-
1
-
2
-
3
The plea of the innocent against the false judgment of the guilty : being a vindication of George Keith and his friends, who are joyned with him in this present testimony, from the false judgment, calumnies, false informations and defamations of Samuell Jenings, John Simcock, Thomas Lloyd, and others joyned with them, being in number twenty eight : directed by way of epistle to faithful friends of truth in Pennsilvania, East and West-Jersey, and else-where, as occasion requireth.
Published 1692CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
4
The plea of the innocent against the false judgment of the guilty : being a vindication of George Keith and his friends, who are joyned with him in this present testimony, from the false judgment, calumnies, false informations and defamations of Samuel Jenings, John Simcock, Thomas LLoyd, and others joyned with them, being in number twenty eight. : Directed by way of epistle to faithful friends of truth in Pennsilvania, East and West-Jarsey, and else-where as occasion requireth. : [Nine lines of Scripture texts].
Published 1692CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
5
-
6
-
7
-
8
An account of the great divisions, amongst the Quakers, in Pensilvania, &c. : as appears by their own book, here following, printed 1692, and lately came from thence, intituled, viz. The plea of the innocent, against the false judgment of the guilty : being a vindication of George Keith, and his friends, who are joined with him in this present testimony, from the false judgment, calumnies, false informations and defamations of Samuel Jenings, John Simcock, Thomas Lloyd, an others, joyned with them, being in number twenty eight : directed, by way of epistle, to faithful friends of truth, in Pensilvania, East and West-Jersey, and else-where, as occasion requireth.
Published 1692CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
9
More divisions amongst the Quakers : as appears by the following books of their own writing, viz. I. The Christian faith of New-England Quakers condemn'd by a meeting of Pensilvanian Quakers. II. The false judgment of a yearly meeting of Quakers in Maryland, condemn'd by George Keith, Thomas Budd, &c. all Quakers : to which is added, A discovery of this mystery of iniquity /
Published 1693CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
10
A testimony against that false & absurd opinion which some hold : viz. that all true believers and saints immediately after the bodily death attain to all the resurrection they expect, and enter into the fullest enjoyment of happiness : and also that the wicked, immediately after death, are raised up to receive all the punishment they are to expect : together with a Scriptural account of the resurrection of the dead, Day of Judgment, and Christ's last coming and appearance without us : also, where, and what those heavens are into which the man Christ is gone, and entered into /
Published 1692CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
11
A testimony against that false & absurd opinion which some hold : viz. that all true believers and saints immediately after the bodily death attain to all the resurrection they expect, and enter into the fullest enjoyment of happiness : and also that the wicked, immediately after death, are raised up to receive all the punishment they are to expect : together with a Scriptural account of the resurrection of the dead, Day of Judgment, and Christ's last coming and appearance without us : also, where, and what those heavens are into which the man Christ is gone, and entered into /
Published 1692CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
12
The Christian Quaker: or, George Keith's eyes opened : Good news from Pensilvania. Containing a testimony against that false and absurd opinion which some hold, viz. that all true believers and saints, immediately after the bodily death attain to all the resurrection they expect, and enter into the fullest enjoyment of happiness. And also, that the wicked, immediately after death, are raised up to receive all the punishment they are to expect. Together with a scriptural account of the resurrection of the dead, day of judgment, and Christ's last coming and appearance without us....
Published 1693CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
13
A serious appeal to all the more sober, impartial & judicious people in New-England to whose hands this may come : whether Cotton Mather in his late address, &c. hath not extreamly failed in proving the people call'd Quakers guilty of manifold heresies, blasphemies and strong delusions, and whether he hath not much rather proved himself extreamly ignorant and greatly possessed with a spirit of perversion, error, prejudice and envious zeal against them in general, and G.K. in particular, in his most uncharitable and rash judgment against him. : Together with a vindication of our Christian faith in those things sincerely believed by us, especially respecting the fundamental doctrines and principles of Christian religion...
Published 1692CONNECT
Electronic eBook