Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
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BX5136 .D648 1685 | De jure laicorum sacerdotali ex sententiâ Tertulliani aliorumque veterum dissertatio adversùs anonymum dissertatorem, De coenae administratioue [sic] ubi pastores non sunt / | 1 |
BX5136 .D85 |
The last words of Lewis du Moulin being his retractation of all the personal reflections he had made on the divines of the Church of England (in several books of his) / The last words of Lewis du Moulin being his retractation of all the personal reflectins he had made on the divines of the Church of England (in several books of his) / |
2 |
BX5136 .E46 | S. Austin imitated, or, Retractions and repentings in reference unto the late civil and ecclesiastical changes in this nation | 2 |
BX5136 .E49 | Animadversions upon some passages in a book entituled The true nature of a gospel-church and its government written (as it is said by the publisher) by John Owen. | 2 |
BX5136 .F34 1674 | Libertas ecclesiastica, or, A discourse vindicating the lawfulness of those things which are chiefly excepted against in the Church of England, especially in its liturgy and worship and manifesting their agreeableness with the doctrine and practice both of ancient and modern churches / | 2 |
BX5136 .F42 | The gentle lash, or, The vindication of Dr. Featley, a knowne champion of the Protestant religion also seven articles exhibited against him with his answer thereunto : together with the said Doctor his manifesto and challenge. | 2 |
BX5136 .G64 | A reasonable word to the doctors of reason being some remarks on a nameless author in his pamphlet entituled The divine unity asserted : and some observations upon a short account of the proceedings of R.S., Bishop of a dissenting congregation in London ... : also a reasonable reprimand to Mr. Considerator for his foolish boasting in his letter to H.H. ... / | 2 |
BX5136 .G73 | The great case of toleration stated and endeavoured to be resolved in order to publick security and peace. | 2 |
BX5136 .G76 |
Defensio suæ responsionis ad nuperum libellum, qui inscribitur celeusma, &c. adversus refutationem ab authore celeusmatis editam adjecta sunt parallela imparia, sive, specimen fidei celeusmaticæ / An answer to Mr. Lowth's letter to Dr. Stillingfleet in another letter to a friend. |
4 |
BX5136 .H4 | Reflections upon the animadversions upon the Bishop of Worcester's letter | 2 |
BX5136 .H66 |
A fair and methodical discussion of the first and great controversy between the Church of England and Church of Rome concerning the infallible guide in three discourses : whereof the first is introductory, the second considers ... the pretence of modern infallibility and shews it to be groundless, the third ... briefly examines the pretended rational account of the Roman Catholicks concerning the ecclesiastical guide in controversies of religion and detects its artifice. A fair and methodical discussion of the first and great controversy between the Church of England and Church of Rome concerning the infallible guide in three discourses : whereof the first is introductory, the second considers ... the pretence of modern infallibility and shews it to be groundless, the third ... briefly examines the pretended rational account of the Roman Catholicks concerning the ecclesiastical guide in controversies of religion and detects its artifice. |
2 |
BX5136 .H886 | An addition or postscript to The vindication of the essence and unity of the Church-Catholick visible, and the priority thereof in regard of particular churches. In answer to the objections made against it, both by Mr. Stone, and some others. / | 1 |
BX5136 (INTERNET) |
The gentle lash, or, The vindication of Dr. Featley, a knowne champion of the Protestant religion also seven articles exhibited against him with his answer thereunto : together with the said Doctor his manifesto and challenge. The common-wealths-man unmasqu'd, or, A just rebuke to the author of The account of Denmark in two parts. True peace, or, A moderate discourse to compose the unsettled consciences and greatest differences in ecclesiastical affaires A modest and reasonable examination, of some things in vse in the Church of England, sundrie times heretofore misliked and now lately, in a booke called the (Plea of the innocent:) and an assertion for true and Christian church policy, made for a full satisfaction to all those, that are of iudgement, and not possessed with a preiudice against this present church gouernment ... The contentes whereof are set downe in the page following. / Post-haste a reply to Peter (Doctor Heylin's) appendix to his treatise intituled, Respondet Petrus, &c. / The author and subject of healing in the church set forth in a sermon preached before the Right Honorable the Parliament of England at St. Margarets Church in Westminster, on Wednesday, April 25, 1660, being the day of their assembly / A vindication of some Protestant principles of Church-unity and Catholick-communion, from the charge of agreement with the Church of Rome in answer to a late pamphlet, intituled, an agreement between the Church of England and the Church of Rome, evinced from the concertation of some of her sons with their brethren the dissenters / A fuller answer to Elimas the sorcerer or to the most material part (of a feign'd memoriall) toward the discovery of the Popish Plot, with modest reflections upon a pretended declaration (of the late Dutchess) for charging her religion : prelates ... in a letter addressed to Mr. Thomas Jones by Richard Watson ... / Of the lavves of ecclesiasticall politie eight bookes. / Moderation a vertue, or, A vindication of the principles and practices of the moderate divines and laity of the Church of England represented in some late immoderate discourses, under the nick-names of Grindalizers and Trimmers / The principall grounds of Christian religion Briefely and plainly propounded by way of question and answere for the instructing of the younger sort. / Theodulia, or, A just defence of hearing the sermons and other teaching of the present ministers of England against a book unjustly entituled (in Greek) A Christian testimony against them that serve the image of the beast, (in English) A Christian and sober testimony against sinful complyance, wherein the unlawfulness of hearing the present ministers of England is pretended to be clearly demonstrated by an author termed by himself Christophilus Antichristomachus / The false-prophets try'd by their fruits being a sermon preached at St. James's Westminister, November Vth 1699, in which it is shewn, that the principles, and practices, of the Church of Rome, with relation to those whom they call hereticks, are not only destructive of civil society, but are utterly irreconcileable with the gospel of Christ / A collection of several discourses against popery By William Wake, preacher to the honourable society of Grays-Inn. A very Christian, learned, and briefe discourse, concerning the true, ancient, and Catholicke faith, against all wicked vp-start heresies seruing very profitably for a preseruatiue against the profane nouelties of papists, Anabaptists, Arrians, Brownists, and all other sectaries. / The last words of Lewis du Moulin being his retractation of all the personal reflectins he had made on the divines of the Church of England (in several books of his) / An apologie or answere in defence of the Churche of Englande with a briefe and plaine declaration of the true religion professed and vsed in the same. The defense of the aunsvvere to the Admonition against the replie of T.C. / Love and truth in two modest and peaceable letters concerning the distempers of the present times / An apologie, or aunswer in defence of the Church of England concerninge the state of religion vsed in the same / A relation of the conference betweene William Lavvd, then, Lrd. Bishop of St. Davids; now, Lord Arch-Bishop of Canterbury: and Mr. Fisher the Jesuite by the command of King James of ever blessed memorie. VVith an answer to such exceptions as A.C. takes against it. / A vindication of the answer to some late papers concerning the unity and authority of the Catholic Church, and the reformation of the Church of England. A replication to the Bishop of Chalcedon his Survey of the Vindication of the Church of England from criminous schism clearing the English laws from the aspertion of cruelty : with an appendix in answer to the exceptions of S.W. / A just vindication of the Church of England, from the unjust aspersion of criminal schisme wherein the nature of criminal schisme, the divers sorts of schismaticks, the liberties and priviledges of national churches, the rights of sovereign magistrates, the tyranny, extortion and schisme of the Roman Communion of old, and at this very day, are manifested to the view of the world / The first parte of Pasquils apologie Wherin he renders a reason to his friendes of his long silence : and gallops the fielde with the Treatise of reformation / Schisme garded and beaten back upon the right owners shewing that our great controversy about Papall power is not a quaestion of faith but of interest and profit, not with the Church of Rome, but with the Court of Rome : wherein the true controversy doth consist, who were the first innovators, when and where these Papall innovations first began in England : with the opposition that was made against them / Melius inquirendum, or, A sober inquirie into the reasonings of the Serious inquirie wherein the inquirers cavils against the principles, his calumnies against the preachings and practises of the non-conformists are examined, and refelled, and St. Augustine, the synod of Dort and the Articles of the Church of England in the Quinquarticular points, vindicated. Reflections upon several passages in a book entitled, The reasonableness of a personal reformation, and the necessity of conversion with a letter to Mr. John Galpine, concerning his printed encomium of J.F. A chronological discourse touching, 1 The Church. 2 Christ. 3 Anti-Christ. 4 Gog & Magog. &c The substaunce whereof, was collected about some 10. or 11. yeares since (as may be gathered by an epistle prefixed before a tractate, called, The visible Christian) but now digested into better order / A paradox, in the praise of a dunce, to Smectymnuus The principles and practices of certain moderate divines of the Church of England (greatly mis-understood), truly represented and defended wherein ... some controversies, of no mean importance, are succinctly discussed : in a free discourse between two intimate friends : in three parts. A rational method for proving the truth of the Christian religion, as it is professed in the Church of England in answer to A rational compendious way to convince without dispute all persons whatsoever dissenting from the true religion, by J.K. / An apology for the Church of England in point of separation from it The Protestants evidence taken out of good records; shewing that for fifteene hundred yeares next after Christ, divers worthy guides of Gods Church, have in sundry weightie poynts of religion, taught as the Church of England now doth / |
34 |
BX5136 .J3 | A letter to the author of Milton's life | 2 |
BX5136 .J35 |
May it please Your Most Sacred Majesty seriously to consider my great zeal and love that I have always had for His Late Majesty and kingdoms and my fervent constancy to the Church of England Mrs. James's vindication of the Church of England in an answer to a pamphlet entituled A new test of the Church of England's loyalty. My Lord, I thought it my bound duty to return your Lordship thanks A retrayt sounded to certaine brethren lately seduced by the schismaticall Brownists to forsake the church |
7 |
BX5136 .J47 | Jerubbaal justified, or, A Plain rebuke of the high (pretended humble) remonstrance and plea against Mr. Crofton, his Reformation not separation, or, A plea for communion with the church under those corruptions, and by that disorderly ministration to which he cannot conform, nor by it administer demonstrating T.P (alias D.) his grosse mistakes of Mr. Crofton his principle and argument : as also the fallacie and vanity of his pleaded necessity for his (confessed) separation from publique assemblies, which is found insufficient to acquit him of schisme : to which is added a position disputing the lawfulnesse of ministers receiving an imposed liturgy. | 1 |
BX5136 .J63 | A full answer to the Second defense of the exposition of the doctrin of the Church of England in a letter to the defender. | 2 |
BX5136 .J77 1663 | Jerubbaal justified: or, A plain rebuke of the high (pretended humble) remonstrance and plea against Mr. Crofton his reformation not separation or, a plea for communion with the church under those corruptions, and by that disorderly ministration, to which he cannot conform, nor by it administer. Demonstrating, T.P. (alias D.) his grosse mistakes of Mr. Crofton his principle and argument: as also the fallacie and vanity of his pleaded necessity for his (confessed) separation from publique assemblies, which is found insufficient to acquit him of schisme. To which is added a position, disputing the lawfulnesse of ministers receiving an imposed liturgy. | 1 |
BX5136 .J97 | A Just censure of the answer to Vox cleri in a letter to a friend. | 2 |
BX5136 .K34 | Two sermons preach'd at the parish-church of St. George Botolph-Lane, London, May the 12th, 1700 | 2 |