Association football club in Darlington, England.
1Hitherto he was acquainted only with the simple worship of the Quakers.
2Such is the organization of the discipline or government of the Quakers.
3These irregularities were much exaggerated by enemies of the Quakers in England.
4The Quakers also conceive it to be a doctrine of the gospel.
5The Quakers to this day do not admit singing in their assemblies.
6The Quakers have as warm feelings as the rest of their countrymen.
7They still refused to find the Quakers guilty of an unlawful assembly.
8The Quakers themselves confess, the Ranters are to be disowned, page 4.
9Nor of the Quakers, the best of all, and abused by all.
10As to the creed of the Quakers, we have seen its effects.
11Now the religion, of the Quakers has been explained, and this extensively.
12Second, of the Quakers in England, George Fox, and his religious descendants
13But the Brethren, he held, were even broader minded than the Quakers.
14I know of no people, who regard truth more than the Quakers.
15Persecution having ceased, the Quakers quit proselyting and therefore ceased to grow.
16The Quakers, in putting this principle into practice, stand, I believe, alone.
Translations for the quakers