Descripción
Small thick octavo. Comprising : A Sermon Preach'd before the King at the Royal Chapel at St James's on the 29th of May, 1716. Being the Anniversary of the Restoration. London 1716. [3],29,[2]. BOUND WITH : A Preservative Against the Principles and Practices of the Nonjurors both in Church and State. Second edition. London 1716. [4],102. BOUND WITH : Some Arguments Made Use of in the Bishop of Bangor's Preservative, etc.by a Lay-Man. London 1716. [2],pp [v]-viii,pp[9]-40. BOUND WITH : A Sermon Preach'd before the King, at the Royal Chapel at St James's on Sunday March 31, 1717. The Third Edition, London 1717. 31,[i]. BOUND WITH : A Letter to the Bishop of Bangor, Occasion'd by his Lordship's Sermon preach'd before the King.Bt Andrew Snape. Second Edition, London 1717. 39,[i]. BOUND WITH : An Answer to The Reverend Dr. Snape's Letter to the Bishop of Bangor. London 1717. 51,[i]. BOUND WITH : A Second Letter to the Lord Bishop of Bangor in Vindication of The Former.by Andrew Snape. London 1717. [3],pp6-67,[3]. BOUND WITH : The Bishop of Bangor's Late Sermon and his Letter to Dr. Snape in Defence of it, etc.by William Law. London 1717. [2],38. BOUND WITH : A Vindication of a Passage in Dr. Snape's Second Letter to the Lord Bishop of Bangor, relating to Mr Pillonniere.by Andrew Snape. London 1717. xii, 80. BOIUND WITH : A Vindication of the Reverend Dr. Snape; In Answer to tghe Bishop of Bangor's Preface.by an Englishman, that was never a Jesuit. London 1717. [2], 31. BOUND WITH : An Answer to a Letter Sent to the Reverend Dr. Sherlock, &c. Relating to his Sermons.etc by THomas Sherlock. London 1717. 62p. BOUND WITH : Some Considerations Occasioned by a Postscript from the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of Bangor to the Dean of Chichester.by Thomas Sherlock. London 1717. [2],pp5-76. BOUND WITH : An Answer to the Reverend Dr. Snape's Accusation by Francis De La Pillonniere. London nd. xxiv,71,23,[i]. BOUND WITH : A Sermon Preach'd at the Church of St Martin in the Fields May 19, etc. by Joseph Trapp. London 1717. [2],38; BOUND WITH : A Collection of Papers Scatter'd lately about the Town in the Daily-Courant, etc. London 1717. 36p. BOUND WITH : The Condition and Example of our Blessed Lord Vindicated, etc.By Tho. Sherlock. London 1718.63,[i]. Contemporary calf boards, later respine with lettering piece. ***** Benjamin Hoadly, who held the sees of Bangor, Hereford, Salisbury and Winchester in rapid succession, was the most notorious Bishop of the eighteenth century. He was probably the best-hated clergyman of the century among his own order; but it is often forgotten that he was also a hero to many of those who wished to see the triumph of Whig principles in the state and Latitudinarian opinions within the church. It is easy to see why he was hated by so many of his clerical brethren: he was a Christian who held lax, even unorthodox, theological views; an Anglican who supported the civil claims of the Dissenters and who helped to bring about the prorogation of Convocation for more than a century; a clergyman who opposed sacerdotal privileges; and a Bishop who attacked the privileged status of the Church of England. (History Today). N° de ref. del artículo 026910
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