1638-George Gillespie.-This short work, published anonymously but attributed to Gillespie, examines the follies, fallacies and tendencies of liturgies in the worship of God.
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1641-George Gillespie.-This is Gillespie’s masterful treatment of Presbyterianism in its several offices, courts and connections.
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1644-George Gillespie.-A tract concerning the extent and application of the laws of the Bible in the civil affairs of nations with a discussion of how this comports with liberty of conscience.
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1647-George Gillespie.-This contains a series of propositions outlining Presbyterial church government and its courts and functions, particularly as understood in its difference from civil power.
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1648-George Gillespie.-Gillespie’s dying testimony and belief that the covenanted cause will ultimately prevail.
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1648-George Gillespie.-Two days before he died, Gillespie was concerned to leave a dying testimony against voluntary associations with malignants and other opposers of the covenanted Reformation.
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1648-Geoge Gillespie.-Gillespie’s dying testimony warning the Church of Scotland against compliance with and engagement to malignants and others hostile to the covenants. From his death bed, he warned about the very measures that would split the church into Protestors and Resolutioners. Gillespie was decidedly on the side of the Protestors.
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1649-George Gillespie.-A volume which gathers many of Gillespie’s smaller works on various topics of church government, sacraments, confederacies and the nature and extent of the atonement.
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