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A TRUE INTERPRETATION of the WITCH OF ENDOR, spoken of in the First Book of Samuel, xxviii. chap. beginning at the 11th verse.

SHEWING,

I. How she and all other Witches do beget or produce that familiar Spirit they deal with, and what a familiar Spirit is, and how those voices are procured, and shapes appear unto them, whereby the ignorant and unbelieving people are deceived by them. 2. It is clearly made appear in this Treatise, that no spirit can be raised without its body, neither can any spirit assume any body after death; for if the spirit doth walk, the body must walk also.

3. An interpretation of all those Scriptures, that doth seem as if Spirits might go out of men's bodies when they die, and subsist in some place or other without bodies.

Lastly, Several other things needful for the mind of man to know, which whoever doth understand, it will be great satisfaction.

THE NECK OF THE QUAKERS BROKEN, or cut in sunder by the two-edged sword of the Spirit which is put into my mouth.

LODOWICKE MUGGLETON.

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A LETTER sent to THOMAS TAYLOR, Quaker, in the year 1664, in Answer to many blasphemous sayings of his in several pieces of paper, and in the margin of a Book. Amongst many of his wicked ignorant sayings, I have given an answer to some of the chief and main things of concernment for the reader to know: The particular heads are seven.

I. That Christ could not make all things of nothing.

II. That earth and Waters were eternal, and out of that matter God cre ated all living creatures.

III. That there was a place of residence for God to be in, when he created this world.

IV. How all children are saved, though the seed of the serpent, if they die in their childhood.

V. Of the difference between the fruit of the womb, and the fruits of the flesh; and how they are two several trees, and two several fruits.

VI. How the seed of faith, the elect seed, did all fall in Adam, and therefore made alive in Christ; and how the reprobate seed did not fall in Adam, so not made alive in Christ; and what it is that purifies the Quaker's hearts.

VII. How Adam and Eve were not capable of any kind of death before their fall and how their fall did procure but a temporal death to all the seed of Adam; but the fall of the serpent did procure an eternal death to all his seed, who live to men and women's estates, and more especially to those that doth deny the person and body of Christ to be now living in heaven, above the stars, without a man, as all the speakers of the Quakers do.

A LOOKING-GLASS for GEORGE FOX the Quaker, and other Quakers; wherein they may see themselves to be right Devils. In answer to GEORGE Fox, his Book, called Something in Answer to Lododowicke Muggleton's Book, which he calls, The Qua

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