A sharp, fact‑driven refutation of Popery built on scripture and the Fathers.This work challenges key Roman Catholic claims by tracing how scripture and early church writings should guide belief and practice. It argues that tradition and unwritten church rules cannot override the Bible, and it examines how relics, images, and church authority have been treated over time. The author aims to illuminate how Protestants can read the scriptures responsibly and understand how church history shapes doctrine.
What you’ll explore
- Arguments about scripture as the standard for faith and conduct
- Critiques of relics, images, and the worship they inspire
- Discussions of how tradition has influenced church authority
- Ways to reason about Protestant readings of the Bible
Ideal for readers of religious history and polemics who want a clear, text‑based defense of scriptural sufficiency and a critical view of tradition.