Milton Public Library

Truth and innocence vindicated, in a survey of a discourse concerning ecclesiastical polity

Label
Truth and innocence vindicated, in a survey of a discourse concerning ecclesiastical polity
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Truth and innocence vindicated
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Sub title
in a survey of a discourse concerning ecclesiastical polity
Summary
In his "Discourse of Ecclesiastical Polity" Samuel Parker decried religious toleration as unfriendly to social order, and attempted to blacken the character of the Nonconformists. Owen was chosen to reply to Parker, which he did in one of the noblest controversial treatises that were ever penned by him. The mind of Owen seems to have been whetted by his deep sense of wrong, and he writes with a remarkable clearness and force of argument; while he indulges at times in a style of irony that is perhaps justified by the baseness and wickedness of Parker's sentiments
Target audience
adult
Contributor
Content

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