The reasonableness of nonconformity to the Church of England, in point of worship. A second defence of a sermon, preach'd at Newark, June 2. 1736. Intitled, The vanity of human institutions in the worship of God. Against the exceptions of Mr. John Beach, in his Appeal to the unprejudiced. Done in the form of a dialogue, wherein Mr. Beach's arguments are all expressed in his own words. By Jonathan Dickinson, M.A. [Seventeen lines of quotations]
- Dickinson, Jonathan, 1688-1747.
- Date:
- 1738
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Publication/Creation
Boston, New England : Printed and sold by Kneeland and Green, 1738.
Physical description
[4],ii,[2],127,[1]p. ; 80.
Contributors
References note
ESTC W28997
Evans, 4237
Reproduction note
Digital image available in the Readex/Newsbank Digital Evans series. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.
Type/Technique
Languages
Subjects
- Dissenters, ReligiousEnglandEarly works to 1800
- Beach, John, 1700-1782. Appeal to the unprejudiced.
- Dickinson, Jonathan, 1688-1747. Vanity of human institutions in the worship of God.
- Beach, John, 1700-1782. Appeal to the unprejudiced
- Dickinson, Jonathan, 1688-1747. Vanity of human institutions in the worship of God
- Church of England