The counterfeit discover'd.
| Main Author: | Crisp, Thomas, 17th cent |
|---|---|
| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
[London :
publisher not identified,
1694]
|
| Series: | Early English books online.
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
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The counterfeit uncover'd.
by: Crisp, Thomas, 17th cent
Published: (1695)
by: Crisp, Thomas, 17th cent
Published: (1695)
Animadversions on George Whitehead's book, falsly stiled [bracket] Innocency triumphant [bracket] : wherein he, and his abettors, are proved guilty of contempt of the person of our Blessed Saviour, the Holy Scriptures, and governours, perverseness and falshood : also George Whitehead's charge of sedition, malice, and impudence, on F.B. proved on himself and abettors.
by: Crisp, Thomas, 17th cent
Published: (1694)
by: Crisp, Thomas, 17th cent
Published: (1694)
Animadversions on George Whitehead's book, falsly stiled [bracket] Innocency triumphant [bracket] : wherein he, and his abettors, are proved guilty of contempt of the person of our Blessed Saviour, the Holy Scriptures, and governours, perverseness and falshood : also George Whitehead's charge of sedition, malice, and impudence, on F.B. proved on himself and abettors.
by: Crisp, Thomas, active 17th century
by: Crisp, Thomas, active 17th century
One blow more at new Rome : being an appendix to Battering rams &c. : containing a farther discovery of the grand errours, deep hypocrisas printed] G. Whitehead, being an answer to some part of his book stiled Innocency against envy &c. /
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
One blow more at new Rome : being an appendix to Battering rams &c. : containing a farther discovery of the grand errours, deep hypocrisies, and romish practices of the leader and teachers of the people called Quakers, but more parricularly [sic] G. Whitehead, being an answer to some part of his book stiled Innocency against envy &c /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1691)
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1691)
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)
The counterfeit convert, a scandal to Christianity : and his unjustly opposing Quakerism to Christianity justly reprehended : and the true Christ, and Holy Scripures [sic] confessed by the Quakers : in opposition to two scandalous books falsly styled I. Quakerism withering, and Christianity reviving, II. Animadversions on G. Whitehead's book, Innocency triumphant.
by: Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723
Published: (1694)
by: Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723
Published: (1694)
New Rome unmask'd and her foundation shaken : by a farther discovery of the grand errors, deep hypocrisies, popish practices, and pernitious principles of the teachers and leaders of the people call'd Quakers : containing also a brief answer to three books wrote by G. Whitehead, one of her chief cardinals ... against Fran. Bugg ... : as also a brief narrative between the said G. Whitehead and Fran. Bugg ... /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
A second summons to the city of Abel, 2 Sam. 20 : to deliver up Sheba, the son of Bichri, that man of Belial : by way of metaphor, alluding to the Quakers and Geo. Whitehead and may serve for a reply to their answer to my printed sheet, stiled The Quakers Yearly Meeting impeached, &c.
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Thomas Taylor's solemn declaration to clear himself from that wicked aspersion of being a Jesuit, and from popery, &c. /
by: Taylor, Thomas, 1618-1682
Published: (1679)
by: Taylor, Thomas, 1618-1682
Published: (1679)
A second summons to the city of Abel, 2 Sam. 20 : to deliver up Sheba, the son of Bichri, that man of Belial : by way of metaphor, alluding to the Quakers and Geo. Whitehead and may serve for a reply to their answer to my printed sheet, stiled The Quakers Yearly Meeting impeached, &c.
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1695)
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1695)
The pilgrim's progress, from Quakerism to Christianity : containing a farther discovery of the danger of the growth of Quakerism, not only in point of doctrine, but also in their politicks, in what they call their church-government, both from matter of fact, practice and experience, from the connection of the use and design of their silent meetings, their monthly, quarterly, and yearly meetings, &c. ... : together with a remedy proposed for the cure of Quakerism : to which is added an appendix, shewing wherein there is a most damnable plot contrived and carrying on by new-Rome, and that by a united confederacy against the reformed religion ... : with a challenge to Geo. Whitehead, (her chief cardinal) to prove the same /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
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)
New Rome unmask'd and her foundation shaken : by a farther discovery of the grand errors, deep hypocrisies, popish practices, and pernitious principles of the teachers and leaders of the people call'd Quakers : containing also a brief answer to three books wrote by G. Whitehead, one of her chief cardinals ... against Fran. Bugg ... : as also a brief narrative between the said G. Whitehead and Fran. Bugg ... /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1692)
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1692)
The pilgrim's progress, from Quakerism to Christianity : containing a farther discovery of the danger of the growth of Quakerism, not only in point of doctrine, but also in their politicks, in what they call their church-government, both from matter of fact, practice and experience, from the connection of the use and design of their silent meetings, their monthly, quarterly, and yearly meetings, &c. ... : together with a remedy proposed for the cure of Quakerism : to which is added an appendix, shewing wherein there is a most damnable plot contrived and carrying on by new-Rome, and that by a united confederacy against the reformed religion ... : with a challenge to Geo. Whitehead, (her chief cardinal) to prove the same /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1698)
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1698)
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?
Due order of law and justice pleaded against irregular & arbitrary proceedings in the case and late imprisonment of George Whitehead and Thomas Burr in the city and county gaol of Norwich, from the 21st day of the 1st moneth called March, 1679, to the 12th day of the 5th moneth, called July, 1680 : being an impartial account of the most material passages and letters to the magistrates relating to the said proceedings with the prisoners above said : wherein the people called Quakers are vindicated and cleared from popery : published for information and caution on the behalf of true Protestants and English-mens birth-rights.
Due order of law and justice pleaded against irregular & arbitrary proceedings in the case and late imprisonment of George Whitehead and Thomas Burr in the city and county gaol of Norwich, from the 21st day of the 1st moneth called March, 1679, to the 12th day of the 5th moneth, called July, 1680 : being an impartial account of the most material passages and letters to the magistrates relating to the said proceedings with the prisoners above said : wherein the people called Quakers are vindicated and cleared from popery : published for information and caution on the behalf of true Protestants and English-mens birth-rights.
Published: (1680)
Published: (1680)
The counterfeit convert, a scandal to Christianity : and his unjustly opposing Quakerism to Christianity justly reprehended : and the true Christ, and Holy Scripures [as printed] confessed by the Quakers : in opposition to two scandalous books falsly styled I. Quakerism withering, and Christianity reviving, II. Animadversions on G. Whitehead's book, Innocency triumphant.
by: Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723
by: Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723
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
A brief reply to George Whitehead's book stiled, A rambling pilgrim : in answer to a book intituled The pilgrim's progress from Quakerism to Christianity : shewing the danger of the Quakers government within the government and opposite to it ... contrary to the laws of the land and particularly to the Act of Toleration /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
New Rome arraigned and out of her own mouth condemned /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
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)
A brief reply to George Whitehead's book stiled, A rambling pilgrim : in answer to a book intituled The pilgrim's progress from Quakerism to Christianity : shewing the danger of the Quakers government within the government and opposite to it ... contrary to the laws of the land and particularly to the Act of Toleration /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1700)
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Published: (1700)
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)
A few positions of the sincere belief and Christian doctrine of the people of God called Quakers (to obviate misrepresentations and calumnies about the same.) : Being inserted as an appendix to a book, entitled, A sober expostulation with some of the clergy, &c.
by: Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723
Published: (1698)
by: Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723
Published: (1698)
The Instability of the Quakers pretended infallibility
Published: (1700)
Published: (1700)
George Keith's Fourth narrative of his proceedings at Turners-hall : divided into three parts : detecting the Quakers gross errors, vile heresies, and antichristian principles, oppugning the fundamentals of Christianity, by clear and evident proofs (in above two hundred and fifty quotations) faithfully taken out of their books, and read at three several meetings, the 11th, the 18th, and 23d of Jan., 1699 before a great auditory of judicious persons, ministers, and others, more particularly discovering the fallacious and sophistical defences of George Whitehead, Joseph Wyeth, and seven Quakers of Colchester, in their late books on all the several heads contained in the printed advertisement : to which is prefix'd, the attestation of five ministers of the Church of England, to the truth of the said quotations, and a postcript [sic] /
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Published: (1700)
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
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)
An abstract by way of index of some very unsound and some other very antichristian passages collected out of G. Whitehead's and W. Penns books, plainly contradicting their late creeds : one signed by W. Penn at Dublin in Ireland on which the B. of Cork hath made some seasonable remarks, another signed by G.W., called A few positions of the sincere belief and Christian doctrine of the people called Quakers, both printed in this present year 1698.
George Keith's Fourth narrative of his proceedings at Turners-hall : divided into three parts : detecting the Quakers gross errors, vile heresas printed] /
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
An abstract by way of index of some very unsound and some other very antichristian passages collected out of G. Whitehead's and W. Penns books, plainly contradicting their late creeds : one signed by W. Penn at Dublin in Ireland on which the B. of Cork hath made some seasonable remarks, another signed by G.W., called A few positions of the sincere belief and Christian
Published: (1699)
Published: (1699)
Battering rams against New Rome : containing a farther discovery of the grand hypocrisie of the leaders and teachers of the people called Quakers : together with a publick challenge to meet G. Fox, G. Whitehead, W. Penn, and S. Cater to prove matters of fact : to which are added some queries propounded to their Protestant hearers who are not of G.F.'s party /
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
by: Bugg, Francis, 1640-1724?
Gross error and hypocrisie detected in George Whitehead and some of his brethern : as doth appear from the disingenuous and hypocritical answer he and some others have given to some queries sent to the last Yearly Meeting of the people call'd Quakers, in the third month, 1695, by comparing the said answer with the printed books of the said George Whitehead, William Pemn, and John Whitehead, leading men in the said Meeting, wherein the great inconistency and contradiction of their present late answer to the express words and sentiments of their printed books is discovered : with a further account of their vile and pernicious errours /
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Published: (1695)
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
Published: (1695)
Gross error and hypocrisie detected in George Whitehead and some of his brethern : as doth appear from the disingenuous and hypocritical answer he and some others have given to some queries sent to the last Yearly Meeting of the people call'd Quakers, in the third month, 1695, by comparing the said answer with the printed books of the said George Whitehead, William Pemn, and John Whitehead, leading men in the said Meeting, wherein the great inconistency and contradiction of their present late answer to the express words and sentiments of their printed books is discovered : with a further account of their vile and pernicious errours /
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
by: Keith, George, 1639?-1716
The Quakers house built upon the sand. Or, A discovery of the damnablenesse of their pernicious doctrines : With a warning to the people of God, and all others that tender the salvation of their immortall soules, to build upon the rocke Christ Jesus, and his righteousnesse, to confirm the faith once delivered to the saints. In answer to a rayling pamphlet, lately put forth by George Whithead. This is published for the securing the saints, keeping others out of the snare, and (if possible) the reducing some of those that have been seduced by their destructive principles. By the unworthyest of the labourers in the Lords vineyard, and teacher to a church of Christ, Samuel Hammond.
by: Hammond, Samuel, d. 1665
Published: (1658)
by: Hammond, Samuel, d. 1665
Published: (1658)