Lawson, Thomas, 1630-1691
Thomas Lawson
VIAF ID: 58047590 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/58047590
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Lawson, Thomas ‡d 1630-1691
- 100 1 _ ‡a Lawson, Thomas, ‡d 1630-1691
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Lawson, Thomas, ‡d 1630-1691
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Thomas Lawson
- 100 0 _ ‡a Thomas Lawson
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (3)
5xx's: Related Names (3)
- 551 _ _ ‡a Great Strickland ‡4 orts ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfDeath
- 551 _ _ ‡a Lawkland (North Yorkshire) ‡4 ortg ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfBirth
- 510 2 _ ‡a Society of Friends ‡4 affi ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#affiliation ‡e Affiliation
Works
Title | Sources |
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Eine Antwort auf ein Buch in lateinischer Sprache ausgegeben, genant der Unflaht der Quäcker, abgemahlet nach ihren Aufkommen (Fortgang) und greulichen Leeren, ausgegeben durch Johan. Joachim Zentgraff, gutgeheissen von Johan Conradus Danhauer &c. | |
An appeal to the Parliament concerning the poor : that there may not be a beggar in England | |
Baptismalogia : Or, a treatise concerning baptisms. Whereunto is added, A discourse concerning the Supper, bread and wine, called also Communion. By Thomas Lawson. | |
Dagon's fall before the Ark : Written primarily, as a testimony for the Lord, his Wisdom, Creation, Products of his Power, Useful and Necessary Knowledge, capacitating People for the Concerns of this Life. Secondaerily, As a Testimony against the Old Serpent, his Wisdom, which is Foolishness with God, his Arts, Inventions, Comedies, or Interludes, Tragedies, Lascivious Poems, Frivolous Fables, Spoiling Philosophy, taught in Christian Schools. Therein, as in a Glass, Teachers in Schools and Colledges may see their Concern, neither Christian nor Warrantable. By Thomas Lawson. | |
The lip of truth opened, against a dawber with untempered morter : A few words against a book, written by Magnus Bine priest, in the county of Sussex, which he calls, The scornful quakers answered, &c. But he himself is found the scorner, and the lyer, charging me with things I never spoke, nor never entered into my heart to speak | |
A mite into the treasury, being a word to artists, especially to Heptatechnists, the professors of the seven liberal acts, so called, grammar, logick, rhetorick, musick, arithmetick, geometry, astronomy : Shewing what we own herein, being according to God and Godliness, and of God; and what we deny, proceeding from, and favouring of, those deceitful lips, which seduced man from his primitive station, and state of Blessedness. Several other things are herein touched, as in the following contents appear. Thomas Lawson. | |
Serious remembrancer to live well, 1684 | |
Two treatises of Thomas Lawson deceased : The first, A mite into the treasury; ... The second, A treatise relating to the call, work and wages of the ministers of Christ, .. | |
An untaught teacher witnessed against. Or, The old bottles mouth opened, it's wine poured forth, drunk of drunkards, denyed of them who have tasted of the new : That is to say, the unsound, unseasoned, unsavory doctrines, and opinions of Matthew Caffyn, Baptist-teacher laid open, who in the county of Sussex, is cryed up to be as their battle axe, and weapon of warre, who as Jannes and Jambres rides aloft, and bestirs himself with the magick rod of his lies, slanders, aspersions, and unsound doctrines, labours to strengthen the hands of carnal professors, and to keep the beloved of God in bondage: ... Which doctrines, and unsavory speeches were received from his own mouth, part of them at a meeting of the people called Quakers, at Crowley in Sussex, others thereof at his own house neere South-water, before me and John Slee, upon the fifth day of the seventh moneth, 1655 |