the English army: and to every member in particular : Friends, I am moved of the Lord to write unto you in the name and power of our Lord Iesus Christ; ...
| Main Author: | Fox, Margaret Askew Fell, 1614-1702 |
|---|---|
| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
[London :
publisher not identified,
1659]
|
| Series: | Early English books online.
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
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To the general councel, and officers of the army, and to every member in particular : Friends, I am moved of the Lord to write unto you, in the name and power of our Lord Jesus Christ; ...
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Jeremiah Hignell's loving and friendly advice and council : given forth to the inhabitants of Bristol, and all others that may be concerned in other places.
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An answer unto thirty quæries propounded by those who by the world (as they say) are scornfully called Quakers. /
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A vvarning from the Lord to the inhabitants of Underbarrovv, and so to all the inhabitants in England, : where it shall meet with them, who holds up the false teachers, and false worship, and who beats, stone, stock, and persecute, and hail out of their assemblies, those who are sent by the Lord, to speak his word freely; with an exhortation, that they hast to meet the Lord by true repentance, by putting off the works of darkness, lest the Lord cut them assunder, by his sword, which is already drawn and put into the hand of his servants. Also, a word to my brethren, and companions in tribulation in the kingdome and patience of Jesus Christ, who is by the world scornfully called Quakers. With the manner of my passage through the dark world, (wherein the simple ones may see the deceits of the man of sin in his actings like the true spirit) to warn all to follow the true light within, which leads unto God, & to beware of the voice, lo here & lo there, by one who is a labourer in the vineyard, who is not known to the world; (though named of the world) Edvvard Burrough.
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Milk for babes: and meat for strong men : A feast of fat things; wine well refined on the lees. O come young men and maidens, old men and babes, and drink abundantly of the streams that run from the fountain, that you may feel a well-spring of living water in yourselves, springing up to eternal life; that as he lives (even Christ Jesus) from whence all the springs do come, so you may live also, and partake of his glory that is ascended at the right hand of the Father, far above principalities and powers. Being the breathings of the Spirit through his servant James Naylor, written by him in the time of the confinement of his outward man in prison, but not published till now.
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by: Naylor, James, 1617?-1660
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An epistle to the monthly, and quarterly meetings of Friends, in England and Wales, : relating to our Friends and brethren, sufferers by reason of the late warrs in Ireland. London, the fifth day of the sixth month, 1692.
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The word of the Lord God Almighty : that liveth for ever, and ever, to all persecutors, who are dead, though yet alive, upon the face of the whole earth: that so they may hear, fear, and repent, before it be too late.
by: West, Thomas, of Hertford
Published: (1664)
by: West, Thomas, of Hertford
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Omnibus magistratibus, gubernatoribusq; universo mundo, qui profitentur Christum, prophetarum, & apostolorum scriptaq; ubicunq; hæc venerint; : hæc vobis obviantur consideranda, ab amico omnium potentiarum justarum. /
by: Fox, George, 1624-1691
Published: (1656)
by: Fox, George, 1624-1691
Published: (1656)
A paper sent forth into the world, from them that are scornfully called Quakers : declaring the grounds and reasons why they deny the teachers of the world, (who profess themselves to be ministers) and dissent from them.
by: Fox, George, 1624-1691
Published: (1656)
by: Fox, George, 1624-1691
Published: (1656)
A few words to those who look for another dispensation than what is known by the faithful Christians in this day, : putting off and slighting the present manifestation of God unto them, and so by their unfaithfulness to the Lord God, in not walking answerable to himfor [sic] his loving-kindness in his present manifestation unto them, put the day of the Lord far off from them, &c.
by: Bourne, Edward, d. 1708
Published: (1679)
by: Bourne, Edward, d. 1708
Published: (1679)
These several papers was sent to the Parliament the twentieth day of the fifth moneth, 1659. : Being above seven thousand of the names of the hand-maids and daughters of the Lord, and such as feels the oppression of tithes, in the names of many more of the said handmaids and daughters of the Lord, who witness against the oppression of tithes and other things as followeth.
by: Forster, Mary, 1619?-1686
Published: (1659)
by: Forster, Mary, 1619?-1686
Published: (1659)
Of the Quakers despising the holy scriptures : As appears in their preachers printed books, as follows; collected in the fear of the Lord, for no other end, but to move the Quakers to get all their errors retracted, and to caution all others against them.
by: Mather, W. (William), fl. 1695
Published: (1700)
by: Mather, W. (William), fl. 1695
Published: (1700)
The great obiection concerning the Quakers meetings fully answered : Wherein, in several particulars, it is proved, that although the said people do meet together, yet they are not transgressors of the law, according to right reason, which is the ground and foundation thereof; and therefore according to equity and good conscience, ought not to suffer for so doing, neither ought their meetings to be supprest. By a lover of all righteous laws, and just government, and one unto whom such laws are not a terror, R.W.
by: Wastfield, Robert, fl. 1647-1665
Published: (1662)
by: Wastfield, Robert, fl. 1647-1665
Published: (1662)
A Reply to the answer unto the letter written to a Quaker in Norfolk : With an appendix. In the letter, reply, and appendix, all Robert Barclay's arguments, the standard of the Quakers faith, are fairly drawn forth, examined and confuted.