Blue Mountain Books & Manuscripts, Ltd.: Religion
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Vollmar, Edward R., S.J.
The Catholic Church in America: An Historical Bibliography. Second Edition.
NY: The Scarecrow Press, Inc. 1963. 1963. - Octavo, black cloth titled in gilt. Cocked & soiled. 399 pp. Very good. Very good .
Blue Mountain Books & Manuscripts, Ltd.Professional seller
Book number: 6311
USD 45.00 [Appr.: EURO 40.5 | £UK 34 | JP¥ 6486]
Catalogue: Religion
Keywords: RELIGION; ROMAN CATHOLICISM; EDWARD R. VOLLMAR; CATHOLIC CHURCH; AMERICAN; BIBLIOGRAPHY; REFERENCE. (Religion). (Roman Catholicism). THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN AMERICA: An Historical Bibliography. Second Edition. Vollmar, Edward R., S.J.

 
Wakefield, Dan.
Returning: A Spiritual Journey.
New York: Doubleday, 1988. 1988. INSCRIBED TO PETER MATTHIESSEN AND SIGNED BY DAN WAKEFIELD - Octavo, cloth-backed boards in a dust wrapper. there is some minor foxing to the dust jacket & its top edge is slightly creased. x, [i], 250 & [1] pages. Very good.

First edtion.

Inscribed by the author to Peter Matthiessen on the title page: "To Peter Matthiessen, / with thanks for your own account of your journey in Nine-Headed Dragon River and appreciation of your own path and work -- / Dan Wakefield". Very good .

Blue Mountain Books & Manuscripts, Ltd.Professional seller
Book number: 31897
USD 35.00 [Appr.: EURO 31.5 | £UK 26.5 | JP¥ 5044]
Catalogue: Religion
Keywords: RELIGION; LITERATURE; AUTOBIOGRAPHY; RETURNING: A SPIRITUAL JOURNEY; DAN WAKEFIELD; AUTHOR; NOVELIST; SCREENWRITER; INSCRIBED; SIGNED; SIGNATURE; AUTOGRAPH; SPIRITUAL ODYSSEY; DRUG ABUSE; ALCOHOL ABUSE; PSYCHOANALYSIS; FAITH; COMMUNITY; CHURCH; FIRST EDIT

 
Walker, Josiah Henry (1777-1843).
A Protestant Historical Catechism; Being a Concise View of the Commencement and Decline of Christianity; with the Rise and Establishment of the Reformation, Under Martin Luther, and His Coadjutors, in Several Countries of Europe.
Nottingham: Printed and sold for the author by Shorrock and Son, St. Peter's Gate, 1821. 1821. - 16mo. 5-3/4 inches high by 3-5/8 inches wide. Printed gray boards titled and decorated in black on the front cover with an advertisement for the author's book "Thuanus" on the rear cover. The rubbed and stained covers are detached and the spine is lacking. 106 & [2] pages. There is some very minor occasional foxing and a chip to the top edge of one leaf.

RARE. WorldCat locates only 1 copy, that in the Styberg Library in Evanston, Illinois.

"This work, though diminutive in size, is one, before which many ponderous quartos, and overgrown folios, might justly hide their unwieldy heads.. In the margins of many of his pages, the author has quoted his authorities, unless he refers to facts, the truth of which is universally acknowledged. That he espouses the Protestant cause, he openly avows, and glories in having an opportunity of lifting his voice in favor of the doctrines which reformation inculcates.." - [Quoted from a review in "The Imperial magazine, or, Compendium of religious, moral, & philosophical knowledge", volume 4, 1822].

A disciple of John Wesley, the author Josiah Henry Walker (1777-1843) was the Wesleyan preacher in Walsingham, England. Fair .

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Book number: 95771
USD 350.00 [Appr.: EURO 313.75 | £UK 263 | JP¥ 50443]
Catalogue: Religion
Keywords: RELIGION; JOSIAH HENRY WALKER; A PROTESTANT HISTORICAL CATECHISM; A CONCISE VIEW OF THE COMMENCEMENT AND DECLINE OF CHRISTIANITY; WITH THE RISE AND ESTABLISHMENT OF THE REFORMATION, UNDER MARTIN LUTHER, AND HIS COADJUTORS IN SEVERAL COUNTRIES IN EUROPE; N

 
Wesley, John, 1703-1791; Whitefield, George, 1714-1770; Tucker, Josiah, 1713-1799; Corbett, Charles, 1710-1752.
A Compleat Account of the Conduct of That Eminent Enthusiast Mr. Whitefield. To Which Is Annexed, I. A True Character of Him, Attested by Himself. II. A Most Useful and Entertaining Catechism for the Use of Female Methodists. III. Some Queries Sent to Mr. W. At Bristol, by the Reverend Mr. Tucker of That City. IV. An Answer to Them, Supposed to Be Written by Mr. John Wesley. V. Some General Remarks on the Answer by the Publisher of This Account. And VI. A More Particular Reply by Mr. Tucker, the Author of the Queries. Together with Some Remarks on Mr. W's Journal.
London: Sold by C. Corbett, Bookseller and Publisher, against St. Dunstan's-Church in Fleet-Street, 1739. 1739. - Octavo, 8-1/2 inches high by 5-1/2 inches wide. Printed self-wrappers with "Price Six-pence" in square brackets at the foot of the title page. Remnants of later plain green wraps are present along the spine. The front edges of the cover page and last page are slightly chipped. [2] & 38 deckle-edged pages, decorated with a title device, a formal head & tail piece, and woodcut initial. There is scattered dampstaining, particularly to the first and last pages. Good.

First (and only) edition. RARE.

The significance of a large part of the content of this pamphlet is described in a scholarly article by the American theologian and leading authority on John Wesley Dr. Randy L. Maddox. His article, “John Wesley’s Earliest Published Defense of the Emerging Revival in Bristol” (2014), can be found at The Divinity Archive, a project of The Duke Divinity School Library.

Part 1, "A Compleat Account of the Conduct, &tc. of that Eminent Enthusiast, Mr. Whitefield, &tc.", [pages 1-16], is a scathing denunciation of Whitefield and John Wesley pieced together by the publisher Charles Corbett. Corbett, who was responsible for other anti-Methodist tracts, cites an account in the high church Anglican-supported Weekly Miscellany as his source. Corbett mocks Whitefield: "There is something so extravagantly ridiculous in the Behavior of this young Man, it is very difficult for a person of any Humour to keep his Countenance..". He later goes on to include Wesley in his insults: "I defy all Mankind to justify such Conduct upon any Principles whatsoever; and Mr. John Wesley is less justifiable, or rather more guilty than Mr. Whitefield, because he is a Man of more Learning, better Judgement, and a cooler Head..". Following this Corbett publishes "A Copy of a private Conversation of Mr. Whitefield's taken down in Writing after his leaving the Room, and brought to him by the Rev. Mr. Tucker, Minister of All-Saints in Bristol, and at his Request, sign'd by Mr. Whitefield himself." It is the text of a conversation Whitefield had on March 30, 1739 in which he attributes his understanding of "true Christianity" to a book by Henry Scougal, "The Life of God in the Soul of Man". The text was originally published by Josiah Tucker in a broadsheet dated "Bristol, March 30, 1739".

Part II, "A Method of Confession drawn up for the Use of the Women Methodists. Taken from the Original." [pages 18-20]. Among the questions proposed are the following: "Are you in Love? / Do you take more Pleasure in any Body than in God? / Whom do you love just now, better than any other Person in the World? / Is not the Person an Idol? Does he not (especially in Publick Prayer) steal in between God and your Soul? / Does any Court you? / Is there any one whom you suspect to have any such Design? / Is there anyone who shews you more Respect than to other Women? / Are not you pleased with That? / How do you like him? / How do you feel yourself, when he comes, when he stays, when he goes away? The last ten Questions may be ask'd as often as Occasion offers." Josiah Tucker described this as "shocking scheme for confessing the women". Dr. Maddox makes a cogent argument in his essay that, while differing from Wesley's original December 1738 "Rules of the Band Societies", the author of the rules published here may have been Wesley, not Whitefield.

Part III, "Queries to Mr. Whitefield", [pages 20-22], were written by Josiah Tucker and appeared around mid-april 1739. According to Dr. Maddox, the queries were "highlighting his discomfort with Whitefield’s emphasis on ‘extraordinary’ operations of the Spirit". Part IV, "An Answer to the Queries sent to Mr. Whitefield, from the Rev. Mr. Tucker, Minister of All-Saints, Bristol; in a Letter to the Querist", [22-25], is attributed to John Wesley by both the publisher Charles Corbett and Dr. Maddox in his essay. The tone of the reply is quite disdainful. The writer opens: "Had not the Bristol Queries been said to be written by the Rev. Mr. Tucker, I should have imagin'd, they come from one, who had no manner of Notion of Divine Revelation; but as you are a Reverend Minister, I must suppose you to be a Christian, though you have given great room to think, that you believe nothing of the Operations of the Holy Spirit, by owning, that you do not perceive them in yourself, and are hitherto unacquainted with any extraordinary and supernatural Light". He concludes: "If I have mistaken you, please to let me know it, and tell me both what you mean by the Expressions, in which you oppose Mr. W's Notions of supernatural Light and Assistance, and what your own Notions are of these Things."

Part V of the pamphlet [pages 26-31] is Corbett's response to the "Answer to the Queries" followed by his negative assessment of Whitefield. "This Answer is a sophistical Evasion, and a false Charge upon the Querist. It turns all upon the Ambiguity of the Words extraordinary and supernatural, and feeling, or experiencing. Neither the Querist, nor any other sober Christian denies the Operation of the Spirit upon our Minds and Hearts; and as this Influence is added to the natural Powers of the Soul, it may be called extraordinary, or supernatural." Corbett's argument is followed by his contemptuous remarks regarding Whitefield. "Mr. W. in the Character signed by himself, has thoroughly satisfied the World of his great natural Abilities, and the following Extracts from his last Journal are as strong a Proof of his supernatural Powers and Endowments. Tho' in many of them his Humility be so extraordinary as to put him upon a level with the Prophets and Apostles only, yet in others he seems to put himself upon a Foot with Jesus Christ: and the Carnal, Letter-learned, Established Clergy are rank'd with the false Prophets whom he very candidly threatens with Damnation for opposing him." These statements are followed by nearly three pages of extracts from Whitefield's journal.

Part VI is Josiah Tucker's reply to Wesley's answer, [pages 31-38]. It is headed: "Th[e] following Reply of Mr. Tucker's not coming to hand 'till all the preceding Part of this Pamphlet was printed off, and being willing to make this Collection as complete as I could, I have here inserted it". Tucker's reply is dated "Oxon,June 14, 1739" and includes numerous footnotes by the author. It is especially interesting in that it includes Tucker's attack on the Catechism for female Methodists. He is responding to "Rev. Mr. Hutchins" (i.e.John Hutchings (b. 1716) who worked closely with Whitefield in Bristol in 1739. "Agreeable to this, his Friend and Assistant at Bristol, the Rev.Mr. Hutchins, put out some Remarks on my Queries, wherein, with the usual Christian Spirit, and Meekness of the Sect, he affirms, ‘That I had cast a slur upon my gown. That I ought to quit the Ministry, -- And that I got it by downright Falsehood and Equivocation.’..His next Attack is on my Phrase and Diction: Here he says, I ought not to have asked, ‘After what Manner they come into the Mind, but after what Manner we are enabled to discern, believe, and embrace them’..But before I take my leave of him, I would desire him to consider, that if I really was a Deist, as he represents me, I should not have been such a strenuous Opposer of Mr. Whitefield: No, The Deists seem strongly inclin'd to favour his Cause, and foment the Division. They in particular, are highly delighted with his Shocking scheme for confessing the Women; the graver Part, with the Abuse and miserable Perversion of Scripture Sentences, and the more dissolute with his indecent and loose Interrogations. This is a Scheme so evidently calculated to promote Vice and Lewdness, that many People still persist in thinking 'tis only a waggish Sneer put upon him. But the Gentleman need not be told the contrary; as he appears to be Mr. Whitefield’s Friend, he must know, that 'tis a genuine and real Piece, approved and recommended by the Heads of the Sect, and actually put in Practice, both in London and Bristol. Since therefore he has taken upon him to vindicate Mr. Whitefield’s Principles and Conduct, he is hereby called upon publickly to defend it." . Good .

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Book number: 98089
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Catalogue: Religion
Keywords: RELIGION; AMERICANA; A COMPLEAT ACCOUNT OF THE CONDUCT OF THAT EMINENT ENTHUSIAST MR. WHITEFIELD; JOHN WESLEY; GEORGE WHITEHEAD; JOSIAH TUCKER; CHARLES CORBETT; METHODIST CHURCH; CONTROVERSIAL LITERATURE; BRISTOL; RANDY L. MADDOX; RELIGION; REVIVALISM; PR

 
(Wesley, John). Potts, James H.
Living Thoughts of John Wesley: A Comprehensive Selection of the Living Thoughts of the Founder of Methodism As Contained in His Miscellaneous Works.
New York: Hunt & Eaton / Cincinnati: Cranston & Curts, (1891). (1891). - Octavo, 9 inches high by 6 inches wide. Black cloth titled in gilt on the spine with decorations in blind on the covers and the spine. The covers are lightly bumped with some hint of dampstaining near the spine. There is slight wear to the head of the spine. 562 pages. The pages are lightly toned and there is a tiny chip to the front edge of the last leaf. Very good.

First edition. Very good .

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Book number: 96808
USD 35.00 [Appr.: EURO 31.5 | £UK 26.5 | JP¥ 5044]
Catalogue: Religion
Keywords: RELIGION; LIVING THOUGHTS OF JOHN WESLEY; A COMPREHENSIVE SELECTION OF THE LIVING THOUGHTS OF THE FOUNDER OF METHODISM AS CONTAINED IN HIS MISCELLANEOUS WORKS; CHRISTIANITY; NINETEENTH CENTURY; 19TH CENTURY; FIRST EDITION; 1ST EDITION; JAMES H. POTTS.

 
Wiener, Sita.
Swami Satchidananda. His Biography.
San Francisco & New York: Straight Arrow Books, (1970). (1970). - Octavo, 8-1/2 inches high by 5-3/4 inches wide. Brown cloth titled in gilt on the spine, in a color pictorial dust wrapper. The edges of the dust jacket are creased and chipped with a piece out from the tail of the spine and another from the top inner edge of the jacket's rear panel, crudely repaired with tape. [viii] & 194 pages, with several pages of photographic illustrations. Very good in a good dust wrapper.

First edition. Good .

Blue Mountain Books & Manuscripts, Ltd.Professional seller
Book number: 97320
USD 35.00 [Appr.: EURO 31.5 | £UK 26.5 | JP¥ 5044]
Catalogue: Religion
Keywords: RELIGION; HINDUISM; SITA WIENER; SWAMI SATCHIDANANDA; BIOGRAPHY; INDIA; ILLUSTRATED; ILLUSTRATIONS; FIRST EDITION; 20TH CENTURY; 1ST EDITION; TWENTIETH CENTURY; PHILOSOPHY.

 
Wilson, Thomas, D.D.
Sacra Privata: The Private Meditations and Prayers of the Right Reverend Thomas Wilson, D.D. , Lord Bishop of Sodor and Man, Accommodated to General Use. A New Edition.
Trenton: Printed by James Oram, for Peter A. Mesier, Bookseller, 1805. 1805. - Small octavo, full brown calf. The leather is chipped around the edges & rubbed. There is a piece out of the head of the spine & the top of the front joint is split. vi & pages [7]-215. There is an ink notation & an owner's ink name & date on the front endpaper, with another owner's ink name at the top of the title. The front edge of the front endpaper is chipped with a small piece out & there is a tiny tear to the flyleaf. There is scattered foxing & staining throughout, especially to the rear pastedown, endpaper & blanks. Good. Good .
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Book number: 13967
USD 50.00 [Appr.: EURO 45 | £UK 37.75 | JP¥ 7206]
Catalogue: Religion
Keywords: RELIGION; PRAYER BOOK; BISHOP; SACRA PRIVATA: The Private Meditations and Prayers of The Right Reverend Thomas Wilson, D.D.; LORD BISHOP OF SODOR AND MAN; NINETEENTH CENTURY; 19TH CENTURY.

 
Wilkinson, Thomas Edward (1837-1914) the first Bishop of Zululand and travel writer.
Autograph Letter Signed by Travel Writer and the First Bishop of Zululand Thomas Edward Wilkinson.
Windermere, U.K.: August 21, 1875. 1875. - More than 65 words penned on two sides of a folded sheet of blue personalized letterhead, with a device and the initials "T.E.W." at the top. Measuring 7 inches high by 4-1/2 inches wide, the letter is addressed to a Mr. Middleton. Writing from "The Terrace / Windermere", Wilkinson writes that he will not come to Leeds at present. He goes on to discuss financial arrangements: "You ask for the address of my treasurer. Will you please send any remittances to me here before next Wednesday & I will enter them & pass them on." He signs himself, "Thomas Edward / Bishop of Zululand". The letter has been folded three times for mailing. A piece of heavy stock has been mounted to the top of the 4th blank leaf, else very good.

The Anglican bishop Thomas Edward Wilkinson (1837-1914) was the first Bishop of Zululand, 1870-1876. Before his ordination he had joined the French Foreign Legion and traveled extensively. He was the coadjutor bishop of London for north and central Europe. In this role he journeyed 14,000 miles 82 times to reach all of his churches. He wrote several books, including a Zulu hymn book. Good .

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Book number: 96401
USD 175.00 [Appr.: EURO 157 | £UK 131.5 | JP¥ 25222]
Catalogue: Religion
Keywords: THOMAS EDWARD WILKINSON; BISHOP OF ZULULAND; ZULU HYMN BOOK; ANGLICAN BISHOP; TRAVELER; TRAVEL WRITER.

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