Plain-dealing with a traducing Anabaptist, or, Three letters writ upon occasion of some slanderous reflections given and promoted against William Penn by one John Morse published for common benefit that all impartial people may be better acquainted with the invective spirit of some so called, and their ungodly sly way of defaming such as dissents from them, especially in their restless indeavours against the poor Quakers / by W.P.

About this Item

Title
Plain-dealing with a traducing Anabaptist, or, Three letters writ upon occasion of some slanderous reflections given and promoted against William Penn by one John Morse published for common benefit that all impartial people may be better acquainted with the invective spirit of some so called, and their ungodly sly way of defaming such as dissents from them, especially in their restless indeavours against the poor Quakers / by W.P.
Author
Penn, William, 1644-1718.
Publication
[London? :: s.n.],
1672.
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Subject terms
Morse, John, 17th cent.
Society of Friends -- Apologetic works.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A54193.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Plain-dealing with a traducing Anabaptist, or, Three letters writ upon occasion of some slanderous reflections given and promoted against William Penn by one John Morse published for common benefit that all impartial people may be better acquainted with the invective spirit of some so called, and their ungodly sly way of defaming such as dissents from them, especially in their restless indeavours against the poor Quakers / by W.P." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A54193.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 13, 2024.

Pages

Page 19

This was my Postscript to my Letter to him, which ends these present Letters.

IT comes into my Mind to express thus much farther concerning the Lass, that the Simplicity of her An∣swer is to be excused far sooner then thy Ʋn-Christian and Ʋn-Charitable Spirit, that lay in wait to betray, and if such watchings for Evil be uncondemned of thy Reli∣gion, I pronounce it Anti-Christian and Devilish, and that in the Name of the Lord; And as for our Light, thou shalt never be justified, whilst that condemns thee, and if it be insufficient as to thee, it is because thou never yet didst give up thy self to the Holy Conduct thereof, but unworthily disparages that, which I can make appear thou livest not up to. Repent therefore, and be Baptized of Fire (which con∣sumes the Thorns and Briars with which you Water-Baptists scratch and rend at us) and know a purging from dead Works in the Name of the Lord, or thou and they of thy Spi∣rit will be utterly lost in the day of the Lord.

THE END.
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