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  1. Hicks, Elias (1748-1830). A collection of extemporaneous discourses, delivered by Elias Hicks, in his tour through Dutchess County, during the summer of 1829. Taken in short hand by Henry P. Hoag, stenographer. New York: Printed for the proprietor, by H.R. Piercy, 1830. First edition. 250 pages; 19 cm. Pencil underlining to first chapter, front hinge loosened but still sound, scratches to rear end

  2. 5 títulos para "Elias Hicks" 1 - 10 de más de 5 resultados para "elias hicks" Letters of Elias Hicks: Including Also a Few Short Essays Written on Several Occ Elias Hicks. 978-1-103-33264-9 . 27.03€ (25.99€ sin IVA) ...

  3. Elias Hicks was an energetic, deep thinking, emotionally spiritual Quaker Christian. He was caught historically between a rock and a hard place. He was a consistent and conscientious witness to the truth as he saw it and was deeply committed to the propositions in action that today we call testimonies – community, equality, simplicity, integrity, peace, and earth care.

  4. County Bicentennial fair at Doylestown, Pennsylvania, from Au- gust 31 to September 2, 1882. The paintings are identified in Alice. Ford, Edward Hicks, Painter of the Peaceable Kingdom (Phila- delphia, 1952), pp. 83, 121. Brief comments on the paintings appeared in the Philadelphia Record and Philadelphia Press for September 1, 1882, and the ...

  5. byustudies.byu.edu › article › a-gift-of-faith-elias-hicks-blackburn-pioneerA Gift of Faith - BYU Studies

    A Gift of Faith: Elias Hicks Blackburn, Pioneer, Patriarch, and Healer, by Voyle L. Munson and Lillian S. Munson (Basin/Plateau Press, 1991) This biography, originally produced for Blackburn’s descendants, deserves wider attention. In an age when religious healings were not uncommon, Elias Hicks Blackburn (1827–1908) was nevertheless ...

  6. 8 de oct. de 2022 · (1748–1830), American Quaker. He took up the cause of the negroes. He opposed the creation of any credal basis for Quakerism, notably in his Doctrinal Epistle (1824), in which he protested against insistence on the orthodox doctrines of the Person of Christ and the Atonement. A schism ensued (1827–8) at Philadelphia and elsewhere between his followers (the ‘Liberal Branch’ or ...

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