The Danger of the Church-establishment of England, from the Insolence of Protestant Dissenters ...: With Short Remarks Upon Every Chapter. In a Letter to Sir John Smith

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C. Rivington, 1718 - 72 Seiten
 

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Seite 5 - Church governors, and with their adherents must needs bear so great a sway in the Commonwealth that, if future inconvenience shall be found in that Government, we humbly offer to consideration how these shall be reducible...
Seite 4 - Councils ; that so many of them sowed the seeds of religion in their blood, and rescued Christianity from utter extirpation in the primitive Heathen persecutions ; that to them we owe the redemption of the purity of the Gospel we now profess from Romish corruption ; that many of them for the propagation of the truth became such glorious martyrs...
Seite 4 - When we consider that Bishops were instituted in the time of the Apostles ; that they were the great lights of the Church in all the first General Councils ; that so many of them sowed the seeds of religion in their blood...
Seite 6 - BHhops, however rugged they have fiiewn ' themfelves to the Diflenters, yet they can be as * tame and pliable as may be to a Court, when 'they have any Ends to ferve by it.
Seite 7 - ... body, so indissolubly cement the affections of his people to our royal sovereign, that without any other change of government, he can never want revenue nor we...

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