The Pillars of Priestcraft and Orthodoxy Shaken ...Mr. Cadell, Mr. Kearsley, 1768 |
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Page 1
... fince religion and they furely were never in fuch amity . They rather are the men who have wounded religion , and their Stripes must heal her . IDEM . VOL . III . LONDON : Printed for Mr. CADELL in the Strand ; Mr. KEARSLEY in Ludgate ...
... fince religion and they furely were never in fuch amity . They rather are the men who have wounded religion , and their Stripes must heal her . IDEM . VOL . III . LONDON : Printed for Mr. CADELL in the Strand ; Mr. KEARSLEY in Ludgate ...
Page 9
... fince your great self are pleafed to enter the lifts against him , fince you have been follow'd by fuch an able fecond as the dean of Chichester , and fince Mr. Law has laid down his plan of church power , to the utter confufion of the ...
... fince your great self are pleafed to enter the lifts against him , fince you have been follow'd by fuch an able fecond as the dean of Chichester , and fince Mr. Law has laid down his plan of church power , to the utter confufion of the ...
Page 16
... fince they can have no right to be ftiled fuch , unless they have the SAME POWERS ? Will any one fay that a doge is or can be properly faid to fucceed a monarch ? Though he should pretend to fit on the fame throne , and to put on the ...
... fince they can have no right to be ftiled fuch , unless they have the SAME POWERS ? Will any one fay that a doge is or can be properly faid to fucceed a monarch ? Though he should pretend to fit on the fame throne , and to put on the ...
Page 17
... fince we are , none of us , Arians , ( as many of the bishop's friends are ) but do allow a distinction of perfons in the Trinity , it is evident that you affirm a truth , when you fay , Christ made none of them infallible . Thus may ...
... fince we are , none of us , Arians , ( as many of the bishop's friends are ) but do allow a distinction of perfons in the Trinity , it is evident that you affirm a truth , when you fay , Christ made none of them infallible . Thus may ...
Page 20
... as pat to our scheme of church - government , as if you and I had written them our felves . Now , reverend Sir , + Second letter , p . 42 . fince this bible feems in a peculiar manner to belong fince 20 The Pillars of PRIESTCRAFT.
... as pat to our scheme of church - government , as if you and I had written them our felves . Now , reverend Sir , + Second letter , p . 42 . fince this bible feems in a peculiar manner to belong fince 20 The Pillars of PRIESTCRAFT.
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Common terms and phrases
affert affiftance againſt alfo anſwer Arians becauſe beſt bishop bishop of Bangor cafe caufe cauſe Chrift chriftian church of England clergy commiffion confcience confequence court defign deftroy diffenters divine doctrine ecclefiaftical enemies eſtabliſhed eſtabliſhed church Excommunicated exemption facred faid fame fecular fecure feems fenfe ferve fettled fhall fhew fhould fide fince firft firſt fome fpiritual ftand fubjects fucceffion fucceffors fuch fuffer fufficient fuits fuppofe fupport fure greateſt hath high-church himſelf honour houſe impriſonment infallible intereft itſelf juft juftice king kingdom laity Laud lefs liberty Lord lordship ment moft moſt muft muſt nation never occafion papifts parliament perfecution perfons pleaſe poffibly pope popery prefent preferve prelate prieſts prince proteftant punish reafon reign religion reverend ſay Schifm ſhall ſtate ſuch temporal thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe truth tythe uſe vicegerents whofe whoſe
Popular passages
Page 391 - Awake, awake, put on strength, O arm of the Lord; awake, as in the ancient days, in the generations of old.
Page 318 - Nay, common Fame is more than ordinarily false, if none of them have found a way to reconcile the Opinions of Rome to the Preferments of England ; and to be so absolutely, directly and cordially Papists, that it is all that Fifteen hundred pounds a year can do to keep them from confessing it.
Page 308 - No man so willingly made unkind use of all those occasions, as the lord Cottington, who being a master of temper, and of the most profound dissimulation, knew too well how to lead him into a mistake, and then drive him into choler, and then expose him upon the matter, and the manner, to the judgment of the company ; and he chose to do this most when the king was present ; and then he would dine with him the next day.
Page 307 - The church was not repined at, nor the least inclination to alter the government and discipline thereof, or to change the doctrine. Nor was there at that time any considerable number of persons of any valuable condition throughout the kingdom, who did wish either; and the cause of so prodigious a change in so few years after was too visible from the effects.
Page 315 - While mass has been said in security, a conventicle has been a crime ; and which is yet more, the conforming to ceremonies has been more exacted than the conforming to Christianity ; and while men for scruples have been undone, for attempts of sodomy they have only been admonished.
Page 297 - ... the professors of it, (which was a fatal unskilfulness in the bishops, who could never have suffered whilst the common law had been preserved,) that prohibitions from the supreme courts of law, which have, and must have, the superintendency over all inferior courts, were not only neglected, but the judges reprehended for granting them...
Page 277 - Durham a marble altar with cherubims, which cost two thousand pounds, with all the appurtenances thereof; namely, a cope with the Trinity, and God the Father in the figure of an old man, another with a crucifix and the image of Christ, with a red beard and blue cap. Besides, he...
Page 261 - Better there were no revealed religion, and that human nature were left to the conduct of its own principles and inclinations, which are much more mild and merciful, much more for the peace and happiness of human society, than to be...
Page 298 - ... for the reformation of manners, to a court of revenue, and imposed great fines upon those who were culpable before them ; sometimes above the degree of the offence, had the jurisdiction of fining been unquestionable : which it was not. Which course of fining was much more frequent, and the fines heavier, after the king had granted all that revenue (whatsoever it should prove to be) to be employed for the reparation of St. Paul's church...
Page 318 - Rome, that they have given great fufpicion, that in gratitude they defire to return thither, or at leaft to meet it half way. Some have evidently laboured to bring in an Englifh, though not a Roman, popery : I mean, not only the outfide and drefs of it, but equally abfolute, a blind dependence of the people upon the clergy, and of the clergy upon themfelves ; and have oppofed the papacy beyond the fea, that they might fettle one beyond the Water (namely, at Lambeth).