| Michael G. Hall - 1988 - 460 pagina’s
...Congregational and Presbyterian ministers in London had signed a document called "Heads of Agreement Assented to by the United Ministers in and about London, formerly called Presbyterian and Congregational."8' Like any document written to bury differences between people who disagree, the Heads... | |
| Edwin Wolf, Kevin J. Hayes - 2006 - 1012 pagina’s
...contents; item 6 in volume. PHi (Af.306.8). ESTC T65130. NUC E0174154. *1600 HEADS of agreement assented to by the united ministers in and about London, formerly called Presbyterian and Congregational. London: RR for Tho. Cockerill, and John Dunton, 1691. 4to. Congregational churches; Presbyterian Church... | |
| Robert Tudur Jones, Kenneth Dix, Alan Ruston - 2006 - 448 pagina’s
...6 March 1691. The following extract presents the main points of the Heads of Agreement Assented to by the United Ministers in and about London, formerly Called Presbyterian and Congregational (London, 1691), 16 pp. The spelling has been modernised. It is also reproduced in CHST, VIII, 38ff.... | |
| Congregational Historical Society - 1923 - 346 pagina’s
...Ministers, and the Preface approved of. HEADS OF AGREEMENT Assented to by the United Ministers, &c. The following Heads of AGREEMENT have been resolved...cannot come up to the Common Rule by Law established. I. Of CHURCHES and CHURCHMEMBERS. *, T/Tf ~E acknowledge our Lord Jesus Christ to rr have One Catholick... | |
| Erik Routley - 1960 - 250 pagina’s
...this end these ministers compiled and published a document entitled Heads of Agreement assented to by the United Ministers in and about London formerly called Presbyterian and Congregational. Between eighty and ninety ministers entered into this agreement, one of whose provisions was that the... | |
| Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Theophilus Williams, Josiah Conder, Thomas Price, Jonathan Edwards Ryland, Edwin Paxton Hood - 1837 - 654 pagina’s
...certainly constituted themselves into an organized Body, of which ' the Heads of Agreement assented to by ' the United Ministers, in and about London, formerly called 'Presbyterian and Congregational,' formed the basis. Still this was a Union of individuals, and not of previously constituted Bodies,... | |
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