01990nam 2200337Ia 450 99638801660331620200824132532.0(CKB)4940000000086072(EEBO)2240870228(OCoLC)ocm45097591e(OCoLC)45097591(EXLCZ)99494000000008607220000929d1675 uy 0engurbn||||a|bb|A raging wave foming out his own shame. Or, An answer to a book lately published by Richard Hains (a person withdrawn from) entituled, A protestation against usurpation[electronic resource] Wherein appears such a measure of envies bitterness heaped up, pressed down, and running over, as the like in some ages hath not appeared, by his many false accusations, and malicious insinuations, thereby to provoke (if possible) both the chief magistrate, and all men of what degree soever, to have suspicious thoughts of the innocent, easily proved to have no other fouudation [sic] but his own evil imaginations. : Wherein also the church of Southwater by him contemptuously rendered papistical in their act of withdrawment from him, is vindicated and cleared, first, by apostolical authority, secondly, by Rich. Haynes his own pen. /Written by Matthew Caffyn ..London, Printed for Francis Smith at the Elephant and Castle, near the Royal Exchange, in Cornhill.1675[2], 28 pReproduction of original in the Bodleian Library.eebo-0014BaptistsDisciplineBaptistsGreat BritainBaptistsDiscipline.BaptistsCaffyn Matthew1628-1714.1013027EAEEAEBOOK996388016603316A raging wave foming out his own shame. Or, An answer to a book lately published by Richard Hains (a person withdrawn from) entituled, A protestation against usurpation2398791UNISA