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Trustees of Broadmead Chapel, Bristol. Primitive Methodism Defended in an Address from the Trustees of Broadmead and Guinea Chapels in Bristol. Bristol, (1795).

Tucker, Josiah. Brief History of the Principles of Methodism.

Oxford, 1742.

Tucker, Josiah. A Complete Account of the Conduct of the Eminent Enthusiast, Mr. Whitefield. London, 1739.

(Tucker, Josiah.) Genuine and Secret Memoirs Relating to the Life and Adventures of that Arch-Methodist George Whitefield. Oxford, 1742. Wainewright, Latham. Observations on the Doctrine, Discipline and Manners of the Wesleyan Methodists and also of the Evangelical Party. London, 1818.

Warburton, William. Tracts by

London, 1789.

London, 1827. Vol. i.

Warren, Samuel. Chronicles of Methodism.

Watts, Isaac. An Humble Attempt toward the Revival of Practical Religion among Christians. London, 1731.

Wesley, Charles. 28, 1785.

Facsimile Ms. Letter to Dr. Chandler. London, April,

(Wesleyan Methodist). Methodist Error, or Friendly Christian Advice. Trenton, N. J., 1819.

Whitefield, Rev. George. Expostulatory Letter, Addressed to Nicholas Lewis, Count Zinzendorff, and Lord . . London, 1756.

Whitefield, George. A Continuation of the Rev. Mr. Whitefield's Journal during the Time he was Detained in England by the Embargo. London, 1739. Whitefield, Rev. George. Letter to the Rev. Dr. Durell Occasioned by a Late Expulsion of Students from Edmund Hall. Whitefield, Rev. George. Letter to the President and and Hebrew Instructor of Harvard College Testimony Published by them against the Rev. George Conduct. Boston, 1745.

Whitefield, Rev. George. Letter to Thomas Church

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London, 1768. Professors, Tutors in Answer to a Whitefield and his

in Answer to his

Serious Letter to George Whitefield. London, 1744.
Whitefield, George. Observations on Some Fatal Mistakes in a Book.

The Doctrine of Grace . . . by Dr. William Warburton, Lord Bishop of Gloucester.

London, 1763.

Written Intimate London, 1772. 3 vols.

Whitefield, George. The Rev. Mr. Whitefield's Answer, to the Bishop of
London's Last Pastoral Letter. London, 1739. 2nd ed.
Whitefield, George. Select Collections of Letters.
Friends and Persons of Distinction.
Whitefield, George. Sermons. Bound with Memoirs of George Whitefield,
edited by John Gillies. q.v.

Whitefield, George. The Testimony of the President, Professors

Harvard College against

and his Conduct. Boston, 1744.

Whitehead, John. Discourse at the Funeral of John Wesley. S.L. (Wills). Remarks on Methodism. London, 1813.

WORKS OF JOHN WESLEY

Eayrs, George. Letters of John Wesley. New York, 1915.

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of

1845.

Emory, John. Works of John Wesley. New York, 1831. Complete in 7 vols. The following writings of Wesley were taken from this publication for use in this thesis:

An Address to the Clergy. Athlone, 1756. Vol. vi, pp. 217-236.
Advice to the People Called Methodists. S.L., 1745.

249-254.

Vol. v, pp.

Advice to the People Called Methodists, with Regard to Dress. S.L.
and S.D. Vol. vi, pp. 545-553.

An Answer to an Important Question. 1787. Vol. vii, pp. 317-319.
An Answer to Mr. Rowland Hill's Tract Entitled "Imposture Detected."
London, 1777. Vol. vi, pp. 193-199.

The Case of the Birstal House. London, 1788. Vol. vii, pp. 326-329.
The Case of the Dewsbury House.
The Character of the Methodist.
A Collection of Forms of Prayer
Vol. vi, pp. 377-426.

Bristol, 1789. Vol. vii, pp. 329-330.
Bristol, 1743. Vol. v, pp. 240-245.
for Every Day in the Week.

1733.

Directions Concerning Pronunciation and Gesture. Vol. vii, pp. 487

493.

Directions Given to the Band Societies. 1744.
Directions to the Stewards of the Methodist
Vol. vii, pp. 486-487.

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The Doctrine of Original Sin. Bristol, 1757. Vol. v, pp. 492-669. An Estimate of the Manners of the Present Times. 1782. vol. vi, pp. 347-352

An Extract from: A Short View of the Difference between the Moravian Brethren and the Rev. Mr. John and Charles Wesley. Vol. vi, pp. 22-24.

An Extract of a Letter to the Rev. Mr. Law. London, 1756. Vol. v, pp. 669-699.

Farther Thoughts on Separation from the Church. London, 1789. Vol. vii, pp. 325-326.

A Letter to a Clergyman. Bristol, 1766. Vol. v, pp. 349-352.

A Letter to a Friend. 1761. Vol. vii, p. 299.

A Letter to a Friend Concerning Tea. Newington, 1748. Vol. vi, pp. 567-575.

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A Letter to the Rev. Mr. Baily . . in Answer to a Letter to a Letter. London, 1750. Vol. v, pp. 407-423.

A Letter to the Rev. Conyers Middleton, Occasioned by his Late Free Inquiry, Bristol, 1749. Vol. v, pp. 705-761.

A Letter to the Rev. Mr. Downes. London, 1759. Vol. v, pp. 428-437. A Letter to the Rev. Mr. Fleury. Dublin, 1771. Vol. v, pp. 484-491. A Letter to the Rev. Dr. Free. Bristol, 1758. Vol. v, pp. 352-354.

A Letter to the Rev. Mr. Horne: Occasioned by his Sermon Preached before the University of Oxford. London, 1762. Vol. v, pp. 438-442. A Letter to the Rev. John Taylor. Hartlepool, 1759. Vol. v, p. 669. A Letter to the Rt. Rev. the Lord Bishop of London; Occasioned by his Lordship's Late Charge to his Clergy. London, 1747. Vol. v, pp. 339-349.

A Letter to Mr. T. H., alias Philodemos, alias Somebody.

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Vol. vii,

pp. 400-403. A Letter to the Rev. Mr. Potter. London, 1758. Vol. v, pp. 423-427. A Letter to the Rev. Mr. Toogood, of Exeter; Occasioned by his "Dissent from the Church of England Fully Justified." Bristol, 1758. Vol. vi, pp. 231-234.

The Nature, Design, and General Rules of the United Societies.

1743. Vol. v, pp. 190-192.

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The Principles of a Methodist Occasioned by a Late Pamphlet, entitled "A Brief History of the Principles of Methodism." Vol. `v, pp. 251-264.

The Principles of a Methodist Farther Explained Occasioned by the Rev. Mr. Church's Second Letter to Mr. Wesley. London, 1746. Vol. v, pp. 292-328.

To the Printer of the Dublin Chronicle. Londonderry, June 2, 1789. Vol. vii, pp. 222-224.

Reasons Against Separation from the Church of England. 1758. Vol. vii, pp. 293-298.

Rules of the Band Societies. 1738. Vol. v, pp. 192-193.

Of Separation from the Church. 1785.

Vol. vii, pp. 313-315.

A Second Letter to the Lord Bishop of Exeter, in Answer to his Lordship's Later Letter. London, 1752. Vol. v, pp. 405-407.

A Short Account of the Life and Death of the Rev. John Fletcher. 1786.
Vol. vi, pp. 427-483.

A Short Address to the Inhabitants of Ireland Occasioned by Some
Late Occurrences. Dublin, 1749. Vol. v, p. 480-484.

A Short History of Methodism. (1764.) Vol. v, pp. 246-248.
Some Thoughts upon an Important Question. 1781. Vol. vii, p. 306.
Specimen of the Divinity and Philosophy of the Highly-Illuminated
Jacob Behmen. S.L. and S.D. Vol. v, pp. 703-705.

Thoughts on the Consecration of Churches and Burial Grounds. Dum-
fries, 1788. Vol. vi, pp. 236-237.

Thoughts on Separation from the Church. Bristol, 1788. Vol. vii, p. 319. Thoughts Upon a Late Phenomenon. Nottingham, 1788. Vol. vii, pp. 319-321.

A Word to Whom it May Concern. London, 1790. Vol. vii, p. 332. Wesley, John. An Answer to the Rev. Mr. Churche's Remarks on the Rev. John Wesley's Journal, in a Letter to that Gentleman. Bristol, 1745. Wesley, John. A Blow at the Root; or Christ Stabbed in the House of His Friends. Bristol, 1762. 2nd ed.

Wesley, John. Calm Address to Our American Colonies. Dublin, 1775. Wesley, John. A Calm Address to Our American Colonies. A new edition, corrected and enlarged. London, 1775.

The Christian Sacrament and Sacrifice. Extracted from a late author by . . London, 1794.

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A Compassionate Address to the Inhabitants of Ireland. Belfast, 1778. Deed of Declaration. (In Appendix B, p. 551, Townsend's History of

Methodism q.v.)

Duty of Constant Communion. New York, 1788.

An Earnest Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion. Newcastle on Tyne,

1743.

(Wesley, John.) An Earnest Invitation to the Friends of the Established Church to Join in Setting apart One Hour of Every Week, for Prayer and Supplication, during the Present Troublous Times. London, 1779.

Wesley, John. An Extract of Mr. Richard Baxter's Aphorisms of Justification. London, 1784.

A Farther Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion. London, 1745.
Free Thoughts on the Present State of Affairs. In a Letter to a Friend.
London, 1770.

The Heart of John Wesley's Journal, with an Introduction by Hugh
New York, 1903.

Price Hughes.

(Wesley, John and Charles.)

1750.

Hymns for the Nativity of our Lord. Bristol,

Wesley, John and Charles. Hymns for the Year 1756. Bristol, 1756. Wesley, John. The Journal of the Rev. John Wesley, London, 1907. 4 vols.

The Journal of the Rev. John Wesley.

New York, 1909. Com

plete in 8 vols. The Best and most useful to date.

A Letter to the Author of the Craftsman.

London, 1745.

A Letter to the Author of Enthusiasm of Methodists and Papists Compared. London, 1749-50.

A Letter to the Bishops of London: Occasioned by His Lordship's Late Charge to his Clergy. Bristol, 1749.

Letter to Lord Bishop of Gloucester. London, 1763.

A Letter to a Person Lately Joined with the Call'd Quakers. S.L. 1748.

A Letter to the Rev. Mr. Law: Occasioned by Some of his Late Writings. London, 1756.

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Nicodemus: or a Treatise on the Fear of Man. Written in German by
Augustus Herman Francke, Abridged by
London, 1798.

A Plain Account of Christian Perfection. New York, 1837.

A Plain Account of the People Called Methodists in a Letter to the Rev. Mr. Perronet. London, 1755.

Predestination Calmly Considered. London, 1797.

A Preservative against Unsettled Notions in Religion. Bristol, 1770.
Reflections Upon the Conduct of Human Life; with Reference to Learn-
ing and Knowledge. Extracted by
London, 1798.

The Scripture Doctrine Concerning Predestination, Election.

S.L. and S.D.

Scripture Doctrine of Predestination, Election and Reprobation also the Nature and Extent of the Atonement. New York, 1813.

A Second Letter to the Rev. Dr. Free. Bristol, 1758.

Sermons, Chiefly on the Spiritual Life. New York, 1871. Edited by Abel Stevens.

Sermons on Several Occasions. Devon, 1826.

Sermons on Several Occasions. New York, 1830. 2 vols.

A Short Exposition of the Ten Commandments Extracted from Bishop
Hopkins by
London, 1799.

A Short History of Methodism. London, 1765.

Short View of the Difference Between the Moravian Brethren. London, 1745.

Some Observations on Liberty Occasioned by a Late Tract. London, 1776.

Some Remarks Upon Mr. Hill's Review of all the Doctrines Taught by
Mr. John Wesley. Bristol, 1772.

Some Remarks Upon Mr. Hill's Farrago Double-Distilled. Bristol, 1773.
The Sunday Service of the Methodists in the United States of America
with Other Occasional Services. London, 1790.
Thoughts Upon Necessity. London, 1775.

A Treatise on Christian Prudence.

London, 1784. 4th ed.

Extracted from Mr. Morrs by

A Word in Season: or Advice to an Englishman. S.L. and S.D. 7th ed. The Works of John Wesley. New York, 1826. 10 vols.

VITA

ROBERT LEONARD TUCKER was born in Westfield, Massachusetts, January 28, 1890. After graduating from the high school of that place in 1909, he entered Wesleyan University of Middletown, Connecticut, from which he received the degree of B.A., in 1913. In 1915 he received the degree of Master of Arts from Columbia University. In 1916 he graduated from Union Theological Seminary, of New York City after completing three years of study. It was from 1915-1918 that he was a candidate in Columbia University for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. He is an ordained minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church.

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