Letzte Suchanfragen
Ergebnisse für *
Es wurden 81 Ergebnisse gefunden.
Zeige Ergebnisse 1 bis 25 von 81.
Sortieren
-
A poem on the African slave trade. Addressed to her own sex by M. Birket
-
All slave-keepers that keep the innocent in bondage, apostates pretending to lay claim to the pure & holy Christian religion
of what congregation so ever; but especially in their ministers, by whose example the filthy leprosy and apostacy is spread far and near; it is a notorious sin, which many of the true Friends of Christ, and his pure truth, called Quakers, has been for many years, and still are concern'd to write and bear testimony against; as a practice so gross & hurtful to religion, and destructive to government, beyond what words can set forth, or can be declared of by men or angels, and yet lived in by ministers and magistrates in America. The leaders of the people cause them to err. Written for a general service, by him that truly and sincerely desires the present and eternal welfare and happiness of all mankind, all the world over, of all colours, and nations, as his own soul; Benjamin Lay -
A compassionate address to the Christian negroes in Virginia, and other British colonies in North-America
With an appendix, containing some account of the rise and progress of Christianity among that poor people. By Benjamin Fawcett, minister of the Gospel in Kidderminster -
Africans in Colonial Mexico
absolutism, Christianity, and Afro-Creole consciousness ; 1570 - 1640 -
A particular examination of Mr. Harris's scriptural researches on the licitness of the slave trade
-
Slavery inconsistent with the spirit of Christianity
a sermon preached at Cambridge, on Sunday, Feb. 10, 1788 -
Justice and mercy recommended, particularly with reference to the slave trade
a sermon preached before the University of Cambridge -
Scriptural researches on the licitness of the slave-trade
shewing its conformity with the principles of natural and revealed religion, delineated in the sacred writings of the word of God -
A view of slavery in connection with Christianity
being the substance of discourse delivered in the Wesleyan chapel, Stoney-Hill, Jamaica, Sept. 19, 1824 -
Two letters, severally addressed to the editor of the Christian Observer and the editor of the Christian Remembrancer relative to the slave-cultured estates of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel
-
Thoughts on British colonial slavery
-
Thoughts on British colonial slavery
-
The influence of Christianity in promoting the abolition of slavery in Europe
a dissertation which obtained the Hulsean prize for the year 1845 -
Afer baptizatus, or, The Negro turn'd Christian
being a short and plain discourse shewing I. The necessity of instructing and baptizing slaves in English plantations; II. The folly of that vulgar opinion that slaves do cease to be slaves when once baptized -
Letters of the late Bishop England to the Hon. John Forsyth
on the subject of domestic slavery -
An affectionate expostulation with Christians in the United States of America
because of the continuance of Negro slavery throughout many districts of their country -
Serious reflections on the slave trade and slavery
-
A defence of the Wesleyan Methodist missions in the West Indies
including a refutation of the charges in Mr. Marryat's "Thoughts on the abolition of the slave trade, &c." and in other publications, with facts and anecdotes illustrative of the moral state of the slaves, and of the operation of missions -
The church as it is, or, The forlorn hope of slavery
-
Is the system of slavery sanctioned or condemned by scripture?
to which is subjoined an appendix, containing two essays upon the state of the Canaanite and Philistine bondsmen, under the Jewish theocracy -
The duty of British Christians in reference to colonial slavery
a sermon, preached in the parish church of St. Peter, Derby, on Sunday, October 10th, 1830 -
An address to the inhabitants of Europe on the iniquity of the slave trade
-
A letter on the means and importance of converting the slaves in the West Indies to Christianity
-
A letter on the means and importance of converting the slaves in the West Indies to Christianity
-
A sermon on the African slave trade
preached at Maze-Pond, Southwark, Lord's day afternoon, Nov. 30, 1788. By James Dore