Folly and madnesse made manifest, or, Some things written to shew how contrary to the word of God and practise of the saints in the Old and New Testament the doctrines and practises of the Quakers ... are a rayling and reviling answer made thereunto, full of falsehood and vaine shifts and devices to maintaine their errors : this discovered and made manifest.
- Title
- Folly and madnesse made manifest, or, Some things written to shew how contrary to the word of God and practise of the saints in the Old and New Testament the doctrines and practises of the Quakers ... are a rayling and reviling answer made thereunto, full of falsehood and vaine shifts and devices to maintaine their errors : this discovered and made manifest.
- Author
- Saye and Sele, William Fiennes, Viscount, 1582-1662.
- Publication
- [Oxford :: By H. Hall],
- 1659.
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- Link to this Item
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https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A62268.0001.001
- Cite this Item
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"Folly and madnesse made manifest, or, Some things written to shew how contrary to the word of God and practise of the saints in the Old and New Testament the doctrines and practises of the Quakers ... are a rayling and reviling answer made thereunto, full of falsehood and vaine shifts and devices to maintaine their errors : this discovered and made manifest." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A62268.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 7, 2024.
Contents
- title page
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text
- An account of the Devils changing his device from Ranting to Quaking, yet still carrying on the same malicious Design a∣gainst the souls of men: together with the rise and progress of this latter Delusion; as also a Declaration of their rotten Principles, wherein their Foundations are shaken, and their folly made mani∣fest to all.
- The Quaker's darkness avoiding the scri∣pture light, or their railing and shifting answer to this discovery of their guilfull principles, and sinfull practises: pub∣lished that all men may see their spirit, as they themselves discover it.
- title page
- The Quakers reply herein manifested to be (like the Jesuits sophistry) only shifting evasions, which rather darkens, than clears the truth in hand, as also to be but as sparks of railing, streaming out of their hearts, burning with wrath, not only against the defender of truth, but a∣gainst the truth it selfe.