Title: | The Quakers house built upon the rock Christ Wherein neither their doctrines, principles, nor practices can be confounded, not disproved; being neither damnable, nor pernitious. As Samuel Hammond hath falsly affirmed in his book called, The Quakers house built upon the sand: or, a discovery of the damnablenes of their pernitious doctrins, in his answer to G.W. which to prove, he lays down seven grounds of delusion, and five arguments of damnable doctrine. But in this answer his seven grounds is proved false in themselves, ...; and his five arguments is proved to be his own false positions, ... as first, he lays down false positions, and then proves them false; and then boasts, as if he had proved our doctrines or principles false: the truth of which is herein clearly made manifest, and wherein he falsly accuseth us, he is justly guilty himselfe. Also the ten fundamentall principles or doctrines of the hireling priest-hood, ... By a servant to the Church of Christ, ... Richard Hubberthorne. ... |
Author: | Hubberthorn, Richard, 1628-1662 |
Note: | [London? : s.n., 1659] |
Link: | HTML at EEBO TCP |
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Subject: | Hammond, Samuel, d. 1665 -- Quakers house built upon the sand -- Controversial literature -- Early works to 1800 |
Subject: | Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723 -- Early works to 1800 |
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