Verus Patroclus, or, The weapons of Quakerism, the weakness of Quakerism being a discourse, wherein the choicest arguments for their chief tenets are enervat, and their best defences annihilat : several abominations, not heretofore so directly discovered, unmasked : with a digression explicative of the doctrine anent the necessity of the spirits operation, and an appendix, vindicating, Rom. 9. from the depravations of an Arminian / by William Jamison.
- Title
- Verus Patroclus, or, The weapons of Quakerism, the weakness of Quakerism being a discourse, wherein the choicest arguments for their chief tenets are enervat, and their best defences annihilat : several abominations, not heretofore so directly discovered, unmasked : with a digression explicative of the doctrine anent the necessity of the spirits operation, and an appendix, vindicating, Rom. 9. from the depravations of an Arminian / by William Jamison.
- Author
- Jameson, William, fl. 1689-1720.
- Publication
- Edinburgh :: [s.n.],
- 1689.
- Rights/Permissions
-
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- Subject terms
- Society of Friends -- Controversial literature.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A46640.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"Verus Patroclus, or, The weapons of Quakerism, the weakness of Quakerism being a discourse, wherein the choicest arguments for their chief tenets are enervat, and their best defences annihilat : several abominations, not heretofore so directly discovered, unmasked : with a digression explicative of the doctrine anent the necessity of the spirits operation, and an appendix, vindicating, Rom. 9. from the depravations of an Arminian / by William Jamison." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A46640.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 4, 2024.
Contents
- title page
-
TO THE Right Honourable, The EARL of DUNDONNALD,
Lord Cochran, &c. - To the Judicious READER.
- CHAP. I. Of the Holy Scriptures.
- CHAP. II. Of Immediate Revelation.
- CHAP. III. Concerning Original Sin.
- CHAP. IV. Of GOD.
- CHAP. V. Of Christ, and of his Benefits.
- CHAP. VI. Of Perfection.
-
CHAP. VII. Of the
Quakers Doctrine, of Si∣lent Worship, and of the Sa∣craments. - AN APPENDIX. IN which the Doctrine of the Reformed Churches, and in special of the Reverend assembly at Westminster, in their Confession of Faith, Chap. 3. deduced from the Ninth chap: to the Romans defended, and the Text Vindicated from the Corrupt Glosses and Depravations of Willi∣am Parker, and his pretended examination of the Westminster Confession, which Robert Bar∣clay hath made his own by referring us there∣unto, as sufficient solutions of all our arguments for our Doctrine of Election and Reprobation, deduced from that place.