Please help edit and categorize these titles with the edit icon on the right. Thank you! | Share: | | Bishop Goodman his proposition:in discharge of his own dutie and conscience both to God and man. ( London, 1650) | EEBO-TCP | | |
The creatures praysing God: or, The religion of dumbe creatures. An example and argument for the stirring vp of our deuotion and for the confusion of atheisme. Benedicite omnia opera Domini Domino; laudate & superexaltate eum in secula. G.G. ( London : Felik Kingston, 1622) | EEBO-TCP | | |
The fall of man, or the corruption of nature, proued by the light of our naturall reason. Which being the first ground and occasion of our Christian faith and religion, may likewise serue for the first step and degree of the naturall mans conuersion. First preached in a sermon, since enlarged, reduced to the forme of a treatise, and dedicated to the Queenes most excellent Maiestie. By Godfrey Goodman ... ( At London : ImFelix Kyngston, and are to be sold by Richard Lee, 1616) | EEBO-TCP | | |
The first apparition of Bishop Goodman's ghost being a new strange sight, or, a late strange vision, making a wofull repetition of his former confession in 1653, upon the extirpation of bishops in 1642 : how occasionally revewed, and seasonably renewed, 1681, for an adhortatory admonition to all bishops, and their courts. ( [London?] : H.B. ..., 1681) | EEBO-TCP | | |
To His Highness my Lord Protector.:The humble petition and information of Godfree Goodman Bishop late of Gloucester. ( London?, 1655) | EEBO-TCP | | |
The two great mysteries of Christian religion the ineffable Trinity, [the] vvonderful incarnation, explicated to the satisfaction of mans own naturall reason, and according to the grounds of philosophy ( London : J. Flesher, 1653) | EEBO-TCP | | |
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