The fall of a great visible idol by the coming of the invisible povver, and substance : In this day and time of the lambs war which is come. Wherein Christ the true light is exalted at the right hand of God, who dwells and walkes in his people which are his temple. Which doth bring down the boasting baptists that hath highly exalted themselves upon the high and dark mountains of their own imaginations, as may be known by their own principles which are herein answered with something to the simple hearted that are among them, concerning water baptism and breaking of outward bread, which these baptists hath so much idolized in the night. From a true friend unto all that loves truth in the inward parts, in true love and pitty unto the lost sheep, that they may be of the house of Israel. Joseph Fuce.

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Fuce, Joseph.
Imprint:London : printed for Thomas Simmons, at the Bull and Mouth near Aldersgate, 1656 [i.e. 1659]
Description:1 online resource ([4], 35, [1] p.)
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11526337
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Notes:Date of publication misnumbered 1656; actual date of publication is 1659, cf. Smith and internal text.
Copies have date of publication obscured by MS. to read 1659.
Reproduction of the original in the Friends' House Library, London (Early English books) and the British Library (Misc. Brit. tracts).
Wing (2nd ed.) F2257A
Smith, J. Catalogue of Friends' Books I, p. 824