Online Books by
Thomas Hicks
(Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent)
Books from the extended shelves:
- Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent: A brief narrative of the second meeting between the people called Quakers and Baptists at the Meeting-place, near Wheeler-street, London, the 16th of the 8th moneth, 167[4] / published for information by W.M. ... [et al.] ([London] Printed : [s.n.], 1674), also by William Mead (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent: A continuation of The dialogue between a Christian and a Quaker wherein the truth of those things objected against them in the first part, are fully confirm'd : together with a further account of their perilous and pernitious errors concerning the person of Christ, His satisfaction, justification, sanctification, the ministry, and immediate motions are in this second part, cleerly and plainly represented out of the writings of some of their principal, and most approved leaders / published for the common information of such as either really are, or may be, in danger of being insnared and intangled by them by Thomas Hicks. (London : Printed for Peter Parker ..., 1673) (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent: A discourse of the souls of men, women, and children;: and of the holy and blessed angels in heaven, and of the evil and damned spirits in hell: shewing that they are immortal, spiritual substances, as well as the angels in heaven. Written because this author met with four willfull ignorant men at one time, which said, the souls of men, women, and children, were nothing but breath, and vanished into air, when as the body went to the grave. These unfaithful people ought to be answered and reproved: / by the author, Thomas Hicks. (London : Printed by T. Newcomb, and are to be sold by the author, 1657) (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent: A letter or word of advice to the saints known or unknown. By Thomas Hickes, the elder.: (London : [s.n.], Anno Domini, 1653) (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent: The Quaker condemned out of his own mouth, or, An answer to Will. Pen's book entitled Reason against railing, and truth against fiction wherein he hathe confessed that if those things objected against the Quakers in two former dialogues be true, that then a Quaker is quite another thing than a Christian, that those matters heretofore objected were and are real truths and no fictions, is fully cleared and evinced in this third dialogue between a Christian and a Quaker / by Thomas Hicks. (London : Printed for R.W. for Peter Parker, and are to be sold at his shop ..., 1674) (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent: The Quakers appeal answer'd, or, A full relation of the occasion, progress, and issue of a meeting held in Barbican the 28th of August last past wherein the allegations of William Pen in two books lately published by him against Thomas Hicks, were answered and disproved, and Tho. Hicks, his quotations out of the Quakers own books attested by several as being appeal'd unto. (London : Printed for Peter Parker..., 1674), also by William Kiffin (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- Hicks, Thomas, 17th cent: Thou shalt not fear God, and reverence my sanctuary. A sharp rebuke, or A rod for the enemies of common prayer, that wrote the book of unmasking it with lies; I also prove it to be the pure worship of God taken out of his word, his revealed will. By Thomas Hicks. (London : printed by R.L., 1660) (HTML at EEBO TCP)
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