Hurtman Hetcher
12-10-52 81131
Banishment of Friends, 275. Banks, John, journal of, 1; education, 8; convinced when alone, 9; persecuted, liberated from prison, 10; visits Ireland, 16; goes to the town of Wicklow; holds a meeting in the prison, 17; visits Ireland the second time; finds many convinced at Wicklow, 21; went into Ireland, 23; cured of lameness in his arm by George Fox, 24; bears testi- mony against a separating spirit, 25, 29; advice to his daughter, 29; account of his imprisonment in Carlisle, 31; address to the inhabitants of Carlisle, 36; liberated and travels in the ministry, 39; death of his wife, 40; letter to John Whiting, 43; sickness and death, 44; address to those who once knew the Truth, 47; to Friends of Pardsay, 50; testimony against the fashions and worships, &c. of the world, 51; advice on church government, 55; effects of faith, 56; general epistle, 64; his faith in Christ,
Baptism of the Holy Ghost, 71; with water, 119, 330.
Barclay, John, his prefatory remarks to William Dewsbury's life, 213; to Joseph Pike's life, 340.
Clibborn, John, memoir of, 479.
Covetousness, 386, 394.
Cross of Christ, the need of it, 98.
Davis, Peter, a minister in his ninety-second year,
William Dewsbury, 287; death of his granddaughter, 287; general epistle, 290; sermon, 292; death, 298; letter respecting separation, 308. Discipline, 218, 233, 372, 409.
Edmundson, William, his life, 84; convincement, 96; struggle about paying duties, 97; ministry, 99; intimation of his shop being broken open, 100; put in the stocks, 102; imprisoned, 104; goes to America, 109; vision of a famine, 114; second visit to America, 115; charged with making the blacks Christians, 116; Indian war, 116; inward knowledge of God and Christ, 117; argues against water baptism, 119; for the universal gift of the Spirit, 120; perilous journey among Indians, 123; foresight of great trials and its fulfilment, 127, 130; taken by the rapparees, 131; against pride and covetousness, 145; letter on world- ly pursuits, 153; address to a bishop, 157; faith in his Lord and Saviour, 160; epistles and papers, 170; effect of his ministry on Joseph Pike, 358; his concern for a general reformation, 369, 392.
Education, 53, 290, 409. Elders, 409. Epistle to the flock, 64; of George Fox to Friends in Ireland, 99; to Friends in Barbadoes, 183; general epistle of William Dewsbury, 290; ditto 302; ditto 305; epistles of Tho- mas Wilson, 334; of Joseph Pike to Dublin Half-year's Meeting, 387.
Everhard, Barbara, singular instance of the power of grace, 431; her letter to Joseph Ox- ley, 432.
Faith, nature and effects of, 56; in Christ, 66, 73. Family visits, 371, 377, 378, 393. Fanaticism, 216.
Fashions, &c., 51, 53, 403, 409. Fox, George, 216, 221, 285, 364, 366. Friends' principles, 279; their work, 282.
Dewsbury, William, life of, 213; birth, 221; no rest in the world's worship, 223; unable to join in singing, 224; enters the army, 225; sees into the various dispensations, 225; no liberty to heap up scriptural knowledge, yet valuing the Sacred Wri- tings equally with other professors, 226; experiences regeneration, 227; appears as a minister, 231; epistle on the disci- pline, 233; examination before Judge Hale, 240; ditto before Judge Atkins, 249; description of the prisons; con- fined nineteen years, 252, 290; concern for James Naylor, 257; for John Per- rott, 265; for the dissensions in the So- ciety, 282; John Whiting's account of Keith, George, 325, 326, 381.
Hayes, Alice, 68; her convincement, 70, 71, 72; visited by the priest of the parish, 73; tes- timony of her, 81.
Hireling ministry, 281. Holy
Scriptures, the book of books, 29; advice to search them, 37; much profession of, 223; supported by Friends, 253, 279, 362.
Holy Spirit, teachings of, 43; given to every man, 120, 217, 357, 401, 403, 404, 413.
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