The anarchy of the Ranters, and other libertines, the hierarchy of the Romanists, and other pretended churches, equally refused and refuted, in a two-fold apology for the church and people of God, called in derision, Quakers : wherein they are vindicated from those that accuse them of disorder and confusion on the one hand, and from such as calumniate them with tyranny and imposition on the other, shewing, that as the true and pure principles of the gospel are restored by their testimony, so also is the antient apostolick order of the church of Christ re-established among them, and settled upon its right basis and foundation
The anarchy of the Ranters, and other libertines, the hierarchy of the Romanists, and other pretended churches, equally refused and refuted, in a two-fold apology for the church and people of God, called in derision, Quakers : wherein they are vindicated from those that accuse them of disorder and confusion on the one hand, and from such as calumniate them with tyranny and imposition on the other, shewing, that as the true and pure principles of the gospel are restored by their testimony, so also is the antient apostolick order of the church of Christ re-established among them, and settled upon its right basis and foundation
Book digitized by Google from the library of the New York Public Library and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb.
Signatures: A-I⁸
Evans
Miller, C.W. Franklin
Appended, with special t.p. and separate paging but with continuous signatures: An epistle to the national meeting of Friends, in Dublin, concerning good order and discipline in the church / written by Jos[e]ph Pike. Philadelphia : Re-printed, and sold by B. Franklin, and D. Hall, 1757
LC copy has inscriptions: Thomas Dobson. The gift of James Pemberton, 1759. Ma[r]garet Sharpless to Elizth. Coggeshall, 3d mo. 1813