28 CHRISTOPHER BLACKWOOD Portrait of a Seventeenth Century Baptist( 1) Christopher Blackwood Educated at Cambridge, familiarity with Scripture made frequent references Church History. (3) He devotional ends. ( 4) was born around 1606 in Yorkshire. (2) his writings and sermons demonstrate as well as skills in logical reasoning. He to Greek, Latin, and German sources from believed scholarly' pursuits should serve Blackwood served as vicar of Stokesbury, Kent, from 2nd April to 17th June 1631. From 1632. to 1635, he was a curate of Rye, working under a Mr Twyne. The Sussex records indicate that some time at Rye he succeeded. a Mr Thomas Warren. As a preacher, he delivered organized, simple, illustrative, practical, and persuasive sermons. (5) He proved popular, particularly among the puritan remnant. (6) Blackwood's sympathy for non-conformity, which in Sussex significantly increased ,during the 1630s, is indicated by a churchwarden's report that he abbreviated the prayer book service to the point where it hardly mattered. (7) However, he was willing to subscribe in 1633 as required by the Established Church. Blackwood's activities between 1635 and 1644 are uncertain. Smart's reference to the' record of a preacher named Christopher Blackwood purchasing land in Scituate, Mass., in 1641, indicates that by 1640 Blackwood had fled· to New England, possibly because of religious persecution. (8) Venn and Venn. suggest that he was invited to succeed a Mr Lothrop as, pastor, but instead returned to Kent 'in. 1642. Exactly what position, if any, Blackwood held when the 1644 meeting of the clergy convened at Cranbrook to hear Francis Cornwell is not clear. His own account of this ,event(9) confirmed Stinton's otherwise ambiguous phrase that Blackwood, was 'one of the clergy' from Kent at the meeting. (10) Whitley, and recently Barnard, have continued Wood's view ,that Blac-kwood was the rector of Staplehurst in 1644. (11) However, Smart referred to records that showed John Brown as the rector of Staplehurst from 1626/27 to 1648/49, when the living was sequestered. (12) The, 1644 meeting at Cranbrook' was a' turning point for Blackwood. Francis Cornwell (later freed from Maidstone Gaol by Cromwell after the death of Charles I) developed, a friendship with William J effrey, a General Baptist evangelist and messenger responsible for founding ,several churches of which the chief were Bradburn (Sevenoaks where he was pastor), Speldhurst,. and Pembury. (13) Cornwell, who adopted Jeffrey's views and was baptized while in prison, published on 27th September 1644 his Vindication of the Royal Commission of King Jesus) which was handed out .at the House of Commons. At Cranbrook, Cornwell preached and Jeffrey defended. The clergymen were startled and offended by Cornwell's contention that infant baptism was 'an Antichrist innovation, a human tradition, and a practice with no precept, example, or true deduction' from the Word of
Edward Harrison of Petty France. EDWARD HARRISON sprang from a family which had interests in Sedbergh in 1561, though one member had. then become a citizen and grocer in London. Fifty years later, his ancestors were near Ashford in Kent, at Smeeth and N ettlestead and.Orleston. At this last parish, Lancelot Harrison, M.A., of Jesus College, Cambridge, became rector in 1626. He sent his son Edward to the same college in 1634, but Edward went next . year to St. John'S, where he took his B.A. in 1637-8; he then migrated to Hart's, Hall in Oxford, and became M.A. in 1640. He was ordained, and as seems a family custom, went to live a:t Smeeth, with Sir Edward Scott of Scott's Hall. In 1641 his father died, leaving to Edward £35 and his Latin books and his desk; the widow Katharine took a house and land's for life, after which Edward inherited; children Lancelot, PrisciIla:, Hugh, John and Katharine were to take cash when they came of age and again when the widow died; Elizabeth having had her portion on marrying Henry Collet. Edward became vicar of Kensworth, a hamlet close to, Watling Street, in a northern promontory of Hertfordshire, two' miles south of Dunstable in Bedfordshire, a mile east of Whipsnade. In the next three or four years, Baptist principleS' were canvassed on a new scale, and in February 1643/4 complaint was made to the House of Lords that George Kendall, whom they had appointed vicar of Hemel Hempstead, had allowed Robert Baldwin to preach against the baptism of infants. Dr. Burgess was sent from Watford to enquire, and reportedi "the people there much possessed with Anabaptism and Antinomianism." This was not checked by sending KendaIl and' Baldwin to N ewgate prison, for next Edward Harrison adopted Baptist . views. He therefore resigned the vicarage, as he' expressly stated after the Restoration when twitted with inconsistency. The dates of this period are not clear, before 1646. The vicar in 1643 was John Syddall, who was deprived after twentyeight years, with the approval of the parishioners, who nevertheless agreed to provide for Mrs. SyddaIl and her children, and on August 2nd, 1645, were ordered by the Committee for Plundered Ministers to do so at once. Walker implies that SyddaIl was allowed to live in the vicarage for some while after 214
Southwestern Journal of Theology Historical Theology
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C H A R G E AND SERMON TOGETHER WITH AN INTRODUCTORY DISCOURSE AND CONFESSION os FAITH DELIVERED AT THE O R D I N AT I O N OF THE Rev. Mr. ABRAHAM BOOTH Feb. 16, 1769, in Goodman's Fields Published at the request of the church. L O N D O N, Printed forG. Keith, Gracecburcb-Strect ; J. Buckland, Pater-mJfer-Row ; W.Harris, St. Paul's Church-Tardy B.Tomkins, Tenchurch-Street ; J. Gvrkey, Hclbsrn. 1769. [Price One Shilling.] /I
COLLECTION O F SERMONS and TRACTS; CONTAINING, I. The Doctrine of the Trinity, stated and vindicated. II. The Doctrine of the Resurrection, stated and defended. III. The Doctrine of Justification, stated and maintained. IV. The Doctrines of God's Everlasting Love to his Elect, and their Eternal Union to Christ, with other Truths, stated and defended, against Dr Taylor. V. The Doctrine of the Saints Final Perse verance, asserted and vindicated. VI. The Doctrine of Predestination stated, and set in aScripture-Light, against Mr Wesley. VII. The Prophecies of the Old Testa ment, respecting the Messiah, proved to be . literally fulfilled in Jesus. VIII. A Dissertation concerning the An tiquity of the Hebrew Language, Letters, Vowel-Points, and Accents. IX. Two Annual Discourses on the Duty of Prayer and Singing of Psalms. X. An Essay on the Original of Funeral Sermons, Orations, and Odes. XI. A Brief Confession of Faith and Prac tice, read and assented to at the Admission of Members into the Church, in Carter-Lane, Southtoark. By the late Reverend and Learned JOHN GILL, D.D. VOL. III. Published at the Request of the Subscribers to the Two former Volumes. LONDON: Printed for G E O R G E K E I T H, in Gracechurch- Street. M DCC LXXVIII. • •
I■ HiEl HEM Pi H ■ r WM M Mi ■ I■ %\ Hffm iI■ I ill ! II &$m WBM ^M I
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/sso Arz. « * Ž-2. / - A C o N T E M P L A T I o N EXISTENCE AND PERFECTIONS or GOD, D R A W N vrou 'r H E SEVERAL PARTS CF THE VISIBLE wORLD, T H E sTRUCTURE OF THE HUMAN BODY, A N D T H E WONDERFUL POWERS OF THE SOUL : . As A N IM A GE or T H R WISDOM, PowER, AND THE INVISIBLE AND IMMORTAL NATURE OF GOD. des to sed A S A S P E C I M E N O F A B O D Y O F D I V I N I T Y, Ex E c UT E D I N T H E SA M E M A N N E R. By J O H N R Y L A N D, A. M. „s- --***** ** - o F N o R T H A M P r o N. L O N D O N : Printed for VALLAN ce and SIM Mons, No. 12o. Cheapſide. M. DCC. LXXIV. [ Price Six-pence. ] *
/--z-z-z-z* - A / e /)/4) 4 f. - C O N T E M P L A T I O N - O N T H E I N SU F F I C I EN C Y o p R E A S O N, A N D T H E N E C Ess IT Y or D IV IN E R E v E LA T I o N TO EN ABLE U S T O ATTAIN E T E R N A L H A P P I N E S S. - To which is prefixed, T H E C H A R A C T E R O F A N H O N E S T F R E E – T H I N K E R. By J o H N R Y L A N D, A M. K - * ************* o F N o R T H A M P T o N. L O N D O N : Printed for VALLAN ce and S1M Mons, No. 12o, Cheapſide. M.DCC.LXXV. - \ [ Price Six-pence. ]
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HISTORY OF NEW ENGLAND. Particular Reference to the Denomination of Christians BAPTISTS. ISAAC BACKUS., Sztavfo Coition:, foillj itotes. BY DAVID WESTON. VOLUME I. NEWTON, MASS.: PUBLISHED BY THE BACKUS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. 1871 .
K3 . E ' ‘Y ,, ‘ ‘I \ . (¿Vſ T o T H E ‘ J' GREEKZNEW TESTAMENT: E‘XHIBITKNG IN THE s X CLEARI-;ST POINT OF VIEW, I Every _PRÍMXTXVEÑWORD in that › S A C R E D B o o K; I T H ;a N ENGLISH TRANSLATION of eªch ROOT-Ñ P“ ª' For the US!. of Serious a‘n'd'Inquiſitive CHRISTIANS, as well as SCHOOLS, and YOUNG STUDENTS of DIVINITY. .5** ~\.. \N BY J O'H N R Y LMA'N D, ¿ZM Ñ; P’ Of NOEÏHAIÃIFrON. ‘ ‘ - L O N D O N : Printed for ªnd Sold by GEORGE KEITH, Gracechurchctrect; and EDWARD and CHARLES Dun, in the Poultry. )4 DCC LXXVH. [Price SIXPENCE.)
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ASDOVER HARVARD LIBRARY H SE75 C HARVARD DEPOSITORY BRITTLE BOOK RETAIN BOOK COPY
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- * | A - | - |SCRIPTURE-MANUAL: | O R, - A PLAIN REPRESENTATION */ O F T H E ORDINANCE of BAPTISM. Deſigned for the Uſe of all, who would anſwer a good Con ſcience towards Go o; and give a Reaſon of their Faith and Pradice with Meekneſs and Fear. -- - Search the scriptura. John v. 39. By s A M U E L w I L S O N. . . Reviſed by J O H N R I P P O N. T H E N I N T H E D I T I o N. L O N D O N : Pinted by T. w I LK1Ns, No. 45, cow-lane, Snow-hi". (Price ONE PENNY, or 7s. 6d. per Hundred.)
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/C} } | - A N A D D R E S S TO THE INGENUOUS YOUTH O F G R E A T – B R I T A I N. PRIce 1s. 6d. oR 2s. wITH A STRIKING LIKENESS OF THE AUTHORA
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Qa' ' ' _--- - 4 7 (7 - ' * ' 09 'all ' 'O - 57-- AN AN'SW-ER TO - FOOLS; AND A WORD TO THE WIs'E. ADDRESSED TO THE REVEREND MARIA DE iTLEURY, ', JoHN' RYLAND, AND co. , - BY-WIL-LIAM HUNTINGTON,S.S. /< nt-msſ'rzn or THE GOSPEL, AT PROVIDENCE culi-Et? 'A'r MONK- ' ' ' wem. s'run MEETING; AND AT HORSLEYDOWN 'UPRIGHT MEN SHALL BE ASTONISHED AT THXS, AND THE lNNO CENT SHALL STIR UP HlMsELr AGAlNST THE HYPOCRlTE. JOB, xvii. 8,---GIVE A ronnoN To SEVEN, AND ALSO TO EIGHT. ECCL. xi. z. - I L O N D 0 Nx ' Printed for G. Ten-w, Bookſeller, No 54, Patcrnoſter Ro'w; J. DAVID soN, N' 7, Poſtcrn Row, TowerHil'i; BAKEK, NQ 126, Oxford Six cet; and T. JAMES, N" 53, Tooley Street, Southwark. sum, alſo, at Pro vidence Chapel; at Monkwell Street Meeti'ng, every Tueſday [vening ; and at Horflcydown, every Thur-ſday Evening. ' ' M DCC xcfx. [PRICE ONE SHILLlNG'I I
Qa' ' ' _--- - 4 7 (7 - ' * ' 09 'all ' 'O - 57-- AN AN'SW-ER TO - FOOLS; AND A WORD TO THE WIs'E. ADDRESSED TO THE REVEREND MARIA DE iTLEURY, ', JoHN' RYLAND, AND co. , - BY-WIL-LIAM HUNTINGTON,S.S. /< nt-msſ'rzn or THE GOSPEL, AT PROVIDENCE culi-Et? 'A'r MONK- ' ' ' wem. s'run MEETING; AND AT HORSLEYDOWN 'UPRIGHT MEN SHALL BE ASTONISHED AT THXS, AND THE lNNO CENT SHALL STIR UP HlMsELr AGAlNST THE HYPOCRlTE. JOB, xvii. 8,---GIVE A ronnoN To SEVEN, AND ALSO TO EIGHT. ECCL. xi. z. - I L O N D 0 Nx ' Printed for G. Ten-w, Bookſeller, No 54, Patcrnoſter Ro'w; J. DAVID soN, N' 7, Poſtcrn Row, TowerHil'i; BAKEK, NQ 126, Oxford Six cet; and T. JAMES, N" 53, Tooley Street, Southwark. sum, alſo, at Pro vidence Chapel; at Monkwell Street Meeti'ng, every Tueſday [vening ; and at Horflcydown, every Thur-ſday Evening. ' ' M DCC xcfx. [PRICE ONE SHILLlNG'I I
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American Baptist HISTORICAL SOCIETYBringing our legacy ٠؛ light. Andrew Fuller and the Defense o f Trinitarian Com m unities M i c h a e l a . G. H a y k in It is a curious fact that ^ th o u g h the concept of the encyclopedia has its origins within the ideological m atrix of the e i ^ t n t h - c e n t u r y Enlightenm ent, when it comes to onserv ativ e expressions of theology, this era was not really conducive to encyclopedic or systematic sum m aries of the Christian Eahh. In this regard, a work like Jo h n Gill’s (1697-1771) A Complete Body of Doctrinal and Practical Divinity (1769-1770) was definitely out of sync with conservative theological trends. The Other great Baptist theologian of this era, Andrew Euller (1754-1815), was m ore typicalأ . T hough he was entirely capable of draw ing up a systematic theology, he resisted doing so until it was too late. W hen he finally began to write som ething in this vein, he had about sixteen m onths to live, and he never got beyond writing down Ids thoughts on the prolegom ena of theology, the being of God, the necessity of revelation along with the im piration of the Bible, and the doctrine of the Trinity.* Euller was well aware of his era’s aversion to y ^ e m a tiz in g theology for, as he noted in a serm on he gave at the annual m eeting of the Baptist churches of the N ortham ptonshire Association in 1796, “systematic divinity .. ٠has been MICHAEL A. G. HAYKIN is ?rofessor of Church History and Biblical Spirituality at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He is also the Director of The Andrew Euller Center for Baptist Studies, which operates under the aegis of Southern Seminary He has written widely on fourth-century ?atristic Trinitarian theology and eiglueeml>century British Dissent. “The Father Son and th Spirit are n¿٠ be considered separate bei one Cod. H are one has n ot, revealed— and . ٠ ، ٠ ؟ believe il ste requiresfaith humility. ”
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BRITISH LIBERTY ESTABLISHED, AND GALLIC LIBERTY RESTOFRED; I OR, THE TRIUMPH OF FREEDOM£ A tPOEM. OCCASIONED BY THE GRAND REI/OLUTION IN FRANCE, M,Dcc,LxxxIx. ' TH A PROSPECT OF FrHE GLORIOUS TIME WHEN TRUB RELIGION AND CIVlL LIBERTY SHALL SHED THEIR BENIGN INrFLUENCES OVER THE WORLD. . gqnw" FLEUM A N . BT MARIAQL ſ' \ L O N D O N: (FROM PETERBOROUGH-HOUSE PRESS) PRINTED FOR THE AUTHOR, NO.' 31, JEWIN STREET; ' AND sonn BY J. MATTHIWS, s'rRAND; n. o. SYMONDS, PATER-NOSTER-Row 5' 3. NOTT, LOMBARD_ s'rnuz'r; ASH, TOWER summe-r; TKOMPSON, OXFORD ROADz AND BY mns. HANCOCK, BEACR BTREET, BARBICANS ' M,OCC,XC' l
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A COMMENTARY ACTS OF THE APOSTLES, /C. M. DU VEIL, D.D. ^ EDITED FOR / / C!)e lau^eiU lvnciIIi)£J ^onety, WITH AN HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION, REV. F. A. COX, D.D., LL,D. LONDON: PRIMED FOR THE SOCIETY, BY J. HADDON, CASTLE STREET, FINSBURY. M.DCCCL.I.
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DIVINE POEMS ESSAYS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS; V I Z. Immanuel ; or, the Godhead of A Walk at Enſield. Chriſt diſplayed. - L Meditations on the Canticles." AMeditation written ina Bowcr for the Lord's Supper. at Lady Grovc, Button. Q Chriſt All in All. Elegies. , l Meditations on Rev.xii. 6. Epithalamiums. A Summer Day's Excdrſion. Epiſtles to Miranda, &c. Odes. Hymns. ' Letters. A Poem on Redemption. A Soliloquy. w By MARIA DE FLEURT. With Recomme'ndatory Prefaces, by the Rev Mr WILLs, Rev. Mr TOWERS, and Rev. Mr RYLAND. L o N 1) O N, Printed for the Author, and ſold by T.W1LKI N s, Aldcrmanbury; By Bellamy and Roberts, No. 202, Strand; M. Traipp, NOJ, Pater-noſter-Row; Mr Nott, Lombard ſtreet; M. Gurncy,No.ux, Holborn, and by the Author, No. 31, jewin-ſtreet. 1 7 9 I . [ Price THREE smumcs ſewed. ] /
DIVINE POEMS ESSAYS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS; V I Z. Immanuel ; or, the Godhead of A Walk at Enſield. Chriſt diſplayed. - L Meditations on the Canticles." AMeditation written ina Bowcr for the Lord's Supper. at Lady Grovc, Button. Q Chriſt All in All. Elegies. , l Meditations on Rev.xii. 6. Epithalamiums. A Summer Day's Excdrſion. Epiſtles to Miranda, &c. Odes. Hymns. ' Letters. A Poem on Redemption. A Soliloquy. w By MARIA DE FLEURT. With Recomme'ndatory Prefaces, by the Rev Mr WILLs, Rev. Mr TOWERS, and Rev. Mr RYLAND. L o N 1) O N, Printed for the Author, and ſold by T.W1LKI N s, Aldcrmanbury; By Bellamy and Roberts, No. 202, Strand; M. Traipp, NOJ, Pater-noſter-Row; Mr Nott, Lombard ſtreet; M. Gurncy,No.ux, Holborn, and by the Author, No. 31, jewin-ſtreet. 1 7 9 I . [ Price THREE smumcs ſewed. ] /
5*. /2..o5" §rom f^e feifiran? of (pxoftBBox ^amuef (JJtifFer in (Jttemors of 3ub$e ^amuef (ttttffer QBrecftmrtbge (preeenfeo fig ^amuef (JtttfPet QSrecftinribge £on$ to f0e Eifirarg of (princeton £6eofogtcaf ^emtnat^ sec
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FALSEHOOD EXAMINED .AT THE BAR OF TRUTH ; . ' OR, A FAREWELL TO Mr. Wra- HUNTINGTON, AND Mr. THOMAS. JONES, Os READING: CONTAINING STRICTURES ON THE BROKEN CIST ER Nj WRITTEN BY' THE FORMER, Addressed to the Rev. Mr. R Y L A N D, Senior. t AND UPON MYSTERY BABYLON, ENCOMPASSED FOR UTTER DESTRUCTION, WRITTEN BY THE LATTER. BY MARIA DE FLEURT. (§(; •f It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks," Acts ix LONDON: Printed and fold for the Author by T.Wilktns, Aldermanbury. Sold also by Mr. Trapp, t, Paternoster Row ; M. Gurnfy, No.' ji8, Holbnrn:' and by the Author, No. 31 , Jewin-Stteet. '79'.
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? PRINCETON, N. J. Presented by Mr. Samuel Agnew of Philadelphia, Pa. Ag?iew Coll. on Baptism, No. ' (Ui.J^.^ ^—
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«w«» T«^ff- ^^5^' -»«l^ j>>^' i:^ 5:i 3::=3 ^^. ..^^ s:^. ^2^ OF THE AT PRINCETON, N. J. S^A MUEL AaNE^V, OK PHILADELPHIA, PA. QTo. Pl^mA/ cJ^ /«d'fJL^§^iX'^ 5>03<;^^©3'' ^0 '^^^^^ Divi5,on.OC<(^..|^^^?^^^'^
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VLIFE Henry Dunstei^ First President of Harvard Coleece. REV. JEREMIAH CHAPLINn/d.d. I50STOX: JAMES R. OSGOOD AND COMPANY, (LATH 1ICKNOK i FIKLDS ASI) i: 1S72. -., uSGoOD, & Cu.)
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THE BAPTIST MAGAZINE FOR 1867. THE PROFITS ARISING FROM THE SALE OF THIS WORK ARE OIVEN TO THE WIDOWS OF BAPTIST MINISTERS, AT THE RECOMMENDATION" OF THF. CONTRIBUTORS. VOLUME L I X. (semes v—voi. xi.) Cbitor: Kev. W. G. LEWIS. " Speaking the tmth in love."—Ephesians ix. 15. LONDON : ELLIOT STOCK, 62, PATERXOSTEK ROW. jjpcccLxnr
PASTORAL MEMORIALS: SELECTED FROM THE MANUSCRIPTS OF THE LATE REV JOHN RYLAND, D. D. OF BRISTOL: A MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. I. LONDON: B. J. HOLDSWORTH. AIDCCCWVr.
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Stanford Universi Libraries Hll\l||H|l||H\| l|l\ ll ll\ \ll ll H|ll\l\||\|H\ll\3 l=LU5 UE5 ?UE 75‘! 6 - 'w11_ ‘ J ' ._ '!’;“¢i§’ 4' .- .'l!§... ' . - .. 3' \' . ''i\! - .‘. ‘ E‘ "§'i" 1 . - , ‘f , , - .-3'-\l¢.i. :1\ \tt _,,,._, ‘ ' \ l. ,t ' . .,, _’. 8. ' ' ' "__~>._E '..> _.-.._.--_ . ‘ .;-.'. .,¢'...-<._ .->>P.,4.i."',_.,.__ >>'-,‘.._o-_.''-‘t_. <,6>_u.,->._..i__.4_.'qp..._ '1..‘v,,.Q-i-_-..'.\__., ....-.Q.<_<¢._.'_,.n—_. -3.-...‘'.''' , _ --. moi.-,,...._._, o,t--Q._.,. .___.v_.._._,.,,.,''_, Q.Q'.o--,..'-..._. .¢-§.1.>_,..\‘ '..wa,_.i,.‘___. ' _ , ‘"-,'_' ' .. _. =,_..-|...,, ‘ _ ---\.'‘.i_',._‘,‘, -o---2.._.’.,...‘ Q
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' THE BROKEN C I ST,E RN, AND THE SPRINGING WELL: OR, THE DIFFERENCI BETWEEN HEAD NOTIONS, and HEART RELIGION; VAIN JANGLING, and SOUND DOCTRINE. ABDRKSSID.TO THE Rev. JOHN RYL AND, senior, AT ENFIELD. By WILLIAM HUNTINGTON, S. S. MINISTER OP THE GOSPEL AT PROVIDENCE CHAPEL, LITTLE TITCHFIELD-STREET, AND AT MONKWELL-STREET MEETING QE&OND EDITION. (O Forasmuch as ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle of Christ rtij&ijIterlEd/-\--• /*L\i by us, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God j<^Qfa jft'^r'f'^y / tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the heart. —Our sufficiency is oP&ii^_jL*** who also hath made us able ministers of the New Testament : not of the . letter, but of the spirit ; for the letter, killeth, but the spirit giveth life. zCok. lii- 3 , 5,6. LONDON: PRINTED BY T. BENSLEY, BOLT COURT, FLEET STREET. ' i '. -Sold at Providence Chapel on Monday and Wednesday Evenings, and at Monkwell-Street Meeting on Tuesday Evenings ; by W. Baynes, No. 54, Pater noster-Row ; T. Green, No. 93, and J. Baker, , No. is6, Oxford-Street; J. Cobbin, No. 14, Hertford-street, Fitzroy-square ; at the Chapel in the Cliff, LcWes, Sussex ; by T. Barston, Caftlegate, Grantliam, Lincolnshire j and by A. Batten, sen. Wcllwyn, Herts. l800. U/. i .: SOS •-
The Cause of God and Truth : BEING A VINDICATION OF THE PRINCIPAL PASSAGES O F S Q R I P T U R E, AND THE Arqument founded upon them, In Favour of the poctrines of Eternal Election,.; Particular Redemption, the Efficacy of G b d's Grace, and the Impotence of Marx's Will in Conversion, and the final Perseve? ranee of the Saints, from the Except icins. of the Arminiam ; particularly, Doctor Whitby, in his Discourse on the Five Points. "..'. '-**. PART II. ^ By J O H N GILL. LONDON: Printed for, and Sold by Aaron Ward, at the King's-Arms in Litde-Eritain. J 736. ,
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f LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.? #(|fe? |ore"Si't|:o # I -^^^^ "J H.I * UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, f
LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA PRESENTED BY MRS. HENRY T. LOUTHAN
THE v / I DEACON SHIP: ITS NATURE, QUALIFICATIONS, RELATIONS, AND DUTIES. \ ^ BY R: B. C. HOWELL, D.D. PASTOR OP THE SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH, RICHMOND, TA. •«thor of "The Terras of Communion Bl the Lord's Table.*' " They that have used the office of a Deacon well, purchase to themselves a good degree, and great boldness in the faith which is in Christ Jesus." 1 Tim. iii. 13. Jlta!) ©JtrassanD. f JjilnMpljiit: AMERICAN BAPTIST PUBLICATION SOCIETY, 118 ARCH STREET.
____ -' t' 7i r * i 7 'I / , ba ..._. , .;ſi._ 4a£j£mw, 07' ſ - 'r H E 2 \ DEATH-BEDTERRORS ofan INFIDEL: O R, A MODERN FREETHINKER Exempliſied In the laſt awſul Hours oſ a. YOUNG GENTLEMAN, Who departed from the Principles of CHRISTIANITY, and turned DEIST. To which is added, as a CONTRAST, the GLORIOUS SALVATION OF BARON DYHERRN FROM I N F I D E L I T Y, Who died in APRIL, 1759. REPUBLlSHED BY JOHN RYLAND, AM. of NORTHAJNIPTON. LONDON, Printed for, and Sold by E. and C. DxLLY, in the Poultryz and R. SMITH, Bookſeller, in Northampton. M DCC LXX.
THE DISPLAY OF GLORIOUS GRACE: OR, THE COVENANT OF PEACE OPENED. IN FOURTEEN SERMONS Lately Preached, in which the Errors of the present Day, about Reconciliation and Justification, are Detected. By BENJAMIN KEACH. PSAL. Lxxxix. 34. My Covenant will I not break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of my Lips. LONDON, Printed by S. Bridge, and Sold by Mary Fabian, at Mercers-Chappel in Cheapside; and Joseph Collier, at the Golden-Bible on London-Bridge, by the Gate; and William Marshall, at the Bible in Newgate-street, 1698. TO THE Unprejudiced Reader AS I Preach not to please Men’s Ears, so but little regard ought to be had to the Scoffing Reflections of such Men, who contemn every thing of this kind, unless it consists of a Fancy-taking Modelation of empty Rhetoric, or a high Florid Stile, mixt with Wit, Learning, and Philosophical Notions. Sad it is to see that in Divine Matters, nay, in Preaching, Persons should affect New Modes and Fashions, (as to the shame of the present Generation, they do in respect of Garbs and Dresses:) I am not for Airy and Florid Orations in the Ministration of the Word of God, but for that plain Way of Preaching used by the Holy Apostles, and our Worthy Modern Divines. Besides, could I so Preach or Write, as is the Flesh-pleasing, Ear tickling A-la-mode of the Times, of such who study Words more than Matter, it would be utterly disliked by all such Pious Christians, for whose sake, and at whose Importunity these Sermons are published. The Holy Apostle (who though profoundly Learned) disclaims any Rhetorical Flourishes, or persuasive Oratory, but professes that his Speech and Preaching, was not with the Enticing Words of Man's Wisdom, but in the demonstration
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///-* ^ THE ' • -jj) DOCTRINE » OF Univerfal Salvation Examined and Refuted. CONTAINING, ..-»-' A concife and diftinft Anfwer to the Writing* of Mr. Relly, and Mr. Winchester, upon' thac Subjfeft. r ' ' . ..■'.- . . • \ By ISAAC BACKUS, Preacher of the Gofpcl. v ' ('JJ -'. . '— ' i i? Ear/leftly contend for the Faith 'which ivaf once dJi-vai&itnto th% v Building up your/elves tin your moji holy Faith. rH.' < ' ^i~\ ————— ' ' -j /» R O V I D E N C E: Printed and fold by John Carter. Alfo fold by faill?.. Frssman, in Union-Strut, Eoftw, .
f&/. <?' .4 ' r ' —OF THE BRAMBLtTON ' LYCEUM. 243 i^A&afcs .i-2*sMI
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5^ °^ ANNEX LIB. LIBRARY OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Presented by ALEXANDER S. ROWLAND CLASS OF 1884
AHNKWNIHT. a: h find-ſ: \ 'illa-ſin: "punnflu 4 w, .. ſi In'
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*:-:%' Snpravrd /or Jty/andr Zi/? <?f Jfhrd. ^X & Coffrr sculp . \LF1EB the. -GEEAT Born at Wantage 84Q. Died in the Tear. Q00 . -/>om an antirnt jPtctarr in t/tr Ibfitssian o/'-DC th/sor,/ , "V*
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12^ ^ o^ i^ «^:^ i:^. ^^ AT PRINCETON, N. J. x> c» ::v _^. T X <3 :v c» !•• SAMUEL AONEW, OF PHILADELPHIA. PA. Th/fiA/cJ^ M y&^j«^\ ;<!-„. ^ - - SheJf, Section.
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The Spirit and the Covenant J©HN GILL’S CRITIQUE ٠ ? THE PACTUM SALUTIS R i c h a r d a . M u l l e r O u t ٠ ? THE D 1S1NTEGRAT!UN of the orthodox reformed structure of English federalism there sprang two alternative doctrinal structures, the nomistic, given its definitive form in Richard Baxter’s Catholick Theologie and Methodus theologiae christianae and the antinomian, as synthesized and developed in John Gill’s CompleteBody ofDoctrinal andPractical Divinity.1Gill, who lived from 1697 to 1771, is without doubt the foremost theologian of the Particular Baptists. He is remembered as a zealous and erudite opponent of infant baptism and as an indefatigable defender of the Calvinist doctrine of election in its high orthodox form. In addition to his Body ofDivinity he produced a weighty four-volume refutation of the Arminian Whitby’s Discourse on the “ five points’’ of Calvinism, a massive treatise on the doctrine of foe Trinity, and a verse-by-verse exposition of foe Old and New Testaments which ran to nine volumes in its first edition. Gill also edited and published an edition of the works of Tobias Crisp, the cent^nth-century antinomian preacher.2 Gill’s importance as a thinker rests upon his reformulation of the federal system around the principles of the eternal decree, the absolutely free and unmerited gift of grace in salvation, and justification of foe elect from eternity-the last of these principles serving to rule out any taint of synergism in foe salvation of the individual. These doctrines, together with foe equation of the covenant of grace with foe eternal covenant of redemption or pactum salutis between foe persons of the Trinity, tended in Gill’s system to become the basis for interpreting all other doctrine.3 In one sense, therefore, Gill appears as the great codifier of a movement. More importantly, he also appears as an original thinker in several of foe particulars of his codification, a thinker who was able to examine the needs of system and to draw together into a synthesis the various loose ends of doctrine. Perhaps foe most important of Gill’s original formulations was his critique and development of the Reformed doctrine of the partum salutis. As that doctrine stood in foe systems of major seventeenth-century thinkers like Witsius, Turretin, Heidegger, and Owen, it did not quite fit foe doctrinal needs of foe antinomian side of federalism nor did R ic h a r d A. M u l l e r is assistant professor of Historical Theology at Fuller Theological Seminary, Fasadena, California.
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Special thanks are due to Miss Cornelia Bagster for her kindness in allowing the free use of her father's unpublished Autobiography, and to Martin Wilkin, Esq., for his courteous permission to print an autograph letter of Rev. John Ryland, A.M.
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LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA PRESENTED BY Mr 3. J. 0. Qroarles
THE WORD AND WORKS OF GrO D, BT JOHN GILL, I). 1>. c H. DAYTON, PUBLISHER, 36 HOWARD STREET. TKI>IAIUrOLI8, IND. ! ASHKtt k COMPANY. 1859.
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ierazisizzarzw Er Mr. Bachus's DISCOURSE · On Faith and its - * ’ , ffäärasterzitzaiksikäsa ----
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