Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
BX1767 .J44 | Popery, a great mystery of iniquity proved in a sermon preached in the parish church of Newland, in the county of Glocester, on Wednesday the 22d. of December, 1680, being the fast-day appointed by the Kings proclamation ... / | 2 |
BX1767 .K39 | Satisfaction for all such as oppose reformation in a confutation of twelve practices of popery proved to be condemned by Christ and his apostles : with an answer also made to Mr. Oddy's objections which he wrote against the Covenant : to which is also added a true character of the Covenant / | 2 |
BX1767 .L35 | Les motifs de la conversion à la religion reformée du Sieur Francois de la Motte, cy-devant predicateur de l'Ordre des Carmes | 2 |
BX1767 .L38 1946 | Behind the dictators / | 1 |
BX1767 .L47 | A letter of a baker of Boulougne, sent to the pope. | 1 |
BX1767 .L56 1673 | A seasonable discourse shewing the necessity of maintaining the established religion in opposition to popery | 4 |
BX1767 .L56 1681 | Seasonable advice to all Protestant people of England | 1 |
BX1767 .L56 1686 | Papists no Catholicks, and popery no Christianity | 1 |
BX1767 .M9 | The decline of popery and its causes An address delivered in the Broadway tabernacle, on Wednesday evening, January 15, 1851 / | 1 |
BX1767 .M92 (Toner Coll.) | The difference between popery and Protestantism, in a letter to an inquiring friend,/ | 1 |
BX1767 .N48 | News from the exchange, or, The papist acting the Quaker being a true account of a fanatical pennance enjoyned by a priest of the Church of of [sic] Rome, and performed by one of her obedient sons at the Royal Exchange London, the 14th this instant January, 1674 : where openly pulling off his shooes and stockings in change-time he marched from thence with much solemnity bare-headed, bare-foot and bare-legg'd through the city into the Strand. | 2 |
BX1767 .P36 |
One project for the good of England that is, our civil union is our civil safety : humbly dedicated to the great council, the Parliament of England. The oaths of Irish papists no evidence against Protestants, or, A warning piece to jurors in a letter to a friend. |
4 |
BX1767 .P53 1663 | The primitive rule of reformation | 4 |
BX1767 .R44 | A Relation of the two pretended apostles that came invisibly into the great city of Tholouse in France, from Damascus in Galilea, aged above a thousand years | 2 |
BX1767 .R52 | An account of a disputation at Oxford, anno dom. 1554 with A treatise of the Blessed Sacrament / | 2 |
BX1767 .R6 | Room for miracles;, or, Miracles from Room a cart-load for a penny. : Pleasantly yet truely exposing the wonderful fopperies imposed by the popish church, to be believed by her Catholick children. : To which is added a lump of holy reliques, worth no body knows what, as a cast into the bargain. | 1 |
BX1767 .S24 | The Romish priest turn'd protestant with the reasons of his conversion, wherin the true Church is exposed to the view of Christians and derived out of the Holy Scriptures, sound reason, and the ancient fathers : humbly presented to both houses of Parliament / | 2 |
BX1767 .S35 | The practice practised by the Pope and his prelates which they haue vsed synce they came to their estates. | 1 |
BX1767 .S43 | The Sick Popes last will and testament with his several legacies left to his dear children the Jesuits and others. | 2 |
BX1767 .S64 | The Solemn mock procession of the Pope, cardinalls, Jesuits, fryers &c. through the city of London, November the 17th, 1680 | 2 |