Oakes, Urian, 1631-1681
Urian Oakes
Oakes, Urian
VIAF ID: 52040669 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/52040669
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Oakes, Urian
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Oakes, Urian ‡d 1631-1681
- 100 1 0 ‡a Oakes, Urian, ‡d 1631-1681
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Urian Oakes
- 100 0 _ ‡a Urian Oakes
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (12)
Works
Title | Sources |
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An Almanack For The Year Of Our Lord ... | |
The divine right of infant-baptisme asserted and proved from Scripture and antiquity | |
Elegie upon the death of the Reverend Mr. Thomas Shepard, late teacher of the Church at Charlstown in New-England / by a great admirer of his worth, and true mourner for his death | |
Elegies and epitaphs, 1677-1717. | |
Seasonable and serious word of faithful advice to the churches and people of God (primarily those) in the Massachusets Colony | |
A seasonable discourse wherein sincerity & delight in the service of God is earnestly pressed upon professors of religion, 1682: | |
The soveraign efficacy of divine providence : over ruling and omnipotently disposing and ordering all humane counsels and affairs, asserted, demonstrated and improved, in a discourse evincing that (not any arm of flesh, but) the right hand of the Most Hisgh is it, that swayeth the universal scepter of this lower world's government, oft wheeling about the prudentest management of the profoundest plotts of the greatest on earth, unto such issues and events as are amazingly contrary to all humane probabilities and cross to the confident expectation of lookers on, as delivered in a sermon preached in Cambridge on Sept. 10. 1677, being the day of artillery election there | |
The soveraign efficacy of divine providence / Urian Oakes. - Los Angeles, 1955. | |
The unconquerable, all-conquering, & more-than-conquering souldier: or, The successful warre which a believer wageth with the enemies of his soul: as also the absolute and unparalleld [!] victory that he ovtains finally over them through the love of God in Jesus Christ, as it was discovered in a sermon preached at Boston in New-England, on the day of the artillery-election there, June 3d. 1672. |