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A letter to Charles Butler, Esq. of Lincoln's Inn; containing brief observations upon his question, what has England gained by the Reformation? By a True Catholic.

By: True Catholic.Publisher: London : Printed for Hatchard and Son..., 1825Description: 26p.Subject(s): Butler, Charles, 1750-1832. Book of the Roman Catholic Church | Catholic Church -- Controversial literature | Catholic Church -- England | Reformation -- England
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Reference material House of Lords Library - Palace Librarian's Room, Principal Floor Farnham Tracts VOL.133(3) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 58079-1001
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VOL.13(3) An answer to the net for the fishers of men. VOL.133(1) The revival of popery, its intolerant character, political tendency, encroaching demands, and unceasing usurpations: detailed in a series of letters to William Wilberforce, Esq. M.P. With an appendix; containing copious extracts from the notes, inculcating persecution, which are annexed to the authorized Roman Catholic Bible and remarks on the wilful corruption of Holy Scripture. By William Blair, Esq. A.M. VOL.133(2) A letter to Charles Butler, Esq. of Lincoln's Inn, in vindication of English Protestants from his attack upon their sincerity in the "Book of the Roman Catholic Church" by C.J. Blomfield, D.D. Bishop of Chester. VOL.133(3) A letter to Charles Butler, Esq. of Lincoln's Inn; containing brief observations upon his question, what has England gained by the Reformation? By a True Catholic. VOL.133(4) Two letters addressed to the author of the 'Book of the Roman Catholic Church,' upon certain passages in his book, and shewing from his own exposition of the Roman Catholic creed, the inadmissibility of Roman Catholics into the legislature and government of Protestant England. By a Lay Member of the University of Oxford. VOL.133(5) Cobbett's book of the Roman-Catholic Church. In four parts. Being a familiar introduction to his "History of the Protestant Reformation," addressed to all sensible and just Catholics. VOL.133(6) A discourse concerning transubstantiation, preached by the Rev. Dr. Harris, at Salters' Hall, on the 13th of February, 1734-5.

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