A brief reply to a late answer to Dr. Henry More his Antidote against idolatry Shewing that there is nothing in the said answer that does any ways weaken his proofs of idolatry against the Church of Rome, and therefore all are bound to take heed how they enter into, or continue in the communion of that church as they tender their own salvation.

About this Item

Title
A brief reply to a late answer to Dr. Henry More his Antidote against idolatry Shewing that there is nothing in the said answer that does any ways weaken his proofs of idolatry against the Church of Rome, and therefore all are bound to take heed how they enter into, or continue in the communion of that church as they tender their own salvation.
Author
More, Henry, 1614-1687.
Publication
London :: printed by J. Redmayne, for Walter Kettilby at the Sign of the Bishops-Head in St. Pauls Church-yard,
MDCLXXII. [1672]
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Subject terms
Walton, John, fl. 1672. -- Brief answer to the many calumnies of Dr. Henry More.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A51289.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A brief reply to a late answer to Dr. Henry More his Antidote against idolatry Shewing that there is nothing in the said answer that does any ways weaken his proofs of idolatry against the Church of Rome, and therefore all are bound to take heed how they enter into, or continue in the communion of that church as they tender their own salvation." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A51289.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 4, 2024.

Pages

The Answer.

It was but a plain expression

Page [unnumbered]

of their confidence I dare say, which the heighth of my Ad∣versaries Rhetorick calls Insul∣tation, in that they professed they conceived my Antidote to be a Book unanswerable. And it is a sign to me that they duely understood the weight and solidity of my Arguments, that they did with such confi∣dence pronounce them unan∣swerable. And I hope upon the perusal of my Reply to my Adversaries pretended Answer, not onely those that have a kindness for me, but all lovers of the Truth will acknowledge them unanswerable; And that those are no such poor Souls in his sense, in that they deemed

Page [unnumbered]

my Arguments no less strong than my self was positive in as∣serting of them, but that they are persons of a clear and per∣spicacious Judgment.

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