Concept
Dissenters, Religious - England - History - 18th century
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Letter to a member of Parliament, on the case of the Protestant dissenters; and the expediency of a general repeal of all penal statutes that regard religious opinions.
Geddes, Alexander, 1737-1802.Date: MDCCLXXXVII. [1787]- Books
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The third and last letter to a gentleman dissenting from the Church of England; wherein the design of the second (which was to refute the great and popular objections of dissenters against communion with the Church of England, and to reflect them back upon themselves) is farther pursued, and completed. To which is added, an appendix, containing some considerations on the lawfulness, expediency, and necessity of requiring all who are to be admitted to the ministry, or to any ecclesiastical preferment in the Church of England, or to be preachers or teachers in any dissenting congregation, to subscribe the articles of faith and religion; and setting forth the inconsistencies between the notorious practices of dissenters, and the avowed principles of many of them touching that matter. By John White, B. D. Sometime Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge.
White, John, approximately 1685-1755.Date: MDCCXLVI. [1746]- Books
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A second letter to the Reverend Dr. Sherlock, being a reply to his Answer, &c. Proving the Doctrines maintain'd by the Doctor in his Sermon Nov. 5. 1712. to be the Same with those charged upon the Bishop of Bangor, as Pernicious, in the late Report of the Committee. With an appendix relating to a passage or two in Dr. Snape's Second letter to the Lord Bishop of Bangor. By Arthur Ashley Sykes, M. A. Rector of Dry-Drayton near Cambridge. To which is added, a postscript to the Reverend Dr. Sherlock, Dean of Chichester, by the Right Reverend Father in God Benjamin Lord Bishop of Bangor.
Sykes, Arthur Ashley, 1683 or 1684-1756.Date: [1717]- Books
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A letter to a gentleman dissenting from the Church of England; concerning the lives of churchmen and dissenters. Wherein the peculiar obligations which dissenters are supposed to lie under to holiness of life, and the special advantages they are pretended to enjoy above the members of the Church of England for promoting that end, are considered, divers great advantages which the members of the Church do really enjoy above them are pointed out, the lives of both fairly and impartially represented, the argument (or prejudice) arising from the better lives (real or supposed) of dissenters, in favour of their churches, is discussed, and what Dr. Watts has advanced upon those subjects in his book, entitled, An humble attempt towards the revival of practical religion among Christians, is largely examined. By John White, B. D. sometime Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge.
White, John, approximately 1685-1755.Date: MDCCXLVI. [1746]