More about John Bewick:
| | Books by John Bewick: Books in the extended shelves: Bewick, John, -1671: An answer to a Quakers seventeen heads of queries, containing in them seventy-seven questions. Wherein sundry scriptures out of the prophets and apostles are cleared: the maintenance of ministers by tithes is by scripture fullly [sic] vindicated: several cases of conscience are resolved: several points of Christian religion are confirmed; parochial churches, and the practises of some things in these our English churches are throughly justified: the Grand Antichrist with the heretical antichrists are decyphered and parallelled. By John Bewick minister of the Gospel, and rector of the parish church of Stanhop in Weredale in the county of Durham. (London : printed by T.R. for Andrew Crook at the sign of the Green Dragon in Pauls Church-yard, 1660) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Bewick, John, -1671: Confiding England vnder conflicts, triumphing in the middest of her terrors, or, Assured comforts that her present miseries will end in unspeakable lasting mercies to the whole nation first preached in Bengeo and Hitchin in Hartfordshire and now published for the common comfort of the nation / by Iohn Bevvick ... (London : Printed I. D. for Andrew Crooke ..., 1644) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Bewick, John, -1671: The true ministers living of the Gospel, distinguished from the false ministers living upon tithes and forced maintenance. With a word of reproof (preceding the distinction) to the ministers of the nation, whose kingdom is already shaken and divided against itself. And the iniquity and antichristianism of that ministry which is upheld by forced maintenance, briefly discovered according to the scriptures of the Old and New Testament. In a brief reply to a book stiled, An answer to a Quakers seventeen heads of quaeries, by John Bewick, who calls himself a minister of the Gospel, and rector of the parish church of Stanhop in Weredale in the county of Durham. (London : Printed for Thomas Simmons at the Signe of the Bull and Mouth near Aldersgate, 1660), also by George Whitehead and James Naylor (HTML at EEBO TCP)
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