02162nam 2200361 n 450 99639145740331620200824121739.0(CKB)4940000000108485(EEBO)2240937629(UnM)99863510e(UnM)99863510(EXLCZ)99494000000010848519930510d1657 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|The guilty-covered clergy-man unvailed;[electronic resource] in a plain and candid reply unto two bundles of wrath and confusion, wrapt up in one and twenty sheets of paper. The one written by Christopher Fowler and Simon Ford of Reading; the other by William Thomas of Ubley in Somersetshire. Wherein all their malicious slanders and false accusations, which they cast upon the truth, are clean wash'd off; their weapons with which they war against the Lamb, broken over their own heads; and they, with the rest of the tyth-exacting teachers, proved to be the great incendaries, and mis-leaders of these nations. In which also there is made a brief and sober application, to the magistrates, and other inhabitants, within the city of Bristol. /By Thomas Speed, a friend to all that tremble at the Word of the Lord; but an irreconcileable enemy to the mysterious deceit, and monstrous hypocrisie of those that do teach for hire, and divine for moneyLondon Printed for Giles Calvert at the black Spread-Eagle at the west end of Pauls1657[8], 79, [1] pA reply to "A sober answer to an angry epistle" by Christopher Fowler and Simon Ford and "Rayling rebuked" by William Thomas.Annotation on Thomason copy: "Nou: 18".Reproduction of the original in the British Library.eebo-0018Society of FriendsApologetic worksEarly works to 1800Society of FriendsSpeed Thomasb. 1622 or 3.1007456Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996391457403316The guilty-covered clergy-man unvailed2378243UNISA