An account given to the Parliament by the ministers sent by them to
Oxford. In which you have the most remarkable passages which have fallen
out in the six moneths service there, divers questions concerning the
covenant of grace, justification, &c. are briefly stated. Particularly,
there is presented two conferences, in which the ministers together with
the truth, have suffered by reproaches and falshoods in print and
otherwise. The chief points insisted on in those conferences are, 1.
Whether private men might lawfully preach. 2. Whether the ministers of the
Church of England were Antichristian. Both which questions were disputed,
objections answered, and the truth confirmed. 3. And lastly, divers of M.
Erbury's dangerous errours which he broached and maintained, are recited
and refuted. Published by authority.
Dublin Core
Title
An account given to the Parliament by the ministers sent by them to
Oxford. In which you have the most remarkable passages which have fallen
out in the six moneths service there, divers questions concerning the
covenant of grace, justification, &c. are briefly stated. Particularly,
there is presented two conferences, in which the ministers together with
the truth, have suffered by reproaches and falshoods in print and
otherwise. The chief points insisted on in those conferences are, 1.
Whether private men might lawfully preach. 2. Whether the ministers of the
Church of England were Antichristian. Both which questions were disputed,
objections answered, and the truth confirmed. 3. And lastly, divers of M.
Erbury's dangerous errours which he broached and maintained, are recited
and refuted. Published by authority.
Oxford. In which you have the most remarkable passages which have fallen
out in the six moneths service there, divers questions concerning the
covenant of grace, justification, &c. are briefly stated. Particularly,
there is presented two conferences, in which the ministers together with
the truth, have suffered by reproaches and falshoods in print and
otherwise. The chief points insisted on in those conferences are, 1.
Whether private men might lawfully preach. 2. Whether the ministers of the
Church of England were Antichristian. Both which questions were disputed,
objections answered, and the truth confirmed. 3. And lastly, divers of M.
Erbury's dangerous errours which he broached and maintained, are recited
and refuted. Published by authority.
Creator
Francis Cheynell
Source
Wing (CD-ROM, 1996) C3806
Publisher
Miles Fletcher, Samuel Gellibrand
Identifier
490
Collection
Citation
Francis Cheynell, “An account given to the Parliament by the ministers sent by them to
Oxford. In which you have the most remarkable passages which have fallen
out in the six moneths service there, divers questions concerning the
covenant of grace, justification, &c. are briefly stated. Particularly,
there is presented two conferences, in which the ministers together with
the truth, have suffered by reproaches and falshoods in print and
otherwise. The chief points insisted on in those conferences are, 1.
Whether private men might lawfully preach. 2. Whether the ministers of the
Church of England were Antichristian. Both which questions were disputed,
objections answered, and the truth confirmed. 3. And lastly, divers of M.
Erbury's dangerous errours which he broached and maintained, are recited
and refuted. Published by authority.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 26, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/3268.
Oxford. In which you have the most remarkable passages which have fallen
out in the six moneths service there, divers questions concerning the
covenant of grace, justification, &c. are briefly stated. Particularly,
there is presented two conferences, in which the ministers together with
the truth, have suffered by reproaches and falshoods in print and
otherwise. The chief points insisted on in those conferences are, 1.
Whether private men might lawfully preach. 2. Whether the ministers of the
Church of England were Antichristian. Both which questions were disputed,
objections answered, and the truth confirmed. 3. And lastly, divers of M.
Erbury's dangerous errours which he broached and maintained, are recited
and refuted. Published by authority.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 26, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/3268.